You can most likely find a jobo with a print drum for relativley cheap, this has the advantage of use with film as well. I see unicolor drums/rollers all the time on craigslist, usually for pretty cheap too. But i wonder why you don't just use trays for B&W.
haha well my jobo most certainley is not falling to pieces, and parts are fairly easy to find, but a jobo is not what your looking for.
I think what you want is one of those machines that they use in a 1 hour photo lab. They are, however, designed for color processing, but you can probably figure out how to make it work.
The other option would be to just use inkjet paper and not worry about the whole thing.
What you are looking for is a benchtop roller processor and the one you suggest, the Printo, is good example and one of the most compact but like most of these machines parts supply would be difficult. I use a Fujimoto (may have been sold under the Jobo brand in US but it uses rollers not tubes and is dry to dry). I bought it new 10 years ago and apart from a couple of easily fixed electrical problems it has been faultless but I expect I could have problems if I needed something like a new circuit board. Things like pumps, motors and heater elements can usually be substituted and there are firms who refurbish rollers (I think there is a thread here on APUG about this).
If you manage to get a roller up and running properly, you will love being able to make a print dry to dry in about five minutes.
By the way, you say you only use RC and that's good - never put fibre paper through a roller machine because most are designed to exploit the natural rigidity of RC paper to guide it through the rollers. Fibre usually ends up in the bottom of the first tank or wrapped around a set of rollers.
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