Although sales of multi-function devices continue to top those of simple
photo printers, there are some situations where a printer is all you need.
Some people, for instance, don't have the space for such a device, and those
who already have a scanner will not want to pay again for another.
Canon’s
PIXMA
iP2500 is an inkjet printer designed as an entry-level device without the
fripperies of more expensive machines. The top cover of its high-gloss black and
silver case lifts to make a feed tray, and pages eject on to the desk – there
isn’t the luxury of an output tray.
There are just two controls on the printer: one for power and the other to
feed paper, and the software drivers come with simple
Canon
print utilities, such as Easy-Photoprint and Easy-Layoutprint.
Lift the whole of the top cover up to reveal and the twin cartridge holder.
Unusually for Canon, the printer uses an integral print head, so each time you
clip in a new black or tri-colour cartridge, you get a new print head as well,
which should keep maintenance requirements down, but will bump up the cost of
cartridges.
The head design helps keep print quality consistent and the printer produces
sharp black text, with very little spatter, and bright, well-realised colours.
Black text over colour bleeds a little, but only under close inspection. Photos
are well reproduced, as long as good quality gloss paper is used.
Print speeds are nothing exciting; we recorded 6ppm for black text and under
3ppm for colour graphics. Still, for occasional, home-based printing, it’s not
unduly slow. The cost of a standard A4 text page is around 5.3p, while a colour
page on A4 glossy photo paper is around 33p. Both these figures are at the
higher end of consumable costs, but given the asking price of the printer,
itself, are hardly surprising.
The only way a printer maker can justify a very low asking price like this is
to recoup costs on the consumables. Overall, the cost of ownership is quite
reasonable.
The PIXMA iP2500 comes in at just under £30, which really is a rock-bottom
price for a printer. It compares well with low-cost rivals, particularly from
Lexmark, though it’s a bit more pricey to run.
Vista compatible: Yes
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