754 (4-color) | 755 (5-color) | 756 (6-color) | 758 (8-color) | 7510 (10-color)


Six-up or three-quarter size? Which do you call the 23” x 29” sheet size? Ryobi 750 Series press owners call it their ADVANTAGE! Many a press buyer contemplating an investment in a press in this size range has settled for a 20 x 29”, a 20” x 28”, a 20” x 27” or even a 20” x 26” press. What they have purchased has been a “me too” press. They have little or no advantage over the myriad of printers in the same market who are competing with the same 4-up presses. For about the same price they could have had a six-up 750 Series from Ryobi and could have had the ADVANTAGE of being one and one half times as productive as any of those 4-up printers they compete with day in and day out. The good news is, it’s not too late for you. We’ve got a 750 Series Ryobi with your name on it.

Aside from the six-up ADVANTAGE, the 750 allows you to print 11” x 17” three up via a dutch cut for four-page signature work. Moreover three panel 11” x 25” ½” jobs can be run both sides in one pass via work and tumble. Are you losing long run bids? Are you losing book work? At 80% capacity, the 750 can produce 576,000 8 1/2” x 11” sheets in one eight-hour shift. Your neighbor’s four-up press will only produce 384,000 in that same eight-hour shift. While you are producing twelve pages in two passes, he is only producing eight. Which sheet size do you feel offers the real ADVANTAGE?

As feature rich as our 680 series is, this press has a history back to 1999 and has found itself in high-volume, highly demanding printing plants across the USA. From two colors to ten colors and everything in between (including perfecting, aqueous and UV coating) the 750 is exceeding expectations for print quality, productivity, cost of ownership and reliability. It is no wonder this press was the star of PRINT 05 in Chicago. Sales of the 750 Series are brisk to say the least. Isn’t it time you had an ADVANTAGE in your pressroom?