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Lexmark X6570

B&W Pages per Min.: 28 • Color Pages per Min.: 24 • Max. B&W dpi: 1200-by-1200 • Max. Color dpi: 4800-by-1200 • Max. Scanning dpi: 600 by 1200 • Tray Capacity, pages: 100 • Price When Reviewed: $150
Last updated
January 03, 2008
Test Center Reviewed by
Melissa Riofrio
Pros
Cons

Lexmark X6570 Color Inkjet MFP

High-end features--automatic duplexing and Wi-Fi--help the X6570 stand out in its price range.

Melissa Riofrio

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The ordinary-looking Lexmark X6570 color inkjet multifunction printer conceals a few secret powers. Can advanced paper-handling and networking features help it beat fancier competition?

No other multifunction in the X6570's price range--even the similarly designed Dell 948 AIO--can boast all this: automatic duplexing, a 25-sheet automatic document feeder, and integrated 802.11b/g networking. These features can make a big difference for the SOHO/small business crowd. I'm a particular fan of making two-sided copies of two-sided documents, which the X6570 can do, albeit with manual refeeding of the original. At this price, that's close enough for me.

Most other aspects of the X6570 are pedestrian. It has a 100-sheet, top-loading input tray that's a bit on the small side. Its output tray, a sturdy, foldout front panel, holds 50 sheets. It control panel is well labeled and mostly logical. The panel can sit flush with the front of the machine or tilt to a set angle. The two-line, monochrome LCD on the front panel shows menu items and longer messages in clear English; the latter scroll across the screen, like electronic ticker tape, only more slowly--it's tedious to read.

Performance is competent. Text documents managed a decent speed of 7.2 pages per minute, while graphics pages slowed to a painful 1.7 ppm. Text was nice and dark, but fuzzy, marring finer fonts and making closely-spaced ones look mushed together. Graphics looked oversaturated and grainy on plain paper. Lexmark's own photo paper toned down the palette considerably and improved sharpness. Monochrome scans and copies were quite good, but color ones were yet again oversaturated.

As you happily take advantage of the duplexer and ADF to handle longer documents, note that Lexmark charges a lot for the X6570's ink. Black ink costs a dear 5 cents per page; a page with small amounts of cyan, magenta, yellow, and black costs 11 cents. You'll use far more ink to print a full-color photo.

Lexmark enhances the X6570's hardware with well-designed software. The brightly colored, clearly labeled driver includes spot illustrations of features, plus task-based help. Bundled apps cover photo editing, scanning, and fax functions. The Solution Center is a one-stop shop for how-to information, troubleshooting and maintenance, and other resources, including the excellent, HTML-based manual. A printed user guide covers a subset of common topics. Unfortunately, Lexmark printers scored below average in reliability in our recent Reliability and Service survey.

For a boxy, plain-looking machine, the Lexmark X6570 packs an impressive number of higher-end features. It can't compete with faster, more capable machines, but it's a good bargain for users who want maximum versatility for the price.

--Melissa Riofrio

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