Reviews
Pixma MX7600
June 03, 2008
Melissa Riofrio
Canon Pixma MX7600 Inkjet Multifunction Printer
If you can afford it, this fast, full-featured multifunction inkjet printer will suit any small business or home office.
Melissa Riofrio
With HP wireless printers, you could have printed this from any room in the house. Live wirelessly. Print wirelessly.
Considering the price ($400 as of 6/6/08), the Canon Pixma MX7600 color inkjet multifunction printer had better be good--and it is. It offers plentiful features, fast performance, and vivid output, making it a great choice for small businesses and home offices.
In our tests, the Pixma MX7600 printed black text on plain paper at an above-average rate of 9.8 pages per minute (ppm). It was also fast in generating graphics--managing 3.7 ppm, for instance, in printing a small photo on plain paper. The quality was consistently high regardless of the kind of paper we used (although on plain paper, color images had a slight orange cast). Copies of a text sample closely resembled the original. Scans of text and photos looked slightly fuzzy but otherwise accurate. HP's OfficeJet Pro L7680 All-in-One is a lot faster, but its output quality isn't quite as good.
The MX7600's bulk encompasses a wealth of features. It has two input trays: a 150-sheet cassette for plain paper only (letter or legal) that slides subtly into the bottom of the unit, plus a rear, vertical feeder that holds anywhere from 1 to 20 pieces of photo paper, envelopes, or other kinds of media. A 50-sheet output tray flips out from the front. An automatic duplexer projects from the rear of the machine. Up on top is a scanner with a 35-sheet automatic document feeder (ADF) that can scan two-sided documents in a single pass.
The control panel has an initially daunting number of buttons and a smallish, 1.8-inch, tiltable color LCD, but they work well together. You press one of the four primary-function buttons (to copy, fax, scan, or use a memory card), and the LCD-based menus show only the corresponding options. Most of the buttons have clear labels; I paused only to wonder how the 'Menu' and 'Settings' buttons differed.
The Pixma MX7600's cost-oriented ink system includes a permanent printhead (which you install) and separate tanks for black (K), cyan (C), magenta (M), and yellow (Y) ink. Each of the tanks costs $15, but they vary in yield from 570 pages (black) to 1075 pages (yellow), or from 1.4 cents to 2.6 cents per color, per page. A fifth "ink"--a clear coating that sprays over images printed on plain paper--costs $18 and lasts 1600 pages.
You definitely get your money's worth with the speedy, capable Pixma MX7600. Canon's better-than-average rating in our recent Reliability and Service survey is the icing on this substantial cake. For more-affordable alternatives, however, check out Lexmark's X9575 Professional or HP's Officejet J6480 All-in-One; both offer many of the same features for a lower price (and they have integrated Wi-Fi, too).
--Melissa Riofrio
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