Thursday, September 19, 2013

Brother MFC-6890CDW Professional Series Color Inkjet All-in-One Printer/Copier/Scanner/Fax with Duplex Printing and Wireless Networking

Buy Brother MFC-6890CDW Professional Series Color Inkjet All-in-One Printer/Copier/Scanner/Fax with Duplex Printing and Wireless Networking


Brother MFC-6890cdw Professional Series Color Inkjet All-in-One with Duplex Printing and Wireless Networking The MFC-6890cdw encompasses all of the great features of a Professional Series All-in-One. Print, copy, scan and fax on a wide range of paper sizes up to 11¿ x 17¿. Additionally, enjoy the convenience of duplex printing at 8.5¿ x 11¿, wireless (802.11b/g) and Ethernet network interfaces, and up to 50-page document feeder. Work more efficiently with dual paper trays that hold up to 350...
  • Print, copy, scan and fax up to 11" x 17" (ledger-size) for high impact business applications
  • Save paper with duplex printing at 8.5" x 11"
  • TouchScreen 4.2" color LCD display - easy to use and interactive
  • Flexible wireless (802.11b/g), wired (Ethernet) network connection and Hi-Speed USB 2.0 interfaces
  • Dual paper trays provide total capacity of 350 sheets

This Laser Printers give to us some advantages, like this :
1. Great features, great function, one caveat...
This is a large printer with lots of features that work well. I set this up on the wireless function to operate with my Mac. It only took one setup and I've experienced no problems with the range, which I did experience on my HP initially. Sending documents to print is a fast and easy task. It has an easy to use and good looking large touchscreen to take you through each menu. This is great and time saving when compared with other printers. Having the ability to print ledger photos without going to a printer store is fantastic and I used it to make several posters for our portfolio.

Now to the caveat, big or small depending on your needs. The print quality is not nearly as good as the HP. It's comparable to other brands, very similar to what Lexmark puts out, but could not compare in color quality to my HP. Yesterday, I needed to print out a color chart for our business products and I did a couple on the normal settings on my HP. Then my ink got low so I switched...

2. Good for a specialized purpose
After using this printer's predecessor (MFC-6490CW) for over a year, I can offer the following:

My requirements are very specific. I need ledger-size (11x17) scanning and printing...period. Just try to find an AIO at this price that will do that (unless you want to pay $600+?) Most of my documents are B&W, some with a small amount of color highlighting, and this printer works flawlessly for that purpose.

For color photos, make sure you use photo paper or the color is so washed out even at the custom maxed-out settings that I don't bother printing photos on plain paper.

The automatic document feeder, ADF, is somewhat flakey and skews the paper a bit too much for my finiky demands so I just limit myself to using the glass-top surface for most scanning.

I love the scan-to-file feature that doesn't require input from the PC and allows several file formats as the default, including PDF. If you are not picky about the document skewing of the ADF,...

Need more appointment... ?
Very good if you need ledger printing. Not so good if you don't.
After owning and reviewing both the excellent Canon Pixma MX850 Office All-In-One Inkjet Printer and the almost as-good Canon PIXMA MX860 Wireless All-In-One Photo Printer, Brother has to make an airtight case against Canon when they're looking to get twice as much money out of your wallet.

Unless printing on 11 x 17" (ledger) paper is a make-or-break need, Brother doesn't make a very good case against the less expensive Canon offerings.

Of course, this is Brother's flagship inkjet AIO offering, so they've thrown in a gimmicky touchscreen. Sure, it's kind of cool, but it doesn't really help accomplish much beyond jacking up the price. Is it missing from other AIO printers? Sure. Does it add any value? No.

Setting the printer up on MacOS X was quite painless, making for an unexpected treat. Setting the printer...
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