

#Wireless for a canon mp210 printer registration#
Graphic colours are also dense with little sign of stipple patterns and good registration of black text over colour. Black text is sharp with no signs of ink spatter or spread. We’ve come to expect good print quality from Canon printers and the MP210, even though an entry-level device, doesn’t disappoint. While we realise all manufacturers are in a cycle of hype on print speeds and Canon is no worse than others, you really need to treat all quoted print speeds with a sack of salt. The five page colour test took 1min 59secs, or a speed of 2.52ppm, less than a third of Canon’s claim. The 54 second result translates to a real-world speed of 5.6ppm, less than half the quoted speed. Our five-page text test took 54 seconds to complete, though when the machine had to wake up from sleep mode, there was an extra 40 seconds worth of print cartridge rattling before it started.

It quotes 14ppm for black pages and 9ppm for colour. It appeared to make little difference to the images we tried it on, but no doubt that was due to our Snowdon-esque quality of our photographs.Ĭanon has started quoting both normal and draft mode print speeds, which is a move towards transparency and one which other printer makers should copy.
#Wireless for a canon mp210 printer install#
The bundled software includes OmniPage SE for Optical Character Recognition and various Canon utilities that all install simply enough, though you can’t leave it to get on with the job as it keeps asking for confirmation and agreement to licences.Ĭanon has added a new feature called Auto Image Fix to its MP Navigator EX software, which applies unspecified fixes to images to ‘enhance’ them. It can be a bit fiddly to get them properly located, but the Quick Start sheet provides reasonable diagrams. The PIXMA MP210 uses a black cartridge and a tri-colour one and these slip in and clip upwards to lock into position. Lift the main scanner section and a mauve-ish strut drops down, like the bonnet support on an old MG, so you can get at the twin cartridge holders with both hands. At the back is a single USB 2.0 socket and one for a mains cable even in this budget machine, there’s no separate power-supply brick.

While this works, it’s only good for slim volumes books of poetry rather than Geoffrey Archer novels. The scanner section includes what Canon calls a Z-lid, which lifts up front and back so you can place a book on the flatbed glass. There are eight other indicators and as many control buttons. At first glance it looks a bit like ”Predator’s” wristwatch in the Schwarzenegger film but once you’ve looked up what all the different signals mean it’s quite informative. In its place is a single, seven-segment green LED display that endeavours to produce a variety of messages by showing different combinations of segments as well as a single digit for the number of copies. The control panel is also simple, with no colour LCD in fact no LCD at all. It would be very surprising if either were included in a device at this price. There’s no secondary tray, as there is with the PIXMA MP610, and no option to print CD or DVD labels. A 100-sheet feed tray folds open and extends up at the back and an output tray folds down and pulls out from the front. Canon’s new PIXMA MP210 ”is” unusual, though, and offers all the copy and scanning advantages of its bigger siblings at a true budget price.įor a Japanese product, this Canon is surprisingly bulky, with a large grey and black case echoing the lacquer-box look of its immediate predecessors. All-in-one machines are usually more expensive than their simple printing counterparts and it’s unusual to find one at under £50.
