

🖨️ Upgrade your Canon printer to a sleek PVC card powerhouse—print smarter, not harder!
This Inkjet PVC Card Tray replaces the Canon J Tray for CD/DVD printing, enabling high-quality printing on inkjet-compatible PVC cards. Compatible with a broad range of Canon PIXMA printers, it holds two cards at once for efficient batch printing. Ideal for professionals seeking a cost-effective alternative to thermal card printers, it comes with downloadable templates and detailed usage instructions to ensure flawless results.
| ASIN | B00P25H0BA |
| Best Sellers Rank | #189,066 in Office Products ( See Top 100 in Office Products ) #52 in Computer Printer Trays |
| Customer Reviews | 4.3 4.3 out of 5 stars (250) |
| Date First Available | October 31, 2014 |
| Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
| Item Weight | 3.2 ounces |
| Item model number | EL-PN-47332328 |
| Manufacturer | Brainstorm ID |
| Product Dimensions | 5.12 x 5.12 x 0.12 inches |
L**N
I love being able to print on ID cards. Seriously.
I love love love being able to print on ID cards! I truly do. I used to mark my rabbit cages with business cards slipped into clear pvc pouches. Though printing the same number of cards takes a little longer, it's worth the production time in the time I save on the "front end" -- actually using them. The Inkjet-printable cards come out beautifully, and the company provides the templates you will need, as well as instructions on which printing settings to use, to make things go smoothly. I'm using a Canon MX922. The first print takes a minute or so to begin (it pulls the tray in, pushes it out, in again, thinks about it, etc.) but when doing multiple copies of the same print, the subsequent ones are very fast! It can be a little tricky to push the tray in -- every printer is sure to be different, but I found that mine requires that I start the job without the tray in, and then put the tray in only after it "grinds some gears" (not sure what it's doing, but it's noisy). It asks for the tray at one point, and that's when you put it in; it works great if you follow those instructions. If not, it'll spit the tray back out at you and get grumpy. While I am reviewing the tray, I would like to mention something about the cards it uses: I print multiples of the same card at one time, and write the information for each rabbit onto the card in the boxes I printed for that purpose. Ballpoint and gel pens write beautifully on the cards, and they hold up very well under the rigors of a rabbitry. I use them on the cages I transport to shows, so they hold up well even to that sort of abuse. They even survive being chewed on; they must not taste all that good, because I've only ever had one corner with a ragged edge and they give up any further destruction. ;)
G**1
Nice tray easy to use.
Works well, using on canon printer. Only wish it had a white mark on right or left sid to indicate the tray has been inserted into the printer enough. Other wise cards fit and do not move. No fault of tray but I wish the printer had a storage location for trays. ** Recommendations ** I down loaded and saved templates (horizontal & vertical) as templates from card manufacturers website. Do not throw away a failed card to fill blank for future jobs that you only need to print on one card. Once your settings are set to print on card tray properly, don't forget to save as quick format printing option so you don't have to remember settings and setup.
K**N
These are great but....
This tray works wonderfully, so I do want to give it props and five stars for functioning as it should. My ONLY issue with the dang J Tray is the lack of freaking instructions for it with a MacBook Pro! I searched far and wide, close and narrow and Googled the life out of what to do and I came up nearly emptied handed. It took me two hours of looking to figure out something that would have only taken 8 mins to explain. I've never used a J Tray before and the same day I got the Tray and pvc cards was the same day I got the printer. So I was trying to learn both, but the vast majority of the instructions available are for Windows. If you're having troubles like I was, I've attached a video on exactly what to do to print out your PVC ID cards. I printed out the samples from Brainstorm just so I'd know how to work it and now that I've figured it out, it only takes a couple minutes to set up and print. It’s frustrating that there are no clear instructions available for those of us who don’t know what they are doing. If you have a New MacBook Pro or any Mac that doesn't have the CD slot, there are other pieces that you will need to make this work. If you already downloaded all the drivers and what not, you have a Mac and you already have a pretty good idea of what you may be doing, here is a list of the things you will need: - Canon PIXMA MX922 - Canon Printer USB cord - USB-C to USB adapter - Inkjet PVC Cards - Canon J Tray
M**A
Quality ID cards for way less than true ID card printers
I needed to create a card that could sit behind a standard ID card. I started with cardstock which tore off in about 30 minutes. Then, I tried to laminate the cardstock and that lasted about a week. Third -- becuase I thought ID card printers were just completely unattainable but I neeed something more durable -- I tried to do a half solution. I printed onto mailing labels then stuck those onto some PVC cards. These unfortunately rubbed off in about a week (which for something as sensitive as QR codes would not do). This solution turned out to be really perfect. I bought a relatively cheap Canon MG7120 printer ($59 for Black Friday) and then with this adapter and the cards, I was able to print pristine QR code cards in a matter of minutes. I can only attest to black/white so far since that's all I've done, but wow! They dry instantaneously, too, so no worries about smearing. I didn't quite understand how it would work, but if you go to their tutorials website it all makes a lot more sense: htp://www.brainstormid.com/learn Total spent = $100. Quite a far cry from the minimum $1000 ID card printers.
P**R
Excellent for Canon Pixma
Download the free version of Adobe Acrobat (absolutely required for Windows printing), and follow the printing instructions on the product website. It's not a straightforward process but I only got it wrong once (didn't use Acrobat lome the instructions said) and the second print came out immaculate on an official-looking ID sized card. I'm using a Canon Pixma MX922.
A**R
inkjet pvc card tray
These are great cards. We were paying over $7 per card for id cards, we are a non profit organizations. These cards are a god send, they saved us lots of money, even with the cost of buying a printer and ink and the tray needed for printing. Everything works perfectly together
S**P
One time use?
This worked one time. Then one of the metal squares that I guess it uses to index the tray fell off somewhere inside the printer. So now the tray doesn't work and now there's a piece of loose metal floating around inside the printer which can't be good for it either.
A**F
Parfait ! L’objet est arrivé à temps et il est conforme à la description ! Merci.
V**.
I used for Canon MX922, no problem at all.
M**E
Thanks!
A**R
Awesome Possum...
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