I always buy an Epson printer as they are more reliable then other printers and produce excellent photos.
I always buy an Epson printer as they are more reliable then other printers and produce excellent photos.
If all you need from your home-based or family consumer-grade photo AIO, though, is good-quality prints at reliable speeds and modest print and copy volumes, the Epson Expression Premium XP-6000 Small-in-One Printer should serve you well.
Uses five inks for exceptional output quality, especially photos; Capable of borderless prints; Small and light
High running costs; Input and output capacities are low
The Epson Expression Premium XP-6000 Small-in-One Printer ($149.99) is a capable little entry-level all-in-one (print, copy, scan) inkjet designed for home-based and family offices with light-duty printing needs. Like the Editors' Choice Canon Pixma TS9120, the XP-6000 is a photo-centric machine capable of printing large, borderless photos. However, the Canon model's more robust feature set and lower ink costs are more than enough to justify its $50 higher list price. But if you simply need a basic, inexpensive AIO for light-duty use in a home office, the XP-6000 is a solid choice. Small and Capable Measuring 5.6 by 13.7 by 19.8 inches (HWD) and weighing a slight 14.6 pounds, the Epson XP-6000 ($149.99 at Amazon Canada) is, as its name implies, small for an all-in-one (AIO) printer, However, Canon, HP, and Brother all offer models in about the same (or smaller) size and weight. The Canon TS9120, for example, weighs about the same and is about 7 inches shorter in depth, as is the ...
The Epson Expression Premium XP-6000 Small-in-One is a basic but capable photo-centric all-in-one inkjet printer that delivers excellent print and copy quality, but its high ink costs relegate it to light-duty use.
Uses five inks for exceptional output quality, especially photos; Capable of borderless prints; Small and light
High running costs; Input and output capacities are low
Didn't even have it for a week and it wouldn't work. All I did was insert the ink cartridges while setting it up and it kept saying that the ink levels weren't enough for initializating even though all of the ink cartridges were brand new. Calling Epson support and they were useless too.
Hope it has better life than the 3 to 4 years (probably averaging 20 or so sheets a week) I got from an E.E.P. XP-520 which it replaces which despite always using own brand ink . Too early (soon) to comment on encountered problems.
My printer died and I ordered this one, then I got sick and couldn't deal with installing it. My sister-in-law stayed with us for a while and one of the things she did to help was to unpack the new printer, throwing disclaimers all along that she's not a technical person and this wasn't her forte.
I have not had the printer too long, so I'm still waiting to see how well the ink holds up - if it dries up or doesn't last long, but so far so good. I am printing about 10 pics every week (sending to elderly in-laws in another state who don't do any kind of social media).
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