Good
laser printers are usually way out of the price range of the average
buyer. However, they are becoming more affordable and in some cases, can
make a much better investment than an inkjet printer. Toner cartridges for
inters may cost more than their inkjet counterparts but they last a lot
longer. If you only need to produce text and greyscale images, it's worth
considering a laser .
Installation is straightforward and similar
to your average inkjet. Once set up, there's a hefty 250-sheet A4 paper
feeder for your blank paper and a 50-sheet output tray for your printed
documents.
The published print speed of the ML1510 is
14 pages per minute (ppm) for text, which our tests agreed with. Even
pages with mixed text and images printed at 14ppm and our test A4 photo
only took 29 seconds to print, all of which are very respectable speeds.
One of the most crucial aspects of any
laser printer is print quality. Bolstered by its maximum printing
resolution of 600 x 600, the ML1510 didn't disappoint. We produced a page
of text in varying font sizes and even as small as 2pt, the text was crisp
and clearly readable. The same went for larger fonts, which were solid and
free from jagged edges. Greyscale images and diagrams appeared to suffer
slight banding (where stripes of different tones appear in the image) but
this was by no means chronic.
Laser printers are renowned for being large
and unwieldy, designed with the office in mind. While the ML1510 might be
a little bland, it's relatively small, measuring 34cm deep and 20cm high,
which won't clutter up your desk too much.
Unfortunately, there are no buttons on the
printer. Usually you'd find a 'paper-feed' or cancel button but not here.
Everything is controlled by the PC software, which makes it difficult to
maintain the printer if there's a problem with the PC. All in all, though,
the ML1510 is a great laser printing solution that doesn't cost an arm and
a leg.
Cheaper to run than their inkjet
counterparts, laser printers are a cost-effective option for high-volume
print output. With a compact footprint of just 396 x 353mm.
The technical side of printing fascinates
some and bores others. Basically a printed page consists of tiny little
dots which make up the image or letters that you see. In the case of an inkjet
printer, these dots consist of coloured ink. In the case of a laser
printer the dots are tiny particles of carbon which are sealed onto
the paper by heat (ever wondered why your prints come out hot?).
The logic involved in printer
advertisements is that if you can get more dots within a square inch
then you can get more detail onto the page. The logic then dictates that
more detail means more quality.
In the real world, a printer outputting
at a mere 600 dots per inch may well produce better prints than one
outputting 2,400 dots per inch (dpi). The reason is that there are many
other elements at work, such as how accurately the software that
controls the printer, known as a 'driver', can manage the printer. You
also have to consider the paper handling mechanism, which works within
fractions of an inch. And then there's the actual quality of ink or, in
the case of a laser printer, the quality of the toner - poor quality ink
lacks vibrant colours and won't react with the page in the correct
manner, causing rough edges and long drying times. In the case of poor
quality toner in a laser printer, the black areas won't be as dense.
If you want to purchase a printer then go
along to your local PC shop and ask for a sample print.
If the sales staff pull one out of a folder under the counter then be
wary -- this will have been produced in ideal situations. They're not
going to show you the 9 prints prior to that one which were rubbish.
They'll also have printed onto top quality paper - laser
printers can print on standard paper without qualms but inkjet
printers print best on specially coated paper. Fair enough, you
might think, but this paper is often highly expensive.
Ask to see the printer in action. Take
along your own picture on a floppy
disk and ask them to output it. By all means let them output it on
the special paper but ask to see it printed on standard paper too, and
see how well the printer copes - some printers will cope excellently
whilst others will start to show serious weaknesses.
Also note how long the print takes to
arrive in the output tray. Is it a matter of seconds or have you got
time to make a cup of tea? How noisy is the printer whilst outputting?
Is it whisper-like or more akin to busy traffic?
In the case of an inkjet printer, inspect
the print that comes out. Look at how well the colours have been
reproduced, and skin tones in particular. Watch out for the common
problems of printing. The first is banding - visible lines on the print
where the printer hasn't quite matched up one pass of the print head
with the one lower down. Look out for 'dithering' too - sometimes the
dots that make up the image are visible to the naked eye which can spoil
the effect of a good print.
With a laser print, inspect the denseness
of the black. Is it really black or more of a dark charcoal grey? (The
same rule applies for text outputted by an inkjet printer, by the way).
Are the letters perfectly formed when you look closely or can you see
the 'computerfication' - jagged edges on descenders, for example.
With both a laser and inkjet printer,
examine the page per minute output figures - how long will you be
waiting for 10 pages to drop into the output tray? Ask the shop
assistant to send twenty pages of text to the printer and time it to see
if the quoted figures match reality. They rarely will.
Consider the running costs. How much do
replacement ink cartridges cost? Or, in the case of laser printers, how
much do replacement toner cartridges cost? Also consider the cost of the
'drum' in a laser printer, which will be replaced infrequently but is
nonetheless part of the total running cost.
Watch out too for wide variations in the
amount of pages outputted by a toner or ink cartridge. One company might
sell a cartridge for £10 whilst their competitors sell theirs for £30
but it's likely the former will only print around 2,500 pages whilst the
latter might print three or four times that.
Finally, take a good hard look at the
build quality. Waggle a few things and see how well they're fixed down.
On inexpensive printers this can be a serious issue. Be particularly
diligent in examining laser printers because these often have to survive
constant use in tough office environments.
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