Coupon Croc
Top Discounts: Thomson Travelodge Debenhams Virgin Media
Discount Search:

tech seed
Get our latest content through RSS, iGoogle or get specific feeds.
View | Add to iGoogle

Home » Archive » 2010 » 10 » Misc » Review: Epson BX305FW

Misc

RSS spidered article Review: Epson BX305FW

Added on: 18:24:37 20th October 2010

Review: Epson BX305FWInkjet printers have a sloppy reputation for business printing. Run a highlighter pen over an important phrase of text and you're likely to end up with a smudgy mess. A few raindrops can make ink-printed envelopes almost unintelligible. Colour laser printers make a viable alternative but they tend to be big, heavy and expensive, so what's the answer? Epson bridges the gap between regular inkjet and laser printing with its resin-based DURABrite Ultra inks, which are practically dry by the time they hit the paper and are remarkably resistant to water, smudging and fading.As an all-in-one printer for the small or home office, the BX305FW has a wide range of business-like features. In standalone mode, it can handle mono or colour photocopying at the touch of a button but, unlike most multi-function printers, it adds faxing to its repertoire. Better still, scanning, photocopying and faxing all benefit from a 30-sheet ADF (Auto Document Feeder) to make light of multi-sheet documents. There's also a neat row of assignable speed-dial buttons for up to five phone numbers.You don't need to be tied to the printer either, because the Epson is fully Wi-Fi certified in addition to carrying a standard USB 2.0 port. Another neat touch is that you can fire off faxes through the BX305FW direct from your computer, without having to print hard copies of your documents first.While the on-board control interface is fairly neat and tidy, using the Epson isn't all plain sailing. There's only a single, rear-mounted paper input tray, which sits vertically and can accommodate around 100 sheets of standard 80gsm paper. This means that if you want to print on headed paper or envelopes, you have to swap the paper around every time, and the same goes for photo printing. The dual paper input system on most Canon printers like the MG5150 makes life much easier. Another disappointment is that there's no USB port for direct document printing from flash drives, and there are no memory card readers either. An auto-duplex facility would have been nice too, since the instantly dry resin-based inks are perfect for double-sided printing, but sadly you have to turn each sheet over manually.Print speeds are a bit sluggish for document printing, taking 14 seconds for a mono text page and 58 seconds for a mixed text and colour graphics DTP page in our tests. On the plus side, the printer doesn't have to wait for pages to dry when outputting multi-sheet documents, which speeds things up in real terms. Photo printing is very slow, taking two minutes and 21 seconds for a 6 x 4-inch print in standard photo quality mode and over 12 minutes for an A4 photo print at the highest quality setting. As a four-ink printer, photo quality is compromised but even considering the lack of colour space, it's especially poor on glossy photo paper, although quite acceptable on plain paper.Running costs are steep when using the standard yield (Fox) cartridges that come with the printer, at around 3.7p per mono page and 14.5p for colour. Using high-yield (Apple) cartridges reduces this to 3.2p for mono and 10.3p for colour, but that's still pricey and the page yield is only about the same as you'd expect from Canon's regular cartridges fitted to the likes of the MP640 and MG5150.As a combined printer, photocopier and fax machine, the Epson BX305FW makes good sense and its four-ink DURABrite Ultra system makes for rugged prints that are water, smudge and fade-resistant on plain paper. It's nice to know you can print out important business documents and they're going to stay looking professional.We likedThe auto document feeder works well with scanning, photocopying and faxing, and the BX305FW takes most office printing jobs in its stride. The robustness of the output is definitely the main attraction and, while photo quality is poor on glossy paper, photographic images actually look very passable on plain paper. Wi-Fi connectivity is a bonus.We dislikedThe resin-based inks are perfect for double-sided printing, because the ink doesn't soak into the paper, but the BX305FW doesn't include an auto duplex facility, so you have to turn each page over manually. The single paper input tray means you have to switch between plain paper, headed paper, envelopes and photo paper all too often, and there's no means of printing direct from a USB flash drive.Photo printing is extremely slow, especially in top quality mode, and running costs are very high if you use the standard-yield ink cartridges, and still pretty expensive even with high-yield cartridges fitted.VerdictThe BX305FW works pretty well for basic printing, scanning, photocopying and faxing and its ULTRABrite Ultra inks make for impressively smudge-resistant prints. However, it's lacking in various areas and a few extra features would have made it much more useful in the office.Related LinksRead more printer reviewsTechRadar's Reviews GuaranteeRelated StoriesReview: Canon PIXMA MG6150Review: Canon PIXMA MP495Review: Canon PIXMA MG5150Review: HP Photosmart Plus

Check out latest LCD TV prices