Laser
printers are a better bet than inkjets if you don't colour and want to keep a
lid on running costs.
Oki’s
B2200
is designed not to take up much room on a desk and to provide laser-quality
black print, but without using a laser.
Since it started making these
page
printers, Oki has used an alternative technology that relies on a strip of
high-intensity LED lamps rather than a laser beam to create the page. This is a
simpler technology, it takes up less room, has no moving parts and is less
expensive to make than a laser printer – it makes one wonder why other
manufacturers haven’t made use of the technology.
The B2200 isn't quite as compact as it at first looks, because there's a
150-sheet paper that clips in at the top of the back panel, nearly doubling the
depth of the printer. Paper feeds from this tray, performs a 180-degree turn and
feeds out on top of the feed tray's lid. There's a secondary, single-sheet feed
slot at the front, which can be used for special paper such as envelopes.
A column of four lights at the bottom of the front panel provides status
information, with a power switch beneath that. At the back is a single
USB
socket, the only connection provided. Lift the grey cover of the printer to gain
easy access to the drum and toner cartridges. The 2,000-sheet cassette clips
neatly into place, and on current prices we reckon it'll cost around 2.4p per
printed page.
This isn't cheap for a page printer, but it depends a lot on where you buy
the
toner
and paper. Text print quality is good, with clear and sharp letters and numbers
even at small sizes, and few jagged edges on curves and diagonals. Photo
reproduction isn't quite so good, with some banding visible and loss of detail
in darker parts of the image.
Oki claims a print speed of 20ppm from the B2200, but we saw little more than
half this on test. A true 11ppm from a printer in this class is not bad going,
though.
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