Carbon copy paper ranges in cost, depending upon the amount purchased and the retailer purchased from. With that in mind, a company or individual can save money by buying in bulk.
In Colorado a reem costs about 5 to 10 dollars
A skid of copy paper typically weighs around 1,500-2,000 pounds, depending on the paper weight and quantity.
I just bought a copy 3 days ago, and for you to but it USED it is $43.99 {not including shipping+ handling.} for a new copy, it is around $60, because they no longer make SUPER PAPER MARIO... hope this helps
paper jams are $25 and are not paper
A standard pallet of copy paper typically weighs around 1,500 to 2,000 pounds, depending on the brand and type of paper.
i payed for a pattern key copy and it was £5.550
£7.99
1.50
approx. 51 lbs.
In 1964, a copy of The New York Times cost 10 cents.
Carbon paper is, in general, a thin paper coated on one side with a mixture of a pigment (originally powdered carbon) and wax. Impressions on the uncoated side are transferred by the pigment/wax to a piece of parer under the coated side making a copy on a second piece of paper. Simple enough. Carbon paper intended for typewriter use (see "typewriter" under antiques) uses a thinner tissue paper for the base and a thinner carbon layer to produce a crisper impression compared to pen & pencil carbon paper. Because of this, it has a shorter effective life. That is it takers fewer impressions before it wears out. Pen and Pencil carbon paper uses a slightly thicker paper sheet as a base and a much thicker coating of pigment/way on the business side. So, while the impression transferred to the copy may not be as crisp (it doesn't need to be) the pen and pencil carbon lasts longer. Short answer: it's thicker and lasts longer but doesn't produce as crisp an impression.
if you steal the paper & don't spend too much time on it - it will cost next to nothing.