Entries Tagged 'Printers Reviews' ↓
June 18th, 2011 — Printers Reviews

Author Simon Williams
The Stylus DX4400 is conventionally styled, but unconventionally coloured in slate grey. With a straight-through paper path from back to front and a fold-down, telescopic output tray, there’s nothing unusual about the physical style, either. According to Epson, the input tray can hold up to 80 sheets of 60gsm paper, but who uses 60gsm paper on a standard basis? We managed to load 80 sheets of standard 80gsm office paper.
The spec sheet for this printer claims print speeds of 25ppm for black print and 13ppm for colour, but even in draft mode these speeds are way off what you are likely to see in real life. Our five-page text print took 2 minutes 9 seconds to total, giving a speed of 2.3ppm and the black text and colour graphics print, also five pages, took a fairly exceptional 6:09, just .81ppm. Both these speeds are singularly unimpressive, with the colour print being 1 of the slowest we’ve observed.
The output quality is not too poor given the cost of the printer but black characters still come out a lot more jagged than most of the DX440′s rivals. Solid colours are dense with good registration and small bleed of black text over coloured backgrounds. Variegated colour is also quite reasonable for this class of machine.
An A4 copy came out very a bit paler than the original but colours were still solid even although they had been lighter. Our photographic print, on Epson’s Premium Glossy photo paper, reproduced nicely with smooth gradations of colour and fine detail in the foreground. Colours were generally natural, though quite a bit of detail was lost in shadowed areas.
Epson printers have never been recognized for their quietness. Although printing itself is only a small noisier than its principal competitors, the Stylus DX4400 rattles away when feeding paper, giving a peak noise reading of 70dBA. This is genuinely really loud and noisier than most printers, of any technology type, we’ve tested before.
This is a four-colour printer utilizing 4 separate cartridges. You can replace them individually as they run out and this gives good print economy. The cheapest way to get cartridges is in a 4 pack, which sells for around £13.68, giving page expenses of 2.22p for black and four.85p for colour pages.
These expenses are really competitive, even with printers costing considerably far more, and are fairly a lot best-in-class compared with the entry-level all-in-ones we’ve tested lately.
Verdict
The Stylus DX4400 is a mixed bag. Epson has managed to create a good-looking, functional all-in-one at a extremely competitive cost, while still offering individual ink cartridges and low running expenses. Print good quality is also reasonable and the printer handles photo printing surprisingly well for a machine not geared particularly to photos.
Where it misses out is on print speed and noise level. It takes a lengthy time to create a page and could by no means be described as quiet thanks to Epson’s trademark paper feed mechanism.
Printers reviews
June 14th, 2011 — Printers Reviews

Consumer Reviews
Software program is significant problem3
Setting up this printer was easy and it printed the test pages well, but, the software program fought with other programs on my pc and slowed down my whole method. It took over 30 minutes to install it. Then as soon as installed I could print from all of my programs except anything that had a word processor in it – even notepad. It would take from 2 to 8 minutes for my print menu to even come up. I also tried one more HP printer the day before and had the exact same problems.
I also want to mention that I was on the phone with tech support for three hours and fully uninstalled and reinstalled the software which created no difference. His suggestion was for me to back up my personal computer and reinstall windows. I did not take his advise.
Rather, I am a proud owner of the Cannon MX850. It installed effortlessly and functions wonderfully with my computer…no problems. I have usually liked HP, but their software program has produced me switch.
Just as an FYI, I am running on Windows XP on a 3 year old machine with a lot of operating memory etc.
Other than the fact that I could not print from word processors, the printer did well with photo printing – excellent quality.
I like it…4
I got a wonderful deal for $ 167. Couldn’t ask for much more.
Pros:
> Wireless works perfectly fine. My printer is in other room connected to my wireless network and print from anywhere in the network.
> All in one feature – Printer, Scan, Copy, Fax…all at home…
> the internet based printer admin interface is excellent too…
Conz:
> Makes some noticeable noise and shakes my table (its not too powerful although) while it is printing. Its in other room so it doesn’t matter considerably for me…
Other points:
> You ought to assign fixed IP to your printer…otherwise if it is dynamically assigned then everytime you switch your printer off it gets a new ip even though your pc (which I do not shutdown at all) still holds the old ip…so you have restart the program to make it choose the new ip…but i didn’t face any problem after I assigned a fixed ip (great that there is an simple alternative to do that in the printer) to the printer…
> I tried all choices and other then FAX everything worked fine for me…FAX somehow didn’t function the 1st time…i still have to attempt it again…must have one thing wrong…
HP C7280 is excellent…software is not so great4
The HP C7280 is fantastic. It’s rapidly, clean and makes extremely clear prints/copies.
The C7280 is fast and has fantastic range when making use of wireless printing. I also enjoy viewing the photos on the modest screen prior to printing to make sure I actuall want it or not. It is excellent. I extremely suggest it.
THe only issue, and its a Big issue is the software. It’s terrible. Following becoming on the phone with HP tech support and downloading and reloading the software program, it was confusing, frustrating and it was virtually sufficient for me to take it back. It crashed my windows XP where I had to get it reinstalled. This is a Significant problem and HP actually wants to resolve it. I finally got it to work after downloading other fix it files from the HP internet site. (I wish I had the link to share). Soon after a week, I finally got it working on 1 of my computers. This pc would get at least four stars out of 5 if the software was simpler to install and didn’t screw with my operating program.
Printers reviews
May 31st, 2011 — Printers Reviews

For $ 130, you might not be surprised to locate print, scan, and copy capabilities in HP’s OfficeJet J4680 multifunction ink-jet printer. But the J460 also has a built-in fax machine, wireless connectivity, and a 20-sheet auto document feeder. HP boasts about the J4680’s 20-page-per-minute black-and-white print speeds and 17-page-per-minute color print speeds, but in our actual-world tests, the printer proved to be one thing of a slowpoke.
Setting up the printer was effortless sufficient: just attach the included USB and power cables, install the software program and print cartridges, and you’re ready to go. There were also a couple of cool setup features I hadn’t seen just before in an HP multifunction device. Initial, when running the software installer, you’re asked if you want to install HP’s Inkjet Utility Widget, which runs in OS X’s Dashboard. The widget gives you a fast glimpse of your ink supply and makes it possible for you to launch the regular HP printer maintenance utility software program. Second, after you install the print cartridges, the printer asks to insert a sheet of paper so that it can print out an alignment page. In itself, this isn’t unusual, but several printers require you to analyze this test output your self, selecting which bars line up very best and then utilizing the printer’s on-board menus to input that info. With the J4680, you just lay the printed sheet on the scanner bed and press OK. The scanner reads the sheet and makes any required adjustments.
The J4680 uses two ink cartridges, one black and 1 tri-color (cyan, magenta, and yellow), that claim to yield 200 and 360 prints, respectively. Replacement cartridges price $ 15 for the black and $ 25 for the tri-color. HP also sells a high-yield black print cartridge at $ 28, it costs a little less than two standard-yield black cartridges, and promises to print 700 pages before running out of ink. Unlike some HP printers, the J4680 doesn’t provide support for a photo color ink cartridge.
It was simple to set up the J4680 to connect to the office wireless network. The printer showed up as a Bonjour printer automatically, and you can join individual wireless networks via HP’s Control Center software program on your Mac. That positive beats configuring the device utilizing the printer’s on-board menus and controls, like I’ve had to do with other multifunction printers. I was also pleasantly surprised to find that push scanning from the J4680 to my MacBook over an Airport network worked seamlessly as properly, as many printers we’ve tested in the past either skip support for network scanning or give it via some tedious workaround.
We printed a wide selection of test pages on the J4680 and found the prints to be of great top quality. Prints of our standard Photoshop test files had been a little over-saturated, and a bit too red all around. The J4680 doesn’t provide an ICC color profile, so you’re greater off letting the printer manage the color management. The 4-color printer also lacked the smooth, continuous tone you may find from a six-ink photo printer, but the results had been acceptable. Text, when printed in Normal or Very best modes on plain paper, earned a Great rating. Text was clean, with sharp letters legible at even extremely tiny point sizes but when text was printed with a colored background, there was a tendency for bleeding that looked messy.
Print times were slow. It took 19 seconds to print a 1-page black-and-white Microsoft Word document 1 minute and 47 seconds for a 10-page text document over 4 minutes for our Photoshop test file and a whopping 22 minutes to print our 4-page PDF document at Very best quality (not the greater Maximum DPI mode also obtainable) on plain paper.
The J4680 also features a 1,200-dpi, letter-sized flatbed scanner. It can produce 48-bit scans, but only after you discover and enable that feature deep in the HP scanning software’s preferences. That’s my greatest complaint about the scanning software: most settings are hidden up in the menu bar pull-downs, requiring a search for the correct controls to customize your scan. Once I figured out the software program, I was able to get very good top quality scans that were color accurate with lots of detail. I was able to scan into Photoshop CS3, as properly as directly from HP’s scanning software. You can choose to scan a document to OCR in TextEdit, scan to PDF, scan to e-mail, or scan to file.
I tested the copier with a selection of documents, from pictures to magazine covers to text documents. The copies of photos had a slight yellow tint, but the magazine cover looked very great. A copy of a grayscale test page was a small light but maintained a good quantity of detail. You can place the original either on the scanner’s flatbed or in the automatic document feeder, which can hold up to 20 sheets of paper. It took about 4 minutes to copy a 10-page black-and-white Word document. The J4680 doesn’t offer two-sided printing or scanning.
The J4680 also features a built-in fax machine that worked as advertised, and the included automatic document feeder takes the hassle out of sending multi-page faxes.
Printers reviews
May 29th, 2011 — Printers Reviews

Posted by Becky McCray at 11:28 AM
The Product: Lexmark 1400 series wireless printer
Short and Sweet Review: It works, with out wires!
Who should use it: Tiny businesses with existing wireless networks.
Mike Phan with Rocket XL sent it to me for a review. I set it up in my residence office, where I have a basic wireless network. Setup was as straightforward as any other recent printer I’ve bought.
A couple of points caught my attention.
Single use ink cartridges
The ink cartridges are licensed for one use only. This is marked on the cartridge, as properly as mentioned in the installation method. Good news: they consist of pre-paid return mailers.
Power cord
The power cord is a bit unusual. There is one cord from the wall to the little transformer box, then instead of another cord from there to the printer, the transformer plugs into the back of the printer.
Auto Alignment
I’ve had printers prior to that auto align, but my last several HP All-in-One’s didn’t. I forgot that I really like that!
Wireless is Good
I did want to use a USB cable (included in the box!) to do the initial setup. Following that, I unplugged the cable, and it works perfectly wireless-ly. I really like printing from my laptop, from anywhere on the network, and now I’m contemplating where it makes the most sense to setup the printer. Anywhere there is power and it can get signal, it will work.
This printer would be a great fit for modest or home businesses that have a wireless network. The flexibility of placing the printer anywhere is a useful feature.
Printers reviews
May 21st, 2011 — Printers Reviews

HP Laserjet 1022nw Printer prints text, images, and graphics smoothly with the 266MHz processor and 8MB of memory. HP Laserjet 1022nw Printer works actually rapidly as it prints at a speed of up to 19 pages per minute. HP Laserjet 1022nw Printer economizes on the use if time. The 1st page emerges in less than 8 seconds. It gives you the supply to work wireless.
You can put the printer anywhere in the wireless network environment information travels at up to 54 Mbps across up to 100′ (30.five m). There is a light on the control panel ensuring that you are connected wirelessly. HP Laserjet 1022nw Printer automatically adjusts the optimal print top quality with HP’s Smart printing technology. It can print complicated documents without difficulties via the Hi-Speed USB 2. connectivity.
It can save space with the compact design suitable for desk, shelf, or other convenient spot. The printer can load diverse types of media in the 250-sheet input tray and 10-sheet priority input tray. HP Laserjet 1022nw Printer prints on a variety of media like plain paper up to legal size, envelopes, transparencies, card stock, postcards, vellum, rough paper, and labels. It can manage remotely with the HP embedded Internet server. At the exact same time, it prints securely with the Wi-Fi protected access via WPA pre-shared key.
With this, you have facility of toner replacement from HP SureSupply, which enables you to obtain alerts when a cartridge is low for it monitors for its remaining life. You can also thereby appreciate easy on the internet ordering or check stock and prices at nearby stores for HP Laserjet 1022nw Printer. For the promotion of HP Laserjet 1022nw Printer, HP presents exclusive presents and rewards discounts on HP ink, toner, and paper. You will be given the privilege to shop from a list of customized printing supplies and get totally free next-day shipping with its My Print Rewards program.
HP supplies award-recognized soon after sales support. You will get peace of mind with the 1-year limited warranty with HP’s renowned Total Care service and support. It has been recognized as consistently supplying An Outstanding Customer Service Expertise by J.D. Power and Associates. You can also rely on printing excellence. PC Magazine has designated HP as a Reader’s Option for 14 years in a row. There is a 24×7 toll no cost number that offers you answers to all your queries.
For acquiring after sales item supports for HP Laserjet 1022nw Printer, you will have to select your operating method from among Microsoft Windows Vista, Microsoft Windows Vista (64-bit), Microsoft Windows XP, Microsoft Windows Server 2003, Microsoft Windows 2000, Microsoft Windows ME, Microsoft Windows 98, Mac OS X and Linux. You can register yourself with HP and will get several assists and after sale services for the item.
Printers reviews
May 17th, 2011 — Printers Reviews

The Propaganda
The Canon Selphy CP510 sits in the middle of their compact photo printer range. It’s supposed to provide the greatest value printing in the range, at 22p a print. Becoming a dye-sublimation printer, it feeds the photo through many times as it layers the colours (in fact, half the fun is seeing your photo emerge yellow, then red, then.. no? Not for you?). It supports Pictbridge, as properly as having a USB connector really should you want to print from your computer.
The Good
Setting up the printer is straightforward, in spite of the fact that it comes with an instruction book thicker than War and Peace due to it becoming translated into every thing from Finnish to Klingon. When it comes to connecting the camera, Canon cameras are predictably simple, as they fit with the neat retractable Mini USB cable that emerges from inside the printer. Canon IXUS Wireless cameras also come with a dongle to do away with the require for wires altogether, even though this is not an option you can get with the printer.
Printing time is approximately 60 seconds per photo – considerably quicker than many competitors. And the print quality itself is very good, with colours showing up vividly and outlines, for the most part, sharp.
The Poor
The bad stuff is basically relating to all the issues the CP510 is missing. There is no screen for previewing or manipulating your photos prior to printing and no card slots whatsoever, generating it via cable or bust (no very good if your cable is languishing somewhere in the rats nest you have created under your desk). The Mini USB cable supplied won’t fit many cameras, including Sony and Fuji. It also only comes with five pieces of printing paper, and I can envision a lot of an excited consumer has got property, only have to make some extremely tough choices on which five photos deserve the printing honour. For the most part, these functions are available on the greater spec models in the range, as this is their spending budget £50 model.
The Truth
It all depends on the value of speed. If any longer than 60 seconds per print is going to drive you insane, this is the printer for you. But, compared to competitors, the Selphy CP510 does not shine. For instance, the Epson PictureMate 100 costs the same, but comes with a preview screen, 12 diverse memory card slots and a number of choices for adjusting your photo prior to print. A fairly obvious option then…
Printers reviews
May 16th, 2011 — Printers Reviews

By Kara Soos
Review Roundup: Zink Technologies Shrinks the PoGo Printer Into the Palm of Your Hand
The name Polaroid conjures images of excited young young children shaking blank pictures until the film magically exposes (or if you’re younger images of that Outkast video). Fast forward thirty odd years and thanks to the magic of asset sales, the name Polaroid lives on even though the original business no longer does. This time around, Polaroid is selling a portable photo printer that fits in the palm of your hand — PoGo. No shaking needed.
The teeny PoGo printer marks the first to use of Zink’s zero-ink technologies, which we very first covered way back in January 2007. To put it merely, the Zink technology embeds dye crystals proper on the paper, which the printer head heats up and brings to life. With the PoGo, you can print photos from your camera phone via Bluetooth — or from a PictBridge-enabled digital camera via USB.
Now that the PoGo printer has lastly shipped, we felt compelled to report on all the reviews out there, both amateur and professional.
PC World: Youngsters and Actual Estate Agents Will Enjoy It
“In the end, the PoGo’s appeal lies in its mobility and its near-instantaneous picture production. Teens and tweens, in particular, will enjoy this feature and casual users and organization folks (for example, real-estate agents who want to print pics of specific rooms for clients without delay) might appreciate PoGo’s portability,” says Melissa J. Perenson of PC World.
Gizmodo: We Hate Most Gadgets, But We Like the PoGo
“[T]he pictures are dry as soon as they develop, and you By no means replace ink or toner cartridges. The prints are also waterproof, tear and fade resistant, and have an adhesive backing so you can stick them anywhere,” comments Benny Goldman of Gizmodo.
Stuff.Television: Fun Although Flawed
“The print quality is not the sharpest we’ve observed, but for pure convenience and, dare we say it, enjoyable, it is great value. Even the paper … is a lot less expensive than conventional instant film,” writes Stuff.Tv.
RISMedia: Bluetooth Phone Compatibility Not Complete (No iPhone)
“I was disappointed that it does not function with all Bluetooth phones. Jon Pollock, a Polaroid spokesman, said the PoGo is compatible with about 80 percent of the Bluetooth phones sold throughout the past two years. I tested it with 11 phones and was able to print from only five of them. One phone that is noticeably absent from the list of compatible phones on Polaroid’s Web internet site is the Apple iPhone,” lamented Etan Horowitz of RISMedia.
Wired: Uhm, We Told You Not to Shake It
“The heat-sensitive paper is properly, rather sensitive. Following my colleague printed out a pic of a Ferrari, he instinctively began shaking it to make it develop. Despite the fact that the image was totally baked, the tight grip of his thumb and forefinger on the thermal paper truly discolored it slightly. Word to the wise: If you scoop up a PoGo, maintain your shots away from moderate heat,” advises Daniel Dumas of Wired.
Pixelated Image: Short Battery Life But 1 of a Kind
“Battery life could be longer, print good quality could be a lot better, but if you Need to have something like this — there is absolutely nothing else like it,” acknowledges David duChemin of Pixelated Image.
jC Photography: The PoGo Has Hipster Written All Over It
“Feel of this as actually the new Polaroid print … unexpected saturated colors with imperfect photos in general. I’d say its imperfections in terms of image top quality is aesthetically cool,” according to JJ Casas of jC Photography.
Tracy and Matt’s Blog: Photos in Your Pocket
“[The PoGo prints] aren’t going to compete with specialist photographic services or even the bigger inkjet photo printers that you can acquire these days but you have to bear in mind this is a printer that fits in your pocket! When you take into account that you can generate prints practically anywhere and any time then you start to see where this small gadget will find its marketplace,” concedes Matt of Tracy and Matt’s Blog.
Printers reviews
May 16th, 2011 — Printers Reviews

Absolutely nothing makes you feel more comfortable than realizing your printer was produced by a company named, “Brother.” The fraternal bond between you and printer forms immediately upon its buy, and you really feel that no matter what bully forces you to alter the ink cartridge or get paper jams — Brother will get you out of it.
The Brother MFC-8440 is advertised as being a 5-in-1 multifunction laser printer that faintly resembles a hammerhead shark if a hammerhead shark could print and scan and fax and copy.
The reason we say “advertised” is simply because, no matter how tough we look, we can’t locate the fifth option — and we can’t really envision what a fifth alternative would be. Yes, it scans, yes, it faxes, yes it prints and yes it copies — which makes four. What could that fifth choice possibly be? Text messaging? Bluetooth? Teleportation?
We’re not positive. But what it does do it does nicely — and at the low price (properly, fairly low — much more on this later), it does become a far more or much less worthy addition to your residence or office.
The printer is a 21-ppm laster printer that can print up to 2400 x 600 dpi resolution — it is also an up to 21-cpm legal-size digital copier (which can make enlargements and deductions from 25 to 400 percent), a fax machine with PC capability, and a 9,600 x 9,600 dpi flatbed scanner.
It’s a good all-in-one machine with a mysterious fifth feature (figure the feature out! Enjoyable for the entire family members!) — and there are only two issues. Brother, as opposed to the fraternal connection we all expected, has awful, awful support. It is the equivalent of you asking your brother for aid and him putting you under a laundry basket and sitting on it. Or, say, him waking you up in the middle of the night to tell you you are all going to Disneyland, and when you pack your points he says he was kidding and goes back to bed…
…so, yes. Poor support.
Also, as opposed to numerous other printers, this one uses a combined toner and drum unit — meaning if 1 or the other runs out or breaks — you have to get the combo pack to replace it, meaning in the end, you’ll be paying very a bit more than you expected you would be.
It is, even so, a good and fairly low cost printer (and fax, scanner, copier) — and if you have the income to afford the cartridge/drum unit — you won’t be disappointed.
Points That Make It Special:
* PC and Mac compatible.
* Parallel and USB interfaces.
* Prints, copies, scans, and faxes — a five-in-1 printer! (What?!).
* Up to 21 ppm print speed.
* Up to 2,400 x 600 dpi print resolution.
* Up to 21 cpm copy speed — permits you to reduce/enlarge 25% to 400%.
* Fax forward and paging — with up to 390 broadcast locations.
* Mysterious fifth feature permits you to control all human life.
Printers reviews
May 15th, 2011 — Printers Reviews

All-in-one inkjet multifunction device
23 November 2006 – The main attraction of any all-in-1 device is merely a matter of size, and in this regard the MFC-660CN does not disappoint at just 468 x 370 x 180mm and weighing 8.5kg.
We can remember having a fax machine that was bigger, and heavier, than this just a few years ago! The secondary attraction is hinted at in the name, that multi-functionality, and once once more satisfaction is guaranteed here as you get a full colour inkjet printer and photo printer with network capability and memory card readers, that network facility extending to the flatbed scanner and standalone fax machine functionality. Then there’s the photocopying, the hands free telephone and digital answering machine to contemplate.
Yes, it does all of these points, but it doesn’t do any of them with a sense of superiority. That is the price you pay for convenience, and at around £175 you would be hard pressed to come up with separate devices for less that would come anywhere near the levels of performance found here.
But, and it actually is an opera diva sized but, there are considerably faster inkjets, much higher quality photo printers, significantly a lot more fully featured answering machines, and more flexible scanners.
Not that the MFC-660CN does anything particularly badly, you recognize. Black and white printing can reach a maximum 27 pages per minute, colour up to 22 pages. Colour photo printing is significantly, a lot slower and despite the claimed maximum 6000 x 1200dpi print resolution the outcomes of our photo prints were a tad disappointing, lacking in colour vibrancy compared to many standalone photo printers.
You do get a 20 sheet photo paper feeder, a 2.five-inch colour LCD for previewing images direct from the memory card (multi-card reader built-in) or camera (via PictBridge connection) and accessing menu functions. A good touch is the inclusion of a facility to print out thumbnail index sheets directly from a memory card.
The device is also network ready, which is nice, but not wireless which is a shame. And talking of shame, the 100 sheet paper capacity would have us screaming extremely speedily as it really doesn’t take long to get through that sort of volume even in a little home office.
The telephony is certainly adequate for this kind of environment, with an auto document feeding fax (up to 10 sheets) and a modem speed of 14,400, all with out the need for a PC to be running as this is a appropriate grown up standalone fax. The telephone itself has 80 speed dial slots and a digital answering machine all built-in, plus duplex speakerphone to allow both parties to be heard at the exact same time.
Other office functions are equally properly supported, so there is flatbed photocopying which allows for enlarging or decreasing of documents in 1% increments between 25 – 400%. The scanner will scan to e-mail, OCR, file or print with a maximum interpolated resolution of 19200dpi (600 x 2400dpi non-interpolated).
This Brother device uses single colour ink cartridges, so there is no wasteful throwing away of unused ink to pollute the environment which is good. A black cartridge will give around 500 pages @ five% coverage for £15, even though the Cyan, Magenta and Yellow cartridges offer 400 for £8.50 at the same coverage rate.
But in spite of all this, truth be told we would rather sacrifice a little table space and have a far better photo printer, a decent laser for documents, and a fully featured cordless telephone answering combo. Trouble is, we wouldn’t have anywhere to put the flatbed scanner then…
VERDICT
Falls into the jack of all trades but master of none category, however for the residence office it remains an appealing space saving option and provides excellent value for funds.
Printers reviews
May 9th, 2011 — Printers Reviews

Canon PIXMA MP800 AIO printer
Reviewed by: rmwitt03, Jan 9, 2006
Strengths: big viewscreen, slide & negative adapters, duplexer, dual paper path, print and scan top quality
Weaknesses: flimsy paper tray, big footprint, not network capable
Summary: Wonderful PRINTER! I looked at a selection of printers, but narrowed it down to either this one, the Epson RX620/700 or the HP 3310. Truly wanted wireless connectivity, but discovered that NONE of the wireless (either integral or print server) will function with scan capability. For the cash, the Canon was my final answer.
PRINT & SCAN Good quality – Exceptional! Canon print top quality is frequent information, and this printer is no exception. IMHO, this beats out the RX620 and HP printers. Even so, this expenses much more than the RX620. If price is a factor, you may take a look at the MP500. It has the very same print high quality, but the scan quality is a small bit less and it doesn’t have the slide & negative adapters. I have a lot of old slides from my days with a 35mm, and want to be able to digitize them, so this was an additional selling point for the MP800.
DUAL-PAPER PATH – whilst the lower paper tray appears rather flimsy, I don’t expect to be utilizing it regularly. I will load the lower tray with photo paper, thus I won’t have to switch paper back and forth, I’ll just have to select the lower tray when I want to print photos. Nifty!
DUPLEXER – I had this feature with an old HP printer I had and loved it. Whilst it’s straightforward enough to duplex manually, it’s a nice feature to have to do automatic double-sided printing. Time will tell regardless of whether this function jams the paper frequently, which was a major drawback with my old HP.
The printer is massive and bulky, which is a bit of a disappointment. The next model up from Canon has a sleeker appearance, but is still really big. Didn’t feel it was worth the additional $ $ . My greatest complaint is that the printer does not have an Ethernet connection for networks. On top of that, to use the printer wirelessly with my laptop, the BU-20 Bluetooth adapter is grossly expensive.
All in all, great photo and text printing and copying for a very good mid-range cost. Canon ink cartridges are reasonably priced (as opposed to HP). The control panel is clean, though I wish it didn’t stick out so far.
Canon MP800 Multi-Function Printer
Reviewed by: drpepper1, Oct 10, 2006
Strengths: Superb photo high quality, film/slide adapters, huge color viewscreen, extremely stylish
Weaknesses: Large footprint, no fax capability, gets dirty effortlessly, fairly long warm-up time
Summary: Overall, the Canon MP800 multi-function printer is excellent. Printed photos look outstanding and this printer is able to scan slides and film with the included adapters. The printer is also capable of scanning documents at 2400 dpi and copying documents. A memory card slot accepts CompactFlash, Memory Stick, Memory Stick PRO, Microdrive, MultiMedia Card (MMC), SD Card, and SmartMedia. This makes it possible for you to print directly from the memory card.
The copier has several settings, such as quantity of copies, magnification, copy in color or black/white, and the ability to minimize the copy to fit 2 or four pages onto a single piece of paper. It is very straightforward to use, thanks to the numerous buttons on the printer and the simple to read, significant color viewscreen.
The scanner works quite nicely. One of the primary factors that I bought this printer was since of its ability to scan slides and film, which I am digitizing. The slide and film adapters are conveniently stored in the scanner’s lid. You can also scan documents and save them as PDFs, which I like. You do not need to have any PDF software to do this.
This printer looks actually good. It is black glossy plastic (you can see your reflection in it) and a matte silver. Regrettably, the black plastic attracts dust quite simply, so it requirements a lot of dusting if you like points clean. The printer takes about 30 seconds to warm up from being off, which is a bit long. Also, the rear paper tray is plastic and telescopes in to the printer when not used. This paper tray feels inexpensive and I make certain that I am careful when opening and closing it, as it seems like it could be easy to break. Regardless of these minor annoyances, although, I would extremely recommend this printer.
Printers reviews