

🏷️ Elevate your labeling game—where industrial strength meets wireless freedom!
The LABELWORKS Epson LW-PX800 is a compact, wireless industrial label maker designed for professional environments. It prints high-resolution, durable labels up to 1.5 inches wide on a wide variety of tape types, including heat shrink tubes and vinyl. Featuring wireless connectivity for multi-user access, fast 35 ppm print speed, and seamless Excel batch import, it streamlines large-scale labeling tasks. PEELGuard technology extends label life by preventing peeling and curling. Ideal for manufacturing, warehousing, and maintenance, it comes with a lifetime warranty for unmatched reliability.
















| ASIN | B08JRJVL6P |
| Are Batteries Included | No |
| Color | Black |
| Compatible devices | PC |
| Connectivity Type | Wi-Fi |
| Customer Reviews | 4.1 4.1 out of 5 stars (31) |
| Date First Available | 3 January 2021 |
| Dual-sided printing | No |
| Form Factor | Printer |
| Included components | Label Printer, AC Adapter, USB Cable, Label Editor Software, Guide, Standard Industrial Tape Cartridge |
| Item Weight | 1.81 Kilograms |
| Item model number | LW-PX800 |
| Manufacturer | LABELWORKS |
| Maximum Media Size | 1.5 inches |
| Maximum black and white print resolution | 360 dpi |
| Maximum color print resolution | 300 dpi |
| Print media | Labels |
| Product dimensions | 11.4D x 13.9W x 15.3H centimeters |
| Sheet size | 1.5 inches |
| Warranty type | lifetime warranty |
J**E
I got this primarily to print labels for custom rod building. Overall, I like it, but there were some points of frustration (mostly for errors on my part). Setting this up can take some time. I wanted to use the wireless capabilities for this but that is not a fast process. Part of it involves pressing the Connect button on the back of the printer which will then allow your computer to connect to it. I had, wrongly, assumed that this would be a fast process. I blew through the software installation props not reading them closely, and it would not find the printer. Frustrating! So after the third or fourth time trying to connect, I read the prompts and the key, as best as I can tell, is after you hit the Connect button, the power light will start flashing. This apparently is the printer initializing to connect. It can take a couple of minutes to do that. Once it stops flashing, you can move on and when I did that, it connected just fine. After that, it's pretty easy. The software is pretty intuitive. I wanted it because I wanted to print graphics on the labels for the rods and wanted the higher resolution to print graphics. The labels look great and importantly, as very thin, so they should go on the rods easily and be able to be epoxied down. The only other weird thing that happen with this is that the Label Editor software seemingly uninstalled itself. I'd guess that's more my computer than the software, although it was a pain to get the software back on my computer. In all, it's a very nice printer. I feel like it's expensive for what it does, especially when there are other label makers out there that are much cheaper, but the higher resolution, wirelessness, and versatility are what sold it for me.
A**R
Amazing label maker……
M**A
It is very simple and easy to use. It can create the label in short time using the mobile of laptop. I need to label the sample with marker and the written word used to remove easily. With this label I can label the sample and store for long time and easily notice in future.
A**E
Expensive, but worth it. The cartridges are VERY expensive, but go to the website for the widest variety; labelworks.epson.com
M**E
If you plug it in, install the Windows software, and follow the instructions to the letter, you'll be printing labels without a lot of hassle. However, the whole ecosystem is proprietary from start to finish. The printer only communicates over UDP (why not TCP?) using an undocumented protocol. To configure the network settings, you need to use Windows software and connect it to the USB cable. The power adapter uses one of those annoying male plugs on the end, which is, simply put, a cash grab. Epson also regularly charges $30-50 a cartridge, where generic cartridges are ~$17 for a 5 pack. So in other words, if you don't ask questions and stay within their ecosystem, you'll be fine. If you are looking to talk to this labeler via IPP over a network, have some kind of web front-end (like most IoT devices like these), add it to CUPS, use open software like gLabels, or anything else that you'd expect a typical printer to be capable of, this is not the device you want.