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Re: Rhino 3000



The labels are pretty pricey - that's a serious downside . . . I knew I
should have ordered more.  Which type of labels do you use?

--
Bobby G.

"Tommy" <tommy at leesecurity dot net> wrote in message
news:4490b2c4$0$3650$88260bb3@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> I got one recently also and love it.
> --
>
>
>
> Robert Green wrote:
>
> > Just bought the Rhino 3000 label maker and I'm tickled pink.  Really a
> > well-thought out, easy to use labeller with lots and lots of extra
> > features like built-in serialization of labels, memory recall, built
> > in symbols and common room names, a nice black rubber boot, a
> > backlight LCD (very, very handy) and a keyboard layout similar enough
> > to a PC keyboard to be very easy to figure out.  I've applied labels
> > lengthwise to RG6 and then fished it through some very narrow
> > openings without scraping the labels off (I'm using their nylon
> > stock).
> >
> > All in all, a very neat tool.  I highly recommend it for cable
> > labeling as well as all sorts of other applications.  Works great on
> > my Hi-8 videotapes and lots of other places where I used to use
> > Sharpies.   I recently discovered, to my dismay, that for whatever
> > reason, the silver Sharpies will actually rub off RG6 and I had to
> > re-tone some cables to ID them again as a result.  With the Rhino,
> > all I do is type the one label and print as many copies as I need.
> > Sure's a lot faster than trying to write carefully on a round wire
> > with a fat-tip pen!
>
> --
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>




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