The Canon MX882 is one of the best all in one printer brings incredible quality, speed and ease of use to your business. Built-in Wi-Fi1 lets you print and scan from any room in your home while you produce documents and photos with a 9600 x 2400 maximum color dpi2, 1 picoliter and a 5 individual ink tank system. Its Dual Function Panel provides streamlined controls and function buttons that transform into a keypad while in fax mode for easier operation.
The Canon MX882 prints, copies, scans, and faxes. You can scan to e-mail (it'll open up your e-mail client and attach a scan to a new message), and fax either from your PC or your computer. It's a handsome device, glossy black with rounded corners and a beveled, matte-black top. At 8.6 by 19.4 by 17.7 inches (HWD) and 25 pounds, you probably wouldn't want to share a desk with it. -Photo quality was excellent, with most prints rivaling what you'd get from a professional photo lab. A monochrome photo showed a trace of a tint, but no other issues rose to the level of being worth mention. You can also utilize various security features like password protected PDF's to confidentially create and distribute your most important files. The Pixma MX882 is a black plastic box that measures 8.6x19.4x16.4 inches (HWD). Weighing in at just under 26 pounds, the unit tapers on the top and bottom. Its design is sleek and stylish, even if the body is a little larger than other AIOs in this class. We could see it fitting into a living room as well as an office, as long as you have the desktop real estate for it.
The Canon Pixma MX882 presents an impressive set of features, and superior text and photo quality, all wrapped up in one attractive package at a relatively modest price. It doesn't have quite the speed of the Editors' Choice HP Officejet 6500A, but it's no sluggard, either. The combination of a formidable set of all-in-one features for work and for photo printing plus its print quality, make it the new Editors' Choice as a dual-purpose (home and home office) MFP. The controls sit along a sloped edge on the front of the body. A 3-inch, color LCD shows the printer’s menus, which are controlled by a series of 16 buttons. Paper is loaded into either the main paper cassette beneath the output tray on the front of the unit, or rear-mounted feeder tray (for special media). On the top of the MX882 is a 30-page ADF for copying, scanning, or faxing multiple pages, and there's an adjoining output tray underneath it.
The text and monochrome graphics that the Pixma MX882 produces are excellent--precisely drawn and deeply black in default mode, and nearly laserlike in high-quality mode. Color quality is affected by paper type: On plain paper, our images looked overly pink or orange, and very soft. Switching to Canon's own glossy photo paper resulted in smoother, more natural results. Color scans showed the same ruddy tendencies, but monochrome scans were fairly precise. Monochrome and color copies appeared crisp and fairly smooth even on plain paper.
Ink costs for the Canon MX882 All In One Printer are better than average. The pigment black used for text costs $16 and lasts 341 pages, or 4.7 cents per page. Cyan, magenta, and yellow each cost $14 and last 500 to 520 pages, or 2.7 to 2.8 cents per page. A four-color page would cost 12.9 cents. Canon also sells a dye-based photo black, meant primarily for printing photos; it costs $14 and lasts for 670 4-by-6-inch photos, according to the company. The Kodak ESP 9250 has far cheaper inks, but it falls short in other respects.
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