Brother MFC-1810 MFP

By Trevor Tan
Digital Life, The Straits Times
Sunday, Jun 30, 2013

Looking for an economical all-in-one monochrome laser printer that can print, copy, scan and fax?

The Brother MFC-1810 might just be the answer.

Weighing about 8kg and standing almost as tall as a 1.5l soft drink bottle, it is a little bulky, with a footprint slightly bigger than a copy of Digital Life.

To feed paper into the printer, you have to pull down its lower front casing and extend a paper tray which holds up to 150 sheets of paper. This expands the device’s footprint by almost 40 per cent.

This printer is not going to win any beauty pageant. Predominantly grey with the front half bathed in black, it has a long control panel just under the auto document feeder (ADF) and scanner lid.

The control panel consists of the Power button, Fax function buttons and Mode keys on the left. The Menu keys, Dial pad, and Start and Stop buttons sit on the right. In between is the monochrome LCD that displays date, time and status.

I found it counter-intuitive to have the Fax function buttons sited so far from the Dial pad. It might be better for these buttons to be housed closer to the Dial pad so that users do not have to use one hand to press the hook button and the other to dial the fax number.

At the printer’s rear, you will find a USB port with a phone port for faxing. It does not have an ethernet port or built-in Wi-Fi.

For this review, the MFC-1810 was hooked up to an Apple MacBook Pro via a USB connection.

It takes about 25 seconds to power up the printer before it is ready to print or copy.

Printing 20 monochrome pages takes about 64.5sec, which is pretty quick and in line with the advertised speed of 20 pages per minute. It printed five 2MB JPEG images in 18.2sec. The printer’s ADF does not support duplex copying, meaning that you can copy only one side of the document at a time.

It takes 45.7sec to copy five single-sided documents using the ADF, which is an average of 9.1sec per document.

On the other hand, it takes 10sec to copy a document using the scanner.

The quality of text is crisp and sharp, good enough for your resume as long as it does not include printing your photo on it.

The graphics or pictures printed with this machine tend to look slightly pixellated, with tiny dots visible on close examination.

Each print costs only about 5 cents, which is about the rate of most office laser printers. But the drum can support up to 10,000 print-outs, making it highly economical.

The Brother MFC-1810 offers a quick and fuss-free monochrome fax, copy and printing solution for home office and school projects.

Its rating would have gone up a notch if it had built-in Wi-Fi for ease of connection.

Tech specs

Price: $238
Cartridge: $52 (TN-1000 toner, 1,000 pages), $32 (DR-1000 drum, 10,000 pages)
Print resolution: Up to 2,400 x 600 dots per inch
Speed: 20 pages per minute (black)

Rating

Features: 3
Design: 3
Performance: 4
Value for money: 4
Overall: 3

original article

Brother MFC-9340CDW MFP

BY TONY HOFFMAN

The Brother MFC-9340CDW is the most full featured of Brother’s three new laser-class (LED-based) multifunction printers (MFPs). It includes all the features of the Brother MFC-9330CDW$446.97 at pcRUSH.com and Brother MFC-9130CW$349.99 at OfficeMax, and like them, it has a 35-page automatic document feeder (ADF) for copying, scanning, and faxing multipage documents unattended. But it’s the only one whose ADF is duplexing, able to scan both sides of a two-sided document—on a single pass, no less.

Features
The MFC-9340CDW can print, copy, scan, and fax. It lets you fax either from your computer (PC Fax), or standalone faxing from the MFP’s touch-sensitive keypad without needing to be connected to a computer. As an LED printer, the MFC-9340CDW uses LEDs as a light source instead of lasers. LED printers are typically smaller than the equivalent laser printer; and this model is reasonably compact at 16.1 by 16.1 by 19.0 inches (HWD) and weighs 51.8 pounds.

This two-toned (off-white and black) MFP is boxy except for a swept-back front panel, which includes a 3.7-inch color touch screen. The backlit numerical keypad to the right of the touch screen only appears when you press Fax or other functions that require data entry. The only physical button is the start/stop button. A front-facing port lets you print JPEG and PDF files from (and scan files to) a USB thumb drive.

Paper capacity is 250 sheets, plus a one-page manual feed slot, with no additional paper options. It has an automatic duplexer for printing on both sides of a sheet of paper.

The MFC-9340CDW connects to a PC via a USB cable, or to a network via Ethernet or Wi-Fi. It also supports Wi-Fi Direct, which enables direct printing between compatible devices without needing to go through a WiFi network. It supports mobile printing via Apple AirPrint, Brother iPrint&Scan (which allows you to print from or scan to an Apple, Android, or Windows Phone mobile device as well as Kindle Fire), Google Cloud Print, and Cortado WorkPlace. I tested it over an Ethernet connection with the drivers installed on a computer running Windows Vista.

Brother MFC-9340CDW

Printing Speed 
The MFC-9340CDW printed out our business applications suite (as timed with QualityLogic‘s hardware and software) at 5.8 effective pages per minute (ppm), a reasonable speed considering its 23 page per minute rated speed for both color and monochrome printing, which should be about its print speed when printing text only. (Our test suite includes text pages, graphics pages, and pages combining text and graphics.) Its tested speed was a bit lower than the Brother MFC-9330CDW (6.8 ppm), also rated at 23 pages per minute, and the Brother MFC-9130CW (6.5 ppm), despite its rating of only 19 ppm.

The Editors’ Choice Dell 2155cn$439.99 at Dell, rated at 24 ppm for both color and black output, tested at 5.9 ppm, while the Canon Color imageClass MF8580Cdw$479.00 at B&H Photo-Video-Pro Audio, rated at 21 pages per minute for simplex printing and 10 ppm for duplex, tested at 4.9 ppm in its default duplex mode, and 6 ppm in ad-hoc testing using simplex mode.

Output Quality
Overall output quality was a touch below par. The MFC-9340CDW’s text quality was typical of laser-class printers, which is to say it’s very good. It’s suitable for any business uses short of those requiring very small fonts.

Graphics quality was on the low side of average for a color laser. Though colors were generally bold and well saturated, some darker backgrounds looked slightly faded or blotchy. I noticed traces of banding (a regular pattern of faint striations) in many of the illustrations. The printer had some trouble maintaining distinctions between similar shades of colors, with little differentiation between them. Graphics are suitable for basic PowerPoint handouts, though perhaps not to clients you’re seeking to impress.

Photo quality was slightly sub-par for a laser-class printer. Several prints showed mild tinting. Dithering (graininess) was evident in a few of the prints, and there was a loss of detail in some bright areas.

The Editors’ Choice Dell 2155cn provides good speed and better output quality than the MFC-9340CDW, though it only supports simplex scanning and lacks an auto-duplexer as well. The Canon Color imageClass MF8580Cdw has both of those items—and an even larger-capacity (50-sheet) duplexing ADF, plus better output quality than the MFC-9340 (though not the 2155cn).

The addition of a duplexing ADF makes the Brother MFC-9340CDW stand out among the three recently launched Brother MFPs. Its speed and output quality are solid if unspectacular, and it has a good feature set and range of connectivity choices. It’s best for a small or home office that does mostly text printing but has occasional need for color for casual or in-house use.

original article

Brother MFC-9130CW MFP

BY TONY HOFFMAN

The Brother MFC-9130CW$349.99 at OfficeMax is the junior of three LED-based multifunction printers (MFPs) that the company recently introduced , offering a sparser feature set than the Brother MFC-9330CDW$349.99 at OfficeMax orBrother MFC-9340CDW at a slightly lower price. If duplex (two-sided) printing, copying, scanning, or faxing—or printing directly from a USB key—isn’t important to your small or home office, it can save you some money over the other two MFPs.

The MFC-9130CW can print, copy, scan, and fax. It lets you fax either from your computer (PC Fax), or as a standalone unit without needing a computer. a USB thumb drive. It includes a 35-page automatic document feeder (ADF) for unattended copying, scanning, or faxing of multi-page documents of up to legal size. Unlike the MFC-9340CDW, it doesn’t support duplex scanning, copying, or faxing; although you can still scan two-sided documents, you’d have to feed it side by side, a page at a time.

 

The Brother MFC-9130CW is two-toned (off-white and gray) MFP is boxy except for a swept-back front panel, which includes a 3.7-inch color touch screen. The backlit numerical keypad to the right of the touch screen only appears when you press Fax or other functions that require data entry. The only physical button visible is the Start/Stop button.

The MFC-9130CW uses LEDs in place of lasers as a light source. LED printers are generally smaller than the equivalent laser printers, and this model is no exception: It’s reasonably compact at 16.1 by 16.1 by 19 inches (HWD) and weighing 49.6 pounds.

Paper capacity is 250 sheets, plus a one-page manual feed slot. Unlike the Brother MFC-9330CDW and Brother MFC-9340CDW, it lacks an automatic duplexer for printing on both sides of a sheet of paper. The driver provides on-screen guidance for manual duplexing.

The MFC-9130CW connects to a PC via a USB cable, or to a network via Ethernet or WiFi. It supports Wi-Fi direct, which allows for direct printing between compatible devices without the need to go through a WiFi network. It’s compatible with Apple AirPrint, Brother iPrint&Scan, Google Cloud Print, and Cortado WorkPlace for printing from mobile devices. I tested it over an Ethernet connection, with the drivers installed on a computer running Windows Vista.

HP LaserJet Pro 500 Color MFP M570dn

Printing Speed
I timed the Brother MFC-9130CW, rated at 19 pages per minute for both color and monochrome printing, on our business applications suite (as timed with QualityLogic‘s hardware and software) at 6.5 effective pages per minute (ppm), a decent speed for its price and rated speed. It was a little faster even than the Brother MFC-9340CDW, rated at 23 ppm, which tested at 5.8 ppm, and just slower than the Brother MFC-9330CDW, rated at 23 ppm, which I timed at 6.8 ppm. The Editors’ Choice Dell 2155cn $439.99 at Dell, rated at 24 ppm for both color and monochrome, was a touch slower, at an effective 5.9 ppm. The Ricoh Aficio SP C240SF$410.26 at pcRUSH.com, though rated at only 16 pages per minute for both color and mono, nearly matched the MFC-9130CW, at an effective 6.3 ppm.

Output Quality
Overall output quality for the MFC-9130CW was a touch below par. Text quality was right on par for laser-class printer, which is to say very good. It’s fine for any business use short of ones that require very small fonts, such as demanding desktop publishing applications.

Graphics quality was par for a color laser. Colors were generally well saturated; some dark backgrounds looked a bit blotchy. There was mild banding (a regular pattern of faint striations) in many of the illustrations. It did not do well in showing a gradient between darker and lighter tones, as the printed output showed little difference between them. Graphics are fine for in-house business use, including PowerPoint handouts, though I’d be hesitant to pass them to clients I was seeking to impress.

Photo quality was below par for a laser. Prints were on the light side, with some colors muted. A monochrome photo showed a slight tint. Several prints showed mild banding. Posterization (an abrupt shift in color where it should be gradual) was evident in one photo that tends to bring it out. Quality is fine for printing out images from Web pages or files, but that’s about all.

The MFC-9130CW costs a bit less than the two other MFPs that Brother released at the same time, the MFC-9330CDW and MFC-9340CDW, and it has a more modest feature set. In particular, it lacks the ability to automatically print, scan, copy, or fax two-sided documents, and eschews a port for a USB thumb drive. Its output quality, though comparable to its two “brothers”, falls short of that of the Editors’ Choice Dell 2155cn.

In short, the Brother MFC-9130CW has decent speed for a small-office, laser-class MFP. Its relatively low price comes at the expense of some features like duplexing. Its text quality is fine for nearly any business use. Graphics and photo quality, though fine for most in-house use, are short of what we look for in a printer suitable for outputting basic marketing materials and the like. It’s a good, cost-effective MFP for an office with an occasional need for color printing, provided that high-quality color output isn’t paramount.

original article

Canon ImageClass MF8580Cdw Color MFP

Canon delivers solid value with the Color ImageClass MF8580Cdw Color Laser Multifuction printer. For $599 list, the 8580 includes a two-sided color printer, copier, scanner and fax machine with network control and Ethernet, USB and Wi-Fi interfaces all standard. With its 40,000 page-per-month duty cycle, fast time-to-first-page and fairly high paper capacity, the 8580 is suited for the small office or busy department.

With its 17-by-19-inch footprint and 26-inch vertical clearance requirement, the 8580 stands a prominent figure. Its handsome black-and-putty design and sturdy look and feel instill confidence that the unit will well outlast its one-year warranty. For the cost-conscious home or small business (and who isn’t these days?), the Canon printer automatically enables two-sided printing and can tuck itself into a 2-watt sleep mode after a selectable number of minutes. It wakes itself for print jobs arriving over the network, but when making copies, a manual press of the sleeper button is in order.

Canon ships the unit with its four toner/fuser cartridges preinstalled, and sings the praises of combining the two functions to save on maintenance time and increase convenience. We found helpful the messages displayed on the color LCD control panel during setup, prompting for removal of protective tabs and toner tape materials before using the machine. Another nice touch was the panel’s offer to enable color correction and to connect via Wi-Fi, (both by default). We declined the first and accepted the second. We later enabled color correction, with mixed results.

Canon includes several useful features we’ve seen only on higher-end MFPs, including a secure print feature that holds print jobs until a unique number is entered at the control panel, and unique user IDs, which enable management to monitor usage and help limit costs and consumption. A trade-off is a lack of a PostScript driver; the unit supports PCL. The 8580 offers the usual scan-to-USB, server or email capability, and can accept walk-up print jobs through its front-panel USB port for printing without a computer. Mobile devices can output to Canon’s MFP using Apple AirPrint, Google Cloud Print and Canon’s own Easy-PhotoPrint for AndroidiOS and Windows 8 and RT.

The Canon (NYSE:CAJColor ImageClass MF8580Cdw Color Laser Multifunctionprinter is rated at a maximum rate of 21 pages per minute when outputting letter-sized, single-sided pages in color or black. It lived up to its rating in tests, cranking out 21 of our black-only text pages and color with graphics pages in precisely the same time. The first of 21 test pages appeared after an initial delay of 21 seconds, and all 21 were in the tray after 1:19. The bad news is that Canon muffed its claim of first page in “15 seconds or less.” But what’s a few seconds at the printer, more or less?

We also tested Canon Easy-PhotoPrint for Android and discovered a few things about the printer in the process. We learned that the 8580 supports Ethernet or Wi-Fi, but not both at once. So to print from our Android test device required a trip to the control panel to switch from wired to wireless Ethernet. The app itself is handsome and responsive, and presents a simple, no-nonsense interface that gets the job done. Capabilities are limited to controlling the scanner and printing on-device pics and scans.

 

Canon MF8580

 

 

On the subject of the control panel, Canon’s is nicer than most and offers more convenience. Dedicated hardware buttons along the top provide instant access to the unit’s primary functions of copying, scanning, faxing and direct printing, and LEDs on each indicate which function is enabled. A bright, backlit 3.5-inch LCD shows the corresponding functions and is easily navigated with smaller buttons and keys that surround it. We never had a doubt about how to do anything or where to find a particular setting, thanks to logically worded menus and concise titles. Along the right edge is a pair of programmable “Scan to PC” buttons to which specific network destinations for scanned PDF, JPG and TIFF files can be assigned, plus copy and secure print keys. Well done, Canon.

For a deeper dive into the printer’s many capabilities (a report of its settings prints out to eight pages), Canon also provides a printed manual, something we’ve missed seeing in recent years as such documentation has been relegated to the less handy digital realm. There’s also a second, smaller networking handbook and configuration guide. Separate disks are provided for Mac OS X and Windows drivers and utilities. There’s also a Linux driver available for printing only.

For standard paper capacities, the 8580 offers a 250-sheet cassette plus a 50-sheet multipurpose bin. A second 250-sheet cassette is optional. The output tray holds 125 pages; duplex printing is standard. For the small office looking for an all-in-one with very good color and black print quality that won’t break the bank, the $599 list Canon Color ImageClass MF8580Cdw Color Laser Multifuction printer is worth a serious look.

original article

Samsung SF-560R MFP

By Databazaar Blog

The Samsung SF-560R monochrome MFP is a high-speed laser copier and fax machine that is built for office spaces that are not very large but require the same amount of productivity as large organizations. It is one of those MFPs that are low-volume, high on output but come at a very affordable rate.

The MFP’s 33.6 Kbps fax modem has a transmission speed of 3 seconds. It copies at speeds of up to 17 cpm and with a resolution of 300 x 300 dpi. The MFP supports several document sizes and its paper handling capacity is made easy with a 20-page automatic document feeder (ADF) and a single sheet multipurpose tray. For ease of use, the MFP has a 16-character, two-line LCD display and 80 speed dial locations.

Extremely dependable, it provides many years of service but is not high on maintenance.

Summary

The Samsung SF-560R MFP has good copying and faxing speeds, and an 80-location speed dial.

Price: $277.32

Manufacturer

Samsung

Supplies

Cartridge (Black); up to 3000.0 pages

Specs that matter

Notable Features: Copies at speeds up to 17 cpm with 300 x 300 dpi resolution; Three-second transmission speed and 33.6 kbps fax modem; 20-page automatic document feeder; Works fast with 80 speed dial locations; 16-character, 2-line LCD display
Printer Resolution: 300 x 300 dpi
Paper Handling Capacity: 20-sheet ADF; Standard media capacity – 250.0 sheets; Max media size: A4 (8.25 in x 11.7 in); Input tray – 150.0 sheets; Output tray – 20.0 sheets
Paper Compatibility: Plain paper
Width: 14.3 inches
Depth: 15.7 inches
Height: 12.1 inches
Weight: 21.4 lbs
original article

Samsung SCX 3405FW MFP

By Edward J. Correia

The Samsung SCX 3405FW is a bare-bones monochrome laser multifunction printer that’s intended for a small office or department. This sturdy unit combines a high-resolution one-sided color scanner and copier, plus faxing capabilities (hence the “F” in the model number) accessible over a LAN or Wi-Fi (hence the “W”). With the exception of cable connections, all functions are performed from the front, including paper replenishment and toner service. A 700-sheet starter cartridge is included; its normal toner is rated to deliver about 1,500 pages in standard mode. There’s also an Eco mode.

For paper handling, Samsung substitutes a paper cassette for a 150-sheet front-loading paper tray, which no doubt helped rein in its relatively large 15-by-11-inch footprint. The main feeder can hold paper or as many as 10 envelopes. The output tray holds 100 sheets; there is no two-sided option. The 3405 is rated to deliver up to 10,000 pages per month. It draws 310 watts when operational, 30 watts in standby mode and 1.2 watts when sleeping. It weighs just shy of 15 pounds.

The 3405 requires about 20 inches of height clearance to access its flatbed scanner, a TWAIN-compatible color device with a native resolution of 600 x 600 dpi, and maximum resolution of 4,800 x 4,800 dpi with interpolation. Features include a 40-page auto-feeder and scan-to-PC function. Standard interfaces are USB, Ethernet and Wi-Fi; there are no ports for printing from or storing to USB drives or data cards, but Wi-Fi Direct connection support permits mobile devices to print using Apple (NSDQ:AAPL) AirPrint, Google(NSDQ:GOOG) Cloud Print or Samsung’s own Mobile Print forAndroid and iOS devices.

The Samsung SCX 3405FW lived up to its rated output speed of 21 pages per minute, but getting there was not without a few bumps. First, the performance numbers. The unit printed black-only text pages and those with integrated graphics at virtually the same pace. After a period of 31 seconds until the first page came out, the 3405 finished printing 21 pages in a total of 1:29.

Setting up the printer was a bit more difficult than most. The wireless setup utility requires a USB cable; it can’t send settings to the printer wirelessly, nor could it see the printer after it had an IP address. Configuring the printer for Wi-Fi using its control panel wasn’t a much better option. It obtained an IP address on its own, but entering the passcode using the numerical keypad was clumsy. Absent a software disc, testers went to the 3405’s download page, where manuals, software and drivers for Linux, Mac OS X and Windows can be found as separate downloads. For testing, separate downloads were required for the scanner, fax, “wireless” setup (through USB), printer management and the printer’s own driver.

Uncharacteristic of Samsung, which usually produces excellent software, the management component for the 3405 was practically unusable, as was the interface for its two-line LCD control panel. When installing the driver, the installer package quit all running apps without so much as a prompt, an absolute UI no-no in our book

In all, the Samsung SCX 3405FW performed well enough, but took longer and was more involved to set up than service resellers would probably like. But for $199, this entry-level laser MFP performed up to spec and turned out good quality printouts.

original article

HP LaserJet Pro 400 MFP

By Edward J. Correia

Well-built software and the intuitive interface of its touch-sensitive control panel is icing on the cake for Hewlet-Packard’s LaserJet Pro 400 MFP M425dn, a monochromatic multifunction printer for the small-to-medium sized office or department. For $499 list, the unit delivers a capable, two-sided PCL/PostScript laser printer with high-resolution black-and-white copier, color scanner and fax that’s easy to install, set up and use locally or over a network.

An imposing figure, HP’s 400-series MFP stands 17 inches tall, but needs almost 10 inches more than that for accessing its scanner and copier bed. Its squarish footprint occupies about 14 by 16 inches, and all everyday functions are accessible from the front. These include access to its 250-sheet paper cassette (with low-paper indicator gauge) and toner service, which takes place through a large tilt-down door that also helps facilitate the clearing of paper jams.

Also in front is a USB 2.0 port for walk-up printing of JPG and PDF formats and for saving scanned images to JPG, PDF, RTF, TXT, BMP, PNG and TIFF formats. Scanned images also can be shipped off to a server, email recipient or the cloud. The scanner’s hardware maxes out at 1,200-x-1,200 dpi when using the flatbed, and can handle up to 8.5-by-11.7-inch originals. Maximum resolution when using the auto-document feeder is 300-x-300 dpi, and it’s rated at 20 pages per minute for letter-sized, black-and-white and 9 ppm for color.

HP LaserJet 400 Pro MFP M425dn

Though the M425dn has a rated duty cycle of 50,000 pages a month, HP recommends a page volume between 750 and 3,000 pages, placing it squarely in the small-office category. The black-and-white-only copier supports 600-x-600 dpi and is rated to crank out copies as quickly as the printer can print — that’s at 35 ppm. Like most copiers, originals are placed in the top-loading (50-sheet) feeder, which wakes the M425dn from power-save mode. Two button presses and 10 seconds later, a perfect duplicate (rotated 90 degrees) is dumped into the 150-sheet output bin. A multipurpose tray can hold 50 sheets or 10 envelopes, bringing the unit’s standard capacity to 300 sheets; a 500-sheet third tray is a $125 option.

When you’ve been at the printer game for as long as HP (NYSE:HPQ), good software usually goes with the territory. And that’s clearly the case here; the M425dn was among the fastest and easiest we’ve seen to set up and configure. Much of the credit goes to well-developed and bullet-proof software tools, including its driver and utility installer for Mac OS X and Windows, and its remote management software.

Along with the printer, power cable and telephone cord came a multilingual, illustrated quick installation guide (which we didn’t need) and installation disks for Mac OS X and Windows. On the Mac side, we were impressed with the level of integration between the install utility and the operating system. For example, once drivers were installed, the installer optionally launches the Print & Fax preferences tool, displays step-by-step instructions on how to add and configure the new printer for use by the host Mac and offers to place a copy of the utility in the Dock. During setup, the printer acquired an IP address over its gigabit Ethernet automatically and was identified by the software right away. Total setup time (not including file copying) was about five minutes. The experience on Windows was similar, if perhaps less polished. There’s no Linux driver.

Going well beyond consumables monitoring, HP delivers an excellent utility for Mac OS X and Windows that gives IT or service resellers control from anywhere on the network over nearly every settable feature and function of the M425dn, including networking, power-save settings, scanning and faxing, tray configuration, duplex mode, font and file upload, diagnostic and, of course, supplies management. On the Mac (shown), the tool is modeled after Apple’s System Preferences control panel and even pops up printer messages on a designated Mac.

As for print speed, the HP LaserJet Pro 400 MFP M425dn printed exactly according to HP claims. For testing, we sent a 35-page black-text document to the printer. The first page appeared in 12 seconds, and all 35 pages were in the tray after 1:10 minutes. We repeated the test with a document containing color graphics with the same result. Next we ordered the copier to run 35 copies of one of the test pages, again with the same result.

To vary that old phrase, no one gets fired for buying Hewlett-Packard printers. And with its solid construction, versatile functionality and utilities, and mobile printing through HP’s ePrint for Android and iOS, or Apple (NSDQ:AAPL)’s AirPrint, the HP LaserJet Pro 400 MFP M425dn would be among the safest $500 investments by any small business.

original article

Brother HL-3170CDW

‘Tis the season of the single-function laser-class printer. Over the past several months, several entry-level, “personal” LED-based color printers have passed through our labs. The two most recent of these low-cost, low-volume devices we’ve tested, the C1660w Color Printer$179.99 at Dell and theC1760nw Color Printer$204.99 at Dell, were from Dell. Hot on the heels of these, Brother sent us its newest entries in this niche class of small- and home-based-office machines: the $249.99-list HL-3140CW and the $279.99-list HL-3170CDW.

Brother HL-3170CDW

Here, we’re looking at the slightly faster, more versatile (and, of course, more expensive) of the two, the HL-3170CDW. (Watch for our review the HL-3140CW in the next week or two.) These two printers are much the same, except that for its $30 price premium, the model we’re reviewing here gains you an auto-duplexer (for printing two-sided pages without requiring you to flip them over manually), as well as an Ethernet connector and twice the memory (128MB versus 64MB). As we see it, these additional features are well worth the minimal difference in price, making this slightly more expensive version a better fit for small offices and workgroups.

Before we go on, though, let’s talk about what makes LED-based printers like this one “laser-class” devices, as opposed to being simply laser printers. Although an LED printer is technically not a laser printer, it looks and acts very much like one. The difference between them centers on the basic print technology. Instead of using a laser, LED-based machines use an LED array (an array of light-emitting diodes) to charge the page image onto the print drum. Printer makers substitute LEDs for lasers because they have fewer moving parts, are smaller and lighter, and cost less to manufacture. Otherwise, LED models operate much the same as laser printers do, including in their use of toner.

Historically, small and home offices have chosen laser and laser-class printers over inkjet models because they print faster and cost less to use over the long haul, despite their somewhat heftier upfront purchase price. Nowadays, though—due to the onslaught of high-volume, low-cost-per-page inkjets—you typically have to buy a relatively high-volume (and high-priced) color laser printer to see much speed or per-page cost benefit. Many lower-volume, lower-cost color lasers no longer have the speed and operational-cost advantages over their inkjet counterparts.

Brother HL-3170CDW Front View

Why? Some inkjet models claiming “laser-quality” output, such as the $399.99-list Epson WorkForce 520$199.88 at Amazon and the $199.99-list HP OfficeJet Pro 8600 Plus$199.99 at OfficeMax, really do print business documents on par with high-volume laser models, in terms of both quality and speed. In addition, these relatively new high-volume inkjets perform their magic at a very reasonable cost per page (CPP), which, as you’ll see in the Setup & Paper Handling section of this review, the HL-3170CDW does not. Furthermore, these inkjets are multifunction machines, which means that you get the ability to scan, copy, and fax, as well as print for about the same price, or sometimes even less.

Compared to some other personal LED printers we’ve reviewed lately, such as the two Dell models mentioned above, the HL-3170CDW comes with a respectable feature set. For about the same price, this Brother offers, as mentioned, automatic two-sided printing, as well as a wide range of options for printing from cloud sites and wireless devices. It’s also considerably faster than Dell’s most recent single-function models.

However, this Brother unit’s print quality, as we discuss in the Print Quality section later on, isn’t quite up to what we saw from the Dell LED models. In addition, the HL-3170CDW has a relatively low recommended monthly print volume, and the cost of its toner cartridges make for, compared to some inkjet counterparts, a high CPP for both monochrome and color prints. We wouldn’t recommend this machine as a serious high-volume workhorse printer. It’s best for occasional, light-duty color printing.

Design & Features

As we said about Dell’s entry-level LED printers, Brother’s design of its low-cost single-function machines isn’t even a half-hearted attempt at a stylish or high-tech appearance. Devoid of appealing sloping edges or attractive trim, the HL-3170CDW is a squat, nondescript black-and-white box. Measuring 9.4 inches high, 16.1 inches across, and 18.3 inches front to back, and weighing 39 pounds, it’s significantly larger and heavier than Dell’s comparably priced C1760nw, which rings in at 8.9×15.5×11.8 inches (HWD) and 23.4 pounds.

Some of this additional size and girth is attributable to this Brother model’s duplexing hardware, as well as its 250-sheet input drawer (versus the C1760nw’s meager 150-sheet cassette), but neither of these features can explain away the whopping 15.6-pound weight difference. Despite the HL-3170CDW’s relatively low Brother-recommended monthly duty cycle of 300 to 1,500 pages, as well as the space-saving LED apparatus inside, it’s too big to fit comfortably on the average desk. Unlike some compact LED models we’ve seen of late, this one is bulky enough to require its own sturdy stand or chunk of countertop.

The good news is that the HL-3170CDW comes with support for Wi-Fi network connectivity out of the box (not always a given on laser-class printers), which should make finding a place to put it less of an issue. If your office doesn’t have a wireless network, you can connect it to your wired network via Ethernet, or to an individual PC with a standard USB printer cable. However, the USB cable does not come in the box, which could add $20 or so to the cost of the printer.

Brother HL-3170CDW Interfaces

You can connect the HL-3170CDW to a wireless network, a wired Ethernet network, or to a single PC via USB.

Where this Brother shines, compared to Dell’s similarly priced LED models, is in its wide range of support for printing from cloud sites and mobile devices. You can, for example, print directly to the printer via Wi-Fi Direct, a protocol that lets you print from most smartphones, tablets, and notebooks without either the printer or the mobile device being connected to an intermediary network. The HL-3170CDW also supports printing via Apple’s AirPrint, Google Cloud Print, and Cortado Workplace, or you can use Brother’s own iPrint&Scan app to print directly from most smartphones and tablets. (Cortado Workplace is a free “cloud desktop” service that provides storage space accessible from any Internet connection.)

You set up some of these mobile-device channels, as well as make configuration changes to the printer itself, from the control panel, which, as you can see in the image below, consists of a one-line LED, five navigation keys, a Cancel button, and a Go (Print) button. It’s not unusual to find simple control panels on single-function machines like this one, especially on models that don’t come with memory-card slots or USB-key ports for PC-free printing. Still, some configuration options, such as entering network passwords, which entails scrolling through alphanumeric character lists one character at a time, can be tedious when forced through a little screen like this one. Compared to some other recent low-end models, such as HP’s LaserJet Pro 200 Color Printer M251nw$179.99 at OfficeMax and its color graphics display, the HL-3170CDW’s user interface looks antiquated.

Brother HL-3170CDW Control Panel

The control panel consists of seven buttons and a one-line LED strip.

Setup & Paper Handling

Setting up the HL-3170CDW and installing the drivers was straightforward and easy, but this was primarily because our wireless router supports Wi-Fi Setup (WPS). WPS is a wireless protocol for connecting devices to the network by pressing a couple of buttons, one on the printer itself and one on the router. When we tried to connect using the standard, non-WPS method, in which you enter the network password from the control panel, we once again found ourselves longing for a more sophisticated user interface.

The setup guide explained the process clearly enough, but getting to the proper section in the printer’s menu tree, and then scrolling through the alphanumeric character list one keystroke at a time (10 separate times for each character in our 10-character password) was tedious. Luckily, you only have to do this once, but, compared to what we’re used to, we found it a little frustrating. The snazzy-looking graphical displays that come on so many printers these days have spoiled us.

Like most laser-class printers nowadays, the HL-3170CDW arrives with the toner cartridges already loaded inside the printer. Notice, though, that we didn’t say “installed.” Part of this model’s setup process entails taking each cartridge out of the machine, removing a plastic seal, shaking each to spread around the toner inside, and then reloading it into the printer.

Brother HL-3170CDW Toner

The 1,000-page “starter” toner cartridges ship inside the printer, but you have to remove and prep them before you can use the unit.

Granted, we’ve done this before, and we remember—not that long ago—when toner cartridges typically shipped in separate containers outside the printer. But, frankly, it’s been a while since we’ve seen a laser-class machine that didn’t come with the toner cartridges inside ready to go. Between that and the somewhat poky process of connecting to non-WPS routers on the HL-3170CDW’s last-generation control panel, we found this LED machine a bit less pleasant to set up than several other competing models we’ve tested recently.

The HL-3170CDW ships with four 1,000-page “starter” toner cartridges in the typical cyan/magenta/yellow/black arrangement. When it comes time to replace them, the black cartridge, rated by Brother at 2,500 pages, will run you about $85, and the three 1,400-page color ones about $70 each. At these prices, we calculated the monochrome cost per page at about 3.4 cents, and color pages at about 18.4 cents. While we consider these numbers high, they are about average for a LED-based printer in this price range.

You can lower the color CPP to about 14 cents by purchasing the so-called high-yield (2,200-page) color cartridges for $76.88 (the price, when we wrote this, at Brother Mall). Brother doesn’t offer a high-yield black cartridge for this printer, so 3.4 cents for black-and-white pages is as good as gets unless you find the black cartridge on sale. In addition, after the first 15,000 pages (and every subsequent 15,000 pages), you’ll have to change the printer’s $150 print drum, which adds another cent to each print if you amortize the drum cost over the life of each new drum.

Compared to several business-centric inkjet printers, as well as most higher-volume (and therefore higher-priced) lasers and laser-class printers, 15 cents for color and 4.4 cents for monochrome pages is costly. If you print more than a few hundred pages per month—monochrome or color—you’d be better off looking for a printer with lower CPPs. Otherwise, you could wind up spending hundreds, even thousands, of dollars more than necessary over time with this one.

Brother HL-3170CDW Input Tray

A roomy 250-sheet paper tray pulls out from the bottom of the chassis. A single-sheet override slot is located on the back.

The paper handling on this model matches up well enough with the expected volume of prints this printer is built for. The HL-3170CDW comes with a 250-sheet drawer on the front, and a single-sheet override slot (for printing one-off envelopes and other specialty media) on the back. Printed sheets emerge from and land on the top of the printer, which doubles as a 100-sheet output bed. During our tests, this simple paper path worked flawlessly, without a single jam or any other mishap.

Brother HL-3170CDW Output Tray

The top of the printer doubles as a 100-sheet output bed, which does a great job of supporting your printed pages and keeping them flat.

Performance

One thing the HL-3170CDW has going for it is that it (as well as the slightly lower-priced HL-3140CW) is one of the fastest entry-level laser-class machines we’ve tested lately. It significantly outperformed two of Dell’s recent low-cost single-function LED printers on our business-document speed tests. Interestingly, though, it ran roughly neck-and-neck with the HL-3140CW, even thoughthis Brother has twice as much memory. Typically, increasing the memory in laser-class devices helps them “image,” or process, pages with graphics and photos faster, but for some reason the extra RAM here in the HL-3170CDW didn’t enhance the overall performance much.

For comparison’s sake, we pitted the HL-3170CDW against four other similarly priced single-function laser-class machines. Three of them, the $249.99-list Brother HL-3140CW, the $199.99-list Dell C1660w Color Printer$179.99 at Dell, and the $279.99-list Dell C1760nw Color Printer$204.99 at Dell, are LED-based machines. The fourth, the $329.99-list HP LaserJet Pro 200 Color Printer M251nw$179.99 at OfficeMax, is a full laser printer. As our charts below illustrate, Brother’s LED printers are faster than these other entry-level models—even the actual laser-based machine in this group.

Business Printing: Adobe Acrobat

In this first test, which measures printing speed, we time the AIO as it prints a four-page landscape-orientation Adobe Acrobat document containing text and photos.

Brother HL-3170CDW Acrobat Test

Here, the two Brother LED printers churned out our documents more than twice as fast as the others in group.

Business Printing: Microsoft Office Suite

This test measures how quickly the AIO churns out Microsoft Office suite documents. The result is an aggregate time derived by adding together the results from five discrete test documents totalling 11 pages: a one-page Excel table with a grid in it; a one-page Excel graph; a three-page Excel document containing charts and graphs; a four-page PowerPoint document (containing full-page slides); and a two-page Word text document.

Brother HL-3170CDW MS Office Test

Our Brother test unit beat HP’s laser printer, if not by much. The real story here is that it bested both of Dell’s LED models, the C1660w and the C1760nw, by about 40 and 50 seconds, respectively.

Business Printing: Effective Pages Per Minute

This test measures business-document output in pages per minute (ppm). We calculate it by combining the print times for our Acrobat, Excel, PowerPoint, and Word tests, above. The Effective Pages Per Minute chart you see below is an aggregate rate of printing we derive from these 15 pages’ worth of business documents. We print them multiple times, averaging the results…

Brother HL-3170CDW Effective PPM Test

As you can see, the HL-3170CDW printed our test documents faster than every other model in this group, though the tenth-of-a-point difference between it and its Brother brother is negligible. Notice, though, that it was 2ppm faster than the Dell C1760nw, and nearly 2.5ppm quicker than the Dell C1660w. These are significant differences. If you print a lot of long documents, you’d wait much longer for them using either of those Dell models in this matchup.

Photo Printing (4×6) Test

In this test, we time how long the AIO takes to print a sample 4×6-inch snapshot. These results are an average based on several runs of the print job.

Brother HL-3170CDW Photo Printing Test

Here, the HL-3170CDW printed out our test photo at about the same speed as the others. However, as we discuss on the next page, this model’s photographic output, compared to the non-Brother models here, was subpar. That said, laser-class machines are not the printers of choice if you need quality photos. For that, you really should choose an inkjet model.

Print Quality & Conclusion

Overall, the HL-3170CDW’s print quality on our test business documents was good. However, compared to several other models we’ve tested, it fell short when printing photos and small text (from about 8-point type on down). Text quality was good enough for most applications, but not quite good enough for printing high-end marketing material, such as brochures and flyers.

Brother HL-3170CDW View From Right Side

As for our test photos, granted, laser-class devices never print images as well as even middling inkjets do. But this model’s photo-output quality was not only below that of every inkjet printer we’ve tested recently, also that of most other laser-class models. If you’re as picky as we are, you wouldn’t want to distribute documents containing embedded photos printed on this model to clients or would-be clients. To our eyes, the photo-reproduction limitations of this machine render that kind of output good only for internal use or drafts, not critical marketing material.

Conclusion

The HL-3170CDW is faster than most entry-level laser-class devices in this price range, and compared to some other low-cost LED printers we’ve tested lately, it comes with a robust set of features, such as auto-duplexing and support for a wide range of options for printing from mobile devices. However, this model’s inability to reproduce photos in acceptable quality—even images embedded in business documents—concerned us. This shortcoming limits how and where you can use this printer’s output.

Brother HL-3170CDW Angle View

Again, this is one of the faster entry-level laser-class models we’ve seen recently, but, as we see it, fast document printing is important only in environments with high-volume print requirements. This model’s high cost per page precludes it from being a high-volume workhorse, but then, this is a limitation of the entire genre of low-cost laser-class printers, not just this one. We couldn’t recommend any of the printers mentioned in this review for use in small- or home-based-offices that print thousands upon thousands of pages each month. A couple hundred would be the limit.

If you do print a lot, you really should look at higher-end laser-class models, such as the Dell C3760dn Color Laser Printer$569.99 at Dell, or perhaps a high-volume inkjet, such as HP’s OfficeJet Pro 8600 Plus. Both of these printers print monochrome pages at less than half the per-page cost of this Brother machine, and color prints on either model cost several cents per page less. If you print a lot (again, more than a couple hundred pages per month), either model will save you hundreds, even thousands, of dollars over the long haul depending on how much you print. The C3760dn may cost more than twice as much as the HL-3170CDW, but you’ll recoup that cost, and then some, in time if you print enough.

As we’ve said about several entry-level laser-class printers recently, this is overall a fine, serviceable printer. Our main concern is not necessarily about the quality of the HL-3170CDW itself, but instead about low-cost, personal color laser-class printers in general. As a class of printers, they make sense only for small offices and workgroups that don’t print a whole lot, and that’s our take on the HL-3170CDW.

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Xerox Phaser 6600/DN

BY M. DAVID STONE

Aimed at small offices or workgroups with heavy-duty print needs, the Xerox Phaser 6600/DN$570.00 at DocumentIO offers capable paper handling as one of its best features. Add in the on par or better output quality across the board, including for photos, and it’s a particularly good fit if you need a color laser to print a lot of pages, and also need the output to look good.

Color lasers in this price range have stiff competition in the form of the Editors’ Choice HP Officejet Pro X551dw Printer$580.07 at GoComputerSupplies.com, a laser-class inkjet. But lasers in general, and the 6600/DN in particular, still have an edge on color quality compared with the X551dw. They also have the advantage of there being no way that the output can smudge or smear if it gets wet. Depending on your needs and tastes, these two differences alone may make a laser the better pick.

The 6600/DN also offers somewhat better paper handling than the X551dw, with a 550-sheet drawer, 150-sheet multipurpose tray, and duplexer (for two-sided printing) standard. The 550-sheet drawer is a particularly nice touch, since it lets you refill the drawer with an entire ream of paper even before it’s fully empty. And if you need still more capacity, you can add a second 550-sheet drawer ($299 direct) for a total 1,250 sheets. Not so incidentally, if you don’t need duplexing, Xerox also sells the Phaser 6600/N ($549 direct), which Xerox says is the identical printer minus the duplexer.

Setup and Speed
As you might expect simply from the paper capacity, the 6600/DN is too big to comfortably share a desk with, at 15.1 by 16.9 by 19.2 inches (HWD). It’s also heavy enough, at 56 pounds, so most people would consider moving it into place a two-person job. Once you find a spot for it, however, setup is simple and absolutely typical for a color laser. For my tests, I connected it to a wired network and installed the driver on a system running Windows Vista.

Xerox rates the printer at 36 pages per minute (ppm) for both color and monochrome in simplex (one sided) mode. You should see that speed or close to it when printing text files with little or no formatting. However, the printer installs to print in duplex mode by default, which drops the rating to 24 ppm. And because we run our business applications suite with the default settings as shipped, our official test is for the duplex setting and slower speed. Beyond that, as with virtually all printers, the 6600/DN is much slower than its top speed on our tests, because we include photos and graphics that take time to process.

Xerox Phaser 6600/DN

On our business applications suite (timed with QualityLogic’s hardware and software), I clocked the printer at an effective 4.6 ppm. I also ran an unofficial test in simplex mode and got essentially the same speed. In either case, the speed falls in a tolerable range, but is a little slow for the price. The HP Officejet Pro X551dw, for example, came in at 9.2 ppm, and the Brother HL-4570CDW$379.99 at OfficeMax managed 6.8 ppm. In addition, the 6600/DN was unusually slow for a laser for photos, averaging 48 seconds for a 4 by 6.

Output Quality
Largely making up for any points the printer loses for speed is its overall output quality. Text and graphics are both dead on par for a color laser. That makes the text easily good enough for any business need, and arguably good enough for moderately serious desktop publishing applications, depending on how critical an eye you have. The graphics, similarly, are easily good enough for any business use up to and including good-quality PowerPoint handouts. Most people would also consider them good enough for marketing materials like one-page handouts or mailers.

Photos in my tests were above par, and just short of consistently true photo quality. More than half of the photos in our test suite were high enough quality so if you mounted them in a frame behind glass, they’d pass for the level of quality you’d expect from typical drugstore prints. Outside of a frame, only the fact that they’re printed on plain paper gives them away. However other photos could only pass for photo quality at a quick glance from a distance. Overall, most people would consider the photos, along with the graphics, as good enough for printing your own marketing materials.

The Xerox Phaser 6600/DN’s strongest points are clearly its paper handling and output quality. The one other sweetener that demands mention is that Xerox includes one year of onsite service in the base warranty. If you want a speed demon, you’ll need to look elsewhere, but if you don’t mind the slower speed, the Xerox Phaser 6600/DN can be an excellent fit for a small office or workgroup that needs a heavy-duty workhorse with high-quality output.

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Canon imageClass MF4770n

BY M. DAVID STONE

New Canon printers don’t always offer more printer for less money than the previous generation, so it’s very much worth pointing out that the Canon imageClass MF4770n ($199 direct) does. Compared with the Canon imageClass MF4450$119.99 at OfficeMax that it’s in the process of replacing in Canon’s line, it costs less than the MF4450 did when it first came out, it delivers essentially the same speed and output quality, and it adds an Ethernet connector, which means it can not only serve as a heavy-duty personal printer in any size office, it’s a good fit as a shared printer in micro or small office.

Like the Canon MF4450, the MF4770n lacks the duplexer (for two sided printing) that you’ll find in, for example, the Editors’ Choice Canon imageClass MF4570dn $169.99 at TriState Camera. However, it shares similar features otherwise. Given the lower price, this makes the MF4770n an attractive alternative if you rarely need duplexing and a potentially compelling choice if you never duplex.

The MF4770n can print and fax from, as well as scan to a PC, including over a network, and it can work as a standalone copier and fax machine. Like most office MFPs, it offers both a flatbed and automatic document feeder (ADF), with the 35-page ADF letting you scan legal-size pages. Paper handling—with a 250-sheet tray, one-sheet manual feed, and no options available—is suitable for a personal printer or for sharing in a micro or small office with light- to medium-duty print needs.

Setup, Speed, and Output Quality
Although the MF4770n is a little large to share a desk with, at roughly 14.2 by 15.4 by 17.0 inches (HWD), it’s small enough so it should be easy to find enough flat space for it. Setup is standard for the breed. For my tests, I connected it to a network and installed the drivers on a Windows Vista system.

Canon rates the printer at 24 pages per minute (ppm) which is the speed you should see when printing text files with little to no formatting. On our tests, I timed it (using QualityLogic’s hardware and software for timing) at 12.3 ppm, which makes it essentially tied with both the Canon MF4450 and Canon MF4570dn. It’s also faster than any number of more expensive mono laser MFPs. The OKI MB451w ($300 street, 3 stars), for example, came in at only 10.0 ppm

Output quality isn’t quite as impressive as the speed, but it’s certainly good enough for most business needs. Text quality is at the high end of the range that includes most mono laser MFPs, making it suitable for just about any business use short of high-end desktop publishing.

Graphics and photo quality are both at the low end of the range that’s typical for mono laser MFPs. The graphics output is good enough for any internal business need, but depending on how critical an eye you have, you may or may not consider it acceptable for PowerPoint handouts or the like. Photo output, similarly, is easily good enough for printing Web pages with photos, but depending on how much of a perfectionist you are, you may not consider it suitable for, say, client or company newsletters.

The Canon imageClass 4770n offers a lot to like, with fast speed; reasonably good output quality; a network connector; the ability to copy, scan, and fax; and the convenience of an ADF. If you need duplexing or a higher paper capacity, you’ll have to shift your search to a higher price range. But as a relatively heavy-duty personal MFP or a light- to moderate-duty shared printer in a small office, the Canon imageClass 4770n can be an excellent fit.