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Imaging Devices

Best Photo Printers Revealed – Jan 2013 (Part 4) : Epson Stylus Photo R2000, Canon PIXMA Pro-1

1/17/2013 9:16:30 AM

A new and improved A3+ printer

A major revamp of the older Epson R1900 A3+ printer, the R2000 sports an array of crafty features including Wi-Fi plus wired Ethernet and USB 2.0 connectivity. There’s also a roll feeder attachment for printing large-format panoramic prints. To make the latter more usable, as well as to reduce the frequency with which you need to change cartridges, Epson has increased capacity by 50%. The new ‘Kingfisher’ cartridges contain 17ml of ink. Running costs take a step in the right direction as a result.

 
Epson Stylus Photo R2000 $630

Epson Stylus Photo R2000 $630

The line-up of eight UltraChrome HiCloss2 cartridges includes pigment-based photo black and matte black inks. Unlike in the Epson R3000, the print head has separate channels for both photo black and matte black, speeding up the transition between glossy and matte media, and avoiding and expense each time you switch over. A gloss, optimizer gives prints a pleasant, uniform sheen.

Overall build quality feels a little flimsy compared with the Epson R3000 and both Canon A3+ printers.

“Eight UltraChrome HiGloss2 cartridges include pigment-based photo black and matte black inks”

 
UltraChrome HiGloss2 inks come in 17ml cartridges for photo black, matte black, cyan, vivid magenta, yellow, red and orange, plus a gloss optimiser

UltraChrome HiGloss2 inks come in 17ml cartridges for photo black, matte black, cyan, vivid magenta, yellow, red and orange, plus a gloss optimiser

Performance

Fairly fast for a pigment-based printer, the R2000 outputs borderless A3+ prints in top quality mode in a little under seven minutes. That’s significantly faster minutes. That’s significantly faster than both the Canon Pro-1 and Epson R3000 models, which both take around ten minutes. Colour rendition isn’t quite as convincing as that from any of the other A3+ printers on test here. Darker colours and tones tend to look a bit muddy and lifeless.

You can only use either the matte or photo black cartridge depending on media type, and there are no grey cartridges. This makes the R2000 a poor choice for black-and-white printing. Mono photo prints have a habit of taking on a green colour cast.

When it comes to running costs, combined ink and photo paper works out to around $2.2 per A4 print.

In detail… Epson Stylus Photo R2000

In detail… Epson Stylus Photo R2000

It’s well connected for an A3+ printer

·         Roll adaptor

Panoramic printing is on the menu thanks to a roll adaptor that fits to the back of the printer

·         Connection options

Unlike many A3+ printers, there’s a full compliment of USB, Ethernet and Wi-Fi connectivity

·         Resolution

Epson’s typical 5760dpi print resolution is maintained, as featured on the company’s A4 printers

·         Front feeder

The manual front feeder support media with a thickness of up to 1.3mm

Ratings

·         Digital camera

·         Features: 4 stars

·         Image quality: 3 stars

·         Build quality: 3 stars

·         Value: 3 stars

·         Overall: 3 stars

Canon PIXMA Pro-1, $1042.5

Puts the ‘pro’ into home printing

With a colossal range of 11 pigment – based inks plus a ‘chroma optimiser’, which works in essentially the same way as a gloss optimizer, Canon’s Pro-1 has a class-leading 12 cartridges under the bonnet.

 
Canon PIXMA Pro-1

Canon PIXMA Pro-1

Going one better than the Epson R300, this printer features three grey cartridges plus both a photo black and matte black. Better still, both black inks have their own separate channels within the print head, so there’s no wasteful purging required when you want to swap between glossy and matte media.

The other available ink colours are cyan, photo cyan, magenta, photo magenta, yellow and red. In short, the Pro-1 aims to give you the very best of both worlds, black and white and colour. And with the combination of pigment-based inks and a chroma optimizer, this printer seeks to prove itself equally well when printing on both matte and glossy media.

Build quality is equally impressive. At a rather hefty 27.7kg in weight, it feels like something of a battleship of a printer. Connection options include both USB and wired Ethernet, although there’s no Wi-Fi connectivity available on this model.

“Both black inks have separate channels within the print head, so there’s no wasteful pruging”

The 12-cartridge Lucia pigment-based system runs on 36ml tanks for cyan, photo cyan, magenta, photo magenta, yellow, red, photo black, matte black, dark grey, grey, light grey and a chrome optimiser

The 12-cartridge Lucia pigment-based system runs on 36ml tanks for cyan, photo cyan, magenta, photo magenta, yellow, red, photo black, matte black, dark grey, grey, light grey and a chrome optimiser

Performance

In a nutshell, the Pro-1 delivers the best colour and the best black-and-white print quality in the whole group. Glossy prints are silky-smooth, and matte prints are exceptional.

The only real sticking point is the price. This printer is expensive to buy (around $1042.5) and a full set of ink cartridges will set you black about $412.5. Even so, running costs are a bit cheaper than with either of the Epson A3+ printers in this group.

Unlike the other Canon printers reviewed here, the Canon Pro-1 isn’t exactly a speed demon. Top quality borderless A3+ prints take a rather pedestrian nine-and-a-half minutes to output, and the printer is also surprisingly slow at creating small-format prints, even when using its medium quality settings.

However, it’s certainly well worth the wait, because the final prints are of fabulous quality.

In detail… Canon Pixma Pro-1

In detail… Canon Pixma Pro-1

Ticks all the right boxes for a big printer

·         Back to black

There are no less than five black and grey cartridges, to assure supreme mono fidelity

·         Dual input

Dual paper feed paths enable media sizes from 6x4 inches to A3+ and 14x17 inches

·         High-capacity

High-volume cartridges give the printer stamina and help to reduce the running costs

·         Connectivity

Options include USB, wired Ethernet and PictBridge, but no Wi-Fi  

Ratings

·         Camera digital

·         Features: 5 stars

·         Build quality: 5 stars

·         Image quality: 5 stars

·         Value: 5 stars

·         Overall: 5 stars

 

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