CANON PIXMA MX7600 PRINTER REVIEW


Printer Canon Pixma MX7600
Design

The MX7600 retains the same overall design of the MX700, using gunmetal grey, black matte, glossy finish and to enhance its visual appeal. This printer requires a lot of space on your desk, at 10.1 inches by 19.7 inches wide by 21 inches deep, and it was certainly not intended for personal use. It is also much heavier than the MX700, a high weight 36.6 pounds. You'll find the ADF at the rear of the printer behind the flatbed scanner and it can contain 35 pages of plain or legal size paper. The food itself and folds out of the way when not in use.

In general, the MX7600 is a space-saving device, despite its large footprint. The paper tray to expand corral leaves both outside and within the body after. The media card slots (Compact Flash, SD, Memory Stick, MMC) are also covered by a leaflet piece of plastic to protect them from dust. In addition, there is a PictBridge USB port to connect directly to a camera into the printer. We also like the design of the main output tray, as automatic feeding of documents, may times in the printer during the downtime, but it opens automatically when it is the treatment of a document. A front-loading tray can hold up to 150 sheets of paper.

The front of the MX7600 is reflected by the overall control panel. Besides the standard buttons (buttons, keyboard, start, power, functions), the MX7600 also includes eight buttons dialing for individuals or groups. There are also buttons dedicated to research, two-sided printing, fax quality and image enlarging / decrease. A 1.8-inch color LCD adjustable angle lies in the middle of all this on the spot for editing, photo selection and display features.

Features
The copier on the MX7600 contains all the standard features that you find on a full-size office machines. It has special options for copying, including two sides, two-on-one, four-head, without borders, image repeat, gathered copy, restore and discoloration. You can also monitor magnification of 25 per cent-to-400 percent intervals, through pre-ratio increases, or an adjustment to the option.

The scanner is based on the PC connectivity, you can not scan the MX7600 of internal memory and print from there. The scanning options are most often handled by the MP EX browser software supplied with the camera. The software is fairly standard, which allows minor modifications and page formats for printing. Digitized data can be stored on the PC, sent directly to an e-mail, or saved in PDF format on your hard drive. A limited number of optical character recognition feature is available via the browser EX program. The MX7600 can save files in JPEG, TIFF, bitmaps, and PDF. Unfortunately, the MX7600 is not yet the ability to scan directly to a USB or memory card, a function also missed on the MX700.

One of the most remarkable on the MX7600 is the fax machine, a huge improvement over the limited functionality of the MX700. We love that Canon included an eight-touch buttons in line more than 100 short coded buttons. You can also print a sheet of these destinations to serve as a visual reminder. The MX7600 includes sequential dissemination fax you can send the same document to a maximum of 109 recipients in a single session. If you frequently send documents to the same set of figures in the group registered is also available. Finally, the machine is also capable of receiving a distance. If the fax is not configured to the memory of receipt, users can choose the telephone handset connected to the machine, dial a number, and begin receiving faxes.

The MX7600 can print from a computer directly through a compatible PictBridge camera or from a memory card. This time, Canon allows users to select one of four ways to print: simple display of photos (one at a time or all at once), multiselect impressions, photo prints, photography and detailed index. In the selection process, you can choose to view through full-screen, magnified view on the digital zoom, or in a slide show with 5 second intervals. There are also a handful of other options, including cutting (edit by culture), the timestamp, and bordered impressions.

Prints include special photo layout of various impressions, index prints, prints DPOF (prints in the order format parameters of the camera), and printing the photo of Exif in the margins.

Performance
The MX7600 printed pages faster than the MX700 in most of our tests. The MX7600 also surged ahead of the Kodak EasyShare 5500 in all tests except for the photo test, which are fractions within a page from another anyway, if the difference is insignificant. We tested against one of our favorite all-in-one printers, the HP Officejet L7780, which won our Editors' Choice Award last year. Although the Canon was beaten by three pages per minute in the text printing test, the MX7600 fought admirably in the rest of the tests and actually scanned pages faster than L7780. Overall, Canon has made great strides on previous models in terms of speed, doubling its pages per minute into account half of our speed tests.

The quality of prints has also improved as well, thank you Canon's new technology reaction Pigment inkjet. Unlike its MX700, which has four ink reservoirs, the MX7600 has six reservoirs, five Lucia pigment inks and toner cartridge clear. Canon Pigment reaction work by setting a clear coat of ink first and liaison with the color pigments to create a better quality of graphics on plain paper. We found the quality text to be well trained, without jagged edges or misplaced dots of ink. While other multifunction inkjets, as the Brother MFC-685CW, produce pictures with fuzzy edges and faded colors, the MX7600 graphics are clear and precise, even on standard 20 pounds leaves. The graphics printed seems pop off the page with degraded smoothly and the same amount overall color saturation. The most obvious of the toner cartridge increases the package price of the MX7600 a little, the new toner cartridge costs $ 18 clear a few dollars more than the $ 15 pigment inks.

source : cnet.com

1 Response to "CANON PIXMA MX7600 PRINTER REVIEW"

brother printer cartridges said...

Printing photos quality depends on the ink used and the print head