As the usual suspects here may remember some months ago my beloved and somewhat under used HP B8550 wide carriage photo printer jammed solid, and nothing I was able to do got it unjammed. It still sits in my work area, on it's own little table across my work area from my desktop, while I decide what to do with it. I kind of want to send it to HP in hopes of it being repaired, but that almost makes no economic sense, I bought it near the end of it's product life and if I include shipping costs it will probably cost more that I paid for it to get an estimate.

In the mean time I replaced it, almost by accident, with the Canon PIXMA iX6520, and here is a mini review.

/Relevant/ Technical Specifications*;

4 color CMYK, (four dye including photo black, one pigment black for documents), ink system.

Resolution Color 9600x2400 dpi
                  Black 600x600 dpi

Minimum/Maximum Paper Size: 2.16"x3.58" (55x91mm) / 13" x 19" (33x48cm)

Minimum/Maximum Paper Weight: 64gsm/280gsm

USB 2.0 (High Speed)

Print Speed

4x6 Color print ~37 seconds.

B&W Document 11.3 PPM
Color Document 8.5 PPM

The mini review:  It works as advertised, thanks for reading...

OK, so there's more to it than that. Warning there will be some references to the semi dead HPB8550, (hereafter refereed to as the HP) printer as well.

I've been using the Canon PIXMA iX6520 as a dedicated Photo Printer, hereafter to be refereed to as the PIXMA or the Canon, for about 6 months now and it's really quite good at it's job.

There are no frills, it's usb only and unless you share if from the computer it's attached to there is no network printing, (though it works fine shared on a network), Unlike the HP it has no built in display, card reader, USB port for jump drives, or a control panel, (beyond two lighted silver buttons, [On/Off and Pause/Resume which also doubles an alert display]), I do kind of miss those, but then again I only paid $100.00 plus tax for it. Unless you are going to use it networked setup is a snap. Networking on a Windows network at least is a bit more difficult, but that's a Windows thing, I haven't tried it with Linux or any flavor of MAC.

Paper feeding is very reliable, for a printer in this class, (I'll say inexpensive rather than cheap), in the past I've occasionally, had even the best photo capable printers I've used feed more than one page, in the middle of a run of multiple prints, that's not happened with the PIXMA so far, (it only happened with plain paper with the HP B8550 once that I remember but it happened, after which I didn't fully trust it). Ink usage is average.

I haven't printed enough to use up the black cartridges from my initial ink set, it's close on the Photo Black though), I'm on my second set of color inks. As others have noted inkjet inks seem to last longer if you print on a regular basis, I've been trying to find at least one thing I want to print a week, even if it's only 4"x6". I've been recording my print production, by surface area, in a spread sheet, so sometime in the future, probably when this particular printer is no longer available, I'll be able to definitively say how many square inches of photograph this printer will give you per set of inks.

The prints very good, better than those I get could usually get from even an a "professional" photo finisher, in my opinion. If I can manage to get an image to look good on my desktop monitor, it will look good, and mostly identical, on glossy and satin paper. The sole exception is that sometimes shadow areas will appear a bit, um, well flat. I'm not sure if that wouldn't be true with any translation from a lit display to a reflected light print. This is an improvement over the HP . where shadow areas tended to get a bit muddy.

Black and White printing on this printer is actually wonderful. Earlier, less expensive Epsons, and every HP printer, I've ever worked with. that did not have a dedicated B&W ink set, always imparted some kind of color cast, usually an objectionable magenta cast, to the finished B&W print. I would deal with by adding my own faux sepia or platinum toning. The PIXMA doesn't seem to have that problem. There is some color cast but seems to be more in the nature of the paper.

I've found that the Canon paper seems to give a more neutral black, a Bromide paper look, while the Ilford paper give a warmer more Chlorobromide look. Unlike my previous experience the images are quite pleasing without adding an offsetting tint. I have a few other papers to play with but haven't gotten around to trying B&W printing with them.

That brings me to print longevity, and I haven't a clue. I say this because I've had prints under glass that were supposed to be good for 75+ years fade in less than 5. That said, Canon seems to claim 100 years with their inks and paper, but I don't use Canon paper, except in 4x6" size, and I only use that because unlike HP when you buy a set of Canon inks bundled with a 50 pack of their 4x6 inch paper, you actually get full size, (as opposed to half size), ink cartridges. This makes the Canon bundle an actual bargain. However, back to the point on print longevity, you'll have to get back to me in about 75 years.

So what's the bottom line here.

The PIXMA does everything you'd really expect a Photo printer to do for you. Good color prints, good B&W prints, it's just good, and it's affordable.

You'll notice that I've said nothing about what it looks like. That's because it really isn't important to me, but it is stylish, in a kind of Star Trek TNG, "photon torpedo", black lozenge, manor, much like most Canon PIXMA printers.

So what do I find wrong with it? When taken in itself nothing. The only niggle that I have is in comparison to the HP vs Paper handling, The Canon's maximum size print is 13" x 19", (which seems to be driver limited), which is a nice size print** so I shouldn't complain but the HP allowed prints of 13" x 44" so you could print big panoramas.

Would I buy it again?  Yes, it's a really good printer.

Would I recommend it to others, absolutely, while not the most sophisticated printer on the market, it does exactly what it sets out to do, which in itself is a pleasure.

~Fin~

*Taken from multiple sources, not all of this information is available in the same place.

**People who've only shot an processed digital may not understand how amazing that is. Most photographers shooting 35mm film wouldn't think of making anything bigger than 11" x 14" prints, in most cases 8" x 10" prints would be pushing to the limits of acceptable quality, digital has come a long way and the typical prosumer and even consumer level digital camera today can easily produce images that print that big with more than decent quality. To even print to that size in the past would have required a extremely expensive and space consuming enlarger, and to get good quality would require medium format film at the very least.

--
There are two kinds of computer users those who've experienced a hard drive 
failure, and those that will.


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