Simple clear advice in plain English

Review: Agfaphoto Printer AP2700 photo printer

High-end home photos from a well-known imaging name

picture-of-the-agfaphoto-printer-ap2700-photo-printer

Sagem is now selling its photo printers under the better-known Agfa brand in the UK exclusively through Argos catalogue stores.

It's a small machine, about the size of a bag of sugar, but with a 25-sheet paper tray that plugs in at the front.

It has a 63mm LCD display, so you can preview the images that are to be printed, and a menu system controlled by a circle of buttons.

Like printers from the company's earlier Printeasy range, the Photo Printer AP2700 is a dye-sublimation device, which means the solid, waxy ink is transferred from a very thin film ribbon to the postcard-sized print sheets using a thermal print head.

It lays down each of three colours and then overcoats the whole print with a protective clear film. Despite having to pass the print through four times to complete the four layers, the printer completed prints in just over a minute.

Set into the left-hand side are sockets for all the main memory card types including, somewhat surprisingly, one for the largely discontinued Smartmedia format. Opposite these, in the right-hand side, are sockets for connecting a PC, a digital camera and a TV – you can use the Photo Printer AP2700 to run a slide show.

Photo prints are not quite as natural as from the Printeasy printers, which gave a very high-quality printed image. Here we saw a slight blue tinge to the output, though the definition was very good and images were sharp.

There are two image enhancements that can be selected, one for automatic red-eye removal, where you don't even have to indicate where the eyes in the photo are, and the other a photo sharpener called Crystal Image.

There are only enough print blanks and ribbon supplied in the box for five photos, which is a mean move as all users will then have to fork out another £40 for a 150-print consumables pack as soon as they buy the printer.

This gives a cost per print of 27p, considerably higher than from typical ink-jet photo printers. As consumables are tied to the Photo Printer via a smart card, there's no opportunity for using third-party products, either.

See also:
Sony DFP-FP90
Epson Picturemate PM240

Read more reviews

Reader Comments

display:none  

Add your comment

All fields must be completed. Your email address will not be displayed or used to send marketing messages.

All messages will be checked by moderators before appearing on the site.

See our Privacy Policy for more information.

Our verdict

Suggested price

£100

Manufacturer

Great benefits for subscribers!

Poll

Which is your preferred web browser

Jargon Buster

Computing terms explained in plain English

Restore point

A Windows backup of system files and settings.

Great shopping deals from Computeractive