Wednesday, May 22, 2013

Konica Minolta MagiColor 2300W

The Konica Minolta MagiColor 2300W is another quality printer from the electronics giant from Japan. It is marketed as a desktop printer for the SOHO market, and is just that. It differs from the similarly named 2300DL in color, shape performance and capability, and it is odd that they used a very similar designation for a totally different machine.

Printing is of good quality, the reproduction during testing were clean and accurate. Image detail was good with no banding on black and white images, and accurate reproduction on color. Our test document is 28 pages of text, mono images, colored text and colored images, so gives us a real flavor of what a printer can do. The speed is also okay with a rating of 16 pages per minute for monochrome and 4 for color.

The 2300W can handle 200 sheets of paper in the drawer, with no option to expand. The built in 32Mb memory can be so it reaches the maximum of 288Mb.

Toners are easy to replace, and relatively inexpensive. Cartridges are good for 4500 sheets in black, and the drum is also good for 4500. All are fairly easy to change, and shouldn’t present any problems to experienced users. Like relatively few others on the market, this printer came with standard cartridges included as opposed to “starter” ones, which are often half or less than half full.

Connecting and configuring the 2300W is as straightforward as it gets. It can be connected via USB or parallel, with no network option included. The drivers and user manual are easy to use and logical. Overall, setup took less than 30 minutes, from the time we started opening the package to the time we ordered the first print.

The 2300W is a no-nonsense dedicated printer. What it prints it does with luster and good quality. The price and general usability makes up for a lack of features making this a viable option for those offices who aren’t in a hurry, and prefer quality over quantity.

Source: http://hubpages.com/hub/Konica-Minolta-MagiColor-2300W-Printer-Review
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Tuesday, May 21, 2013

Konica Minolta BizHub C45

The Konica Minolta BizHub C451 is an exciting prospect for the medium sized workgroup. Priced to sell in a competitive market, it performs well, and offers a lot for the money.

While there are many full color laser multifunction’s on the market, they don’t come as well featured as the BizHub C451. It can handle printing, copying and scanning, and performs them all with ridiculous ease. There is also the option to add faxing to the mix for a full multifunction machine.

Connecting the device is via USB or ethernet. The USB option is the quickest to set up, but offers slower transfer speeds than ethernet. Networking the device was also straightforward but took a little longer. It was soon auto-discovered on the network once powered up, and once the drivers were installed we were good to go.

The control panel is well designed and easy to understand. There are large buttons that allow you to select printing, copying and scanning, but the full color LCD steals the show. It is one of the clearest and brightest screens we have seen. It allows you to fully control every aspect of the device from its easy to follow menu system.

The output quality is very good, with pages being produced at a rate of 45 pages per minute. The text reproduction was outstanding in our tests with very crisp edges and no jaggies to be seen. Grayscale was smooth and images was very good overall. Color printing was superb considering this is a laser. Images and photos were the highlights, both printing and copying. The color reproduction was accurate and there were no overtones, or spill anywhere.

Paper is held in a group of four drawers at the front totaling a maximum of 3650 sheets. Replacement toner cartridges can produce 40,000 pages in black and 27000 in color. Considering a black toner is on $45, that constitutes a significant saving in running costs over many other manufacturers.

For medium-sized businesses who need a hard working multifunction device the BizHub C451 is a worthy contender. It produces documents of a quality suitable for almost any use. There are enough options and cost saving reasons to consider the C451 as a long term companion in your office.
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Monday, May 20, 2013

Canon LaserClass 710

The Canon LaserClass 710 is a great fax for business. It has many features that are generally restricted to machines at a much higher price point to this one and performs just as well. Its economical enough to be worth a look when you next need to buy a multifunction.

The Canon LaserClass 710 is a monochrome laser fax with copying, printing and scanning built in. Its a variation of a theme in that this is predominantly a fax with other capabilities. The traditional multifunction has been primarily a printer, copier then fax and scanner.

Fax features like broadcasting, dual access, built-in memory, an automatic document feeder and auto dialing make this a versatile machine for a busy office. The 33.3k modem can send a standard sheet in a little under 3 seconds while the built in memory has enough capacity to remember 500 pages of received faxes, which is expandable to 40Mb, which is enough for around 1000 fax pages.

There is also a 20 page automatic document feeder that may appear flimsy, but is much better constructed than it appears.

Copy quality is good, text was a real standout, with clean crisp edges even when printing or faxing at the lowest points. Simple images or graphics are rendered pretty accurately with the grayscale making short work of color images as easily as monochrome ones.

Dual access is a nice feature to have. It lets you load and prepare faxes even when the machine is already printing, faxing or copying. This allows you to get on with other things while not having to wait for it to finish. The fax has all the other features you would hope to see. Plenty of auto dials, fax forwarding, broadcasting, speed dialing, data/voice switching, configurable cover sheets and document resizing and so forth.

Coupled with a decent array of printing and copying features, this makes the device quite a capable one in most scenarios. Cartridges for the Canon LaserClass 710 are quite reasonably priced. A starter comes with it when you get it, and replacements are around $30 for a toner that is good for 4000 pages.

To sum up, the LaserClass 710 is an decent purchase for the small office.
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