Imprimantes POS matricielles vs thermiques : un comparatif du coût total de possession pour le commerce et la restauration
Un guide d'achat pratique comparant les imprimantes de reçus matricielles et thermiques en termes de vitesse, durabilité, coût du papier, tolérance à la chaleur en cuisine et coût total de possession sur 5 ans. Avec matrice de décision téléchargeable.
La réponse en 90 secondes
For roughly 90% of front-of-house retail and hospitality, thermal wins on speed, maintenance and noise. For kitchens, multi-part forms, archival receipts and any environment over 60 °C, dot matrix is still the right answer. The question isn't which technology is better in the abstract — it's which one matches your deployment's specific constraints.
| Thermal | Dot Matrix | |
|---|---|---|
| Print speed | 250–300 mm/s | ~3–6 lines/s |
| Noise level | ~50 dB (quiet) | ~60–70 dB (clattery) |
| Multi-part forms | ✗ | ✓ |
| Heat-tolerant receipt | ✗ | ✓ |
| Long-term archival | ✗ | ✓ |
| Maintenance burden | Low | Higher (ribbons) |
| Front-of-house retail fit | Excellent | Acceptable |
| Kitchen-pass fit | Poor (paper darkens at ~70 °C) | Excellent |
Comment chaque technologie imprime réellement
The two technologies create marks on paper in fundamentally different ways, which is why their durability profiles diverge so sharply.
- Direct thermal printing uses a printhead with thousands of microscopic heating elements. The paper is coated with a leuco dye that turns dark when heated to ~70 °C. No ink, no ribbon, no toner — just heat and chemically active paper.
- Dot matrix (impact) printing uses an array of solenoid-driven pins that strike an inked ribbon against plain paper. The pins fire in dot patterns to form characters and graphics. Ink and paper are decoupled, so paper choice is unconstrained.
Vitesse, bruit et expérience utilisateur
A modern thermal POS printer (Epson TM-T88VII, Star TSP143IV, Bixolon SRP-380) prints at 250–300 mm/sec — about 6–8 standard receipts per second. A high-end dot matrix like the Epson TM-U220 prints at roughly 6 lines per second; a typical 20-line receipt takes 3–4 seconds end-to-end.
That difference compounds at peak. A queue of 10 customers at a busy lunch service experiences a thermal queue as “essentially instant” and a dot matrix queue as “noticeably waiting”. Coffee shops and quick-service retail almost always pick thermal for this reason alone.
Noise matters too. Dot matrix printers in a quiet boutique are conspicuous; in a busy café with espresso machines, less so. Kitchens — already noisy — don't care.
Durabilité et tolérance environnementale
The classic field experience: thermal printers are rated for clean, climate-controlled environments and quietly outlast their warranty. Dot matrix printers laugh at dust, heat and abuse but require ribbon changes and occasional pin-cleaning.
| Thermal | Dot Matrix | |
|---|---|---|
| Operating temp range | 0–45 °C | –10 to 50 °C+ |
| Tolerates dust / oil / steam | No (avoid kitchens) | Yes |
| Mean time between failures (typical) | ~360,000 lines | ~30 million lines (mechanism) |
| Printhead lifespan | 50–150 km of paper | 200–400 million characters |
| Receipt fades over time | Yes (months) | No (years) |
| Multi-part carbonless forms | ✗ | ✓ (up to 5 ply) |
Coût total de possession sur 5 ans
Headline price tags miss the real story. The cost-of-ownership analysis below assumes a typical retail station printing ~150 receipts per day, six days a week, for five years (≈ 234,000 receipts).
| Thermal (Epson TM-T88VII) | Dot Matrix (Epson TM-U220) | |
|---|---|---|
| Hardware (USD) | ~ $400 | ~ $300 |
| Paper, 5 years (~ 800 rolls) | ~ $400 (thermal rolls) | ~ $160 (plain paper) |
| Ribbons / consumables, 5 years | — | ~ $150 (ribbons every 4M chars) |
| Printhead replacement (1 cycle) | ~ $80 | ~ $120 |
| Cleaning supplies & labour | ~ $50 | ~ $100 (more frequent) |
| 5-year total | ~ $930 | ~ $830 |
| Cost per receipt | ~ $0.0040 | ~ $0.0035 |
The headline lesson: at typical retail volumes, the per-receipt cost difference is small (~ 12%). Thermal wins on speed, noise and operational simplicity; dot matrix wins narrowly on raw cost and on every non-cost factor that matters in kitchens.
Matrice de décision par type de déploiement
| Best fit | Why | |
|---|---|---|
| Front-of-house retail (clothing, electronics, gift) | Thermal | Speed at peak; quiet; minimal maintenance |
| Café / coffee bar (front counter) | Thermal | Speed; receipt aesthetics; low noise |
| Restaurant kitchen / pass / line | Dot matrix | Heat tolerance; oil-splash resistance; durable |
| Pharmacy / drugstore | Thermal + ledger | Speed for prescriptions; ledger printer for records |
| Auto repair / workshop | Dot matrix | Multi-part work orders; harsh environment |
| Large warehouse / industrial | Dot matrix or thermal-transfer | Long-life labels; multi-part receipts |
| Banking branch / counter receipts | Dot matrix or thermal-transfer | Multi-year archival requirement |
| Pop-up / mobile / market stall | Thermal (mobile, Bluetooth) | Battery-friendly; compact |
Modèles recommandés et pièces de rechange
The four printer families below cover ~80% of new SMB POS installs we see and have mature aftermarket parts ecosystems — printheads, platen rollers, cutters and ribbons all readily sourceable from quality aftermarket suppliers worldwide. For legacy IBM 4610 and Toshiba 6145 receipt printers (the workhorse of larger retail), see our dedicated Thermal Printhead Replacement Guide.
| Model | Type | Notes | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Epson TM-T88VII | Thermal | Industry workhorse; near-universal driver support | — |
| Star TSP143IV | Thermal | Network-friendly; popular with cloud POS systems | — |
| Bixolon SRP-380 | Thermal | Fast cutter; competitive aftermarket parts | — |
| Epson TM-U220 | Dot Matrix | The classic kitchen / impact receipt printer | — |
| Star SP742 | Dot Matrix | Auto-cutter, splash-resistant kitchen variant | — |
| Toshiba 6145 / SureMark 4610 | Thermal (POS) | Enterprise retail standard — see linked guide | — |
Questions fréquentes
Pourquoi la plupart des cuisines utilisent-elles toujours des imprimantes matricielles ?
À quel point une imprimante thermique est-elle plus rapide ?
Le papier thermique est-il vraiment plus cher que le papier ordinaire plus ruban ?
Les reçus thermiques s'effacent-ils avec le temps ?
Et les imprimantes à transfert thermique — où s'inscrivent-elles ?
Puis-je remplacer une imprimante matricielle de ma cuisine par un modèle thermique 'spécial cuisine' ?
Sources & lectures complémentaires
- Difference Between a Thermal and Dot-Matrix Printer — Hillside Electronics Corp
- Thermal Printing vs Dot Matrix Printing: Which is Right for Your Business? — Rugtek
- POS Printers: Thermal vs Dot-Matrix — Staples
- Understanding Thermal POS, Dot Matrix and Thermal-Transfer Receipt Printers — HPRT
- Thermal vs Matrix Printer Differences — Logiscenter EU
Guides associés
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Lire le guide →Imprimantes de reçus Bixolon comparées : SRP-350III vs SRP-330III vs SRP-Q300 (et les pièces qui s'usent)
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Pièces en vedette
Besoin des pièces mentionnées dans ce guide ?
Pièces OEM d'origine et alternatives testées en usine pour les systèmes IBM, Toshiba, NCR, Diebold, Wincor et Hyosung — avec expédition mondiale.



