![]() ![]() Black text in general is reasonable, though there’s some fuzziness, particularly around headings. ![]() Colour copies showed signs of a purple cast in some shades of blue and black text over coloured backgrounds displayed some bleeding. Dark areas of the image were less detailed than we normally see from Canon machines, and although this could be tweaked through software, we’ve seen better from earlier Canon all-in-ones.Ĭolour graphics on plain paper are generally good, though there’s some noticeable dithering in lighter shades. A 15 x 10cm photo on Canon glossy photo paper, printed at High quality, took 1:21, but printing at Normal quality from a PictBridge camera, the time reduced to just 53 seconds.īoth these photos were to Canon’s normal high standard, with colours looking very natural and showing good levels of detail. The machine performed quite a bit of housekeeping before starting some of these prints and this time is normally excluded from ISO print speed tests.Ī single page colour copy completed in 41 seconds, while a 5-page black text copy from the ADF took one minute, 16 seconds both of these times are quite acceptable for a SOHO machine. The five-page text and colour graphics document produced a speed of 2.4ppm, though, little more than half the rated speed. Our 5-page black text document completed in 54 seconds, giving a real-world speed of 5.6ppm, but the 20-page document boosted this to 6.9ppm, not a long way off the claimed speed. A copy of Canon’s web page print utility is also included.Ĭanon has taken to quoting sensible speeds for its inkjet printers and claims 7.5ppm for black print and 4.5ppm for colour. It has a well-damped release, so that when you close it, the top section doesn’t bang down onto the print engine.ĭrivers for Windows and OS X come as standard and Canon includes a good support bundle, including OCR software and document management. This four-colour machine uses two ink cartridges, one black and the other tri-colour, and these clip in easily, once you’ve hinged up the scanner section onto its ‘bonnet-stand’. A flap pulls open at the rear to provide an input tray, which can take up to 100 sheets.Īt the back are sockets for USB, Ethernet and a fax line, but many people will choose to connect via wireless and setup is straightforward, as you can enter any passcode using the numeric pad. In the front panel is a small illuminated blue badge, which shows that the PIXMA MX340 has Wi-Fi, and a pull-down cover which opens automatically if you forget it when printing and sits at an angle to provide a raised output tray. There’s also a sophisticated system for rejecting junk faxes, based on the source of the fax call. There are 20 speed dials with a fast search facility that comes up with likely names as you type. To the right is a number pad for dialling fax numbers and at the extreme right are two large buttons for black and colour copies. To the left of the LCD display are three large mode buttons for copy, fax and scan. Although it is well used, with a good display font and icon-based status info, there’s no backlight, which can make it difficult to read, unless you have direct overhead light. The front of the surround holds the control panel, which has a bitmapped, mono LCD display set in the middle. The sleek, large black and white box has a high-gloss top, which unfolds into a 30-sheet ADF, inset into the lid of its scanner. They have fewer facilities for the photo enthusiast and more for the small office, so you can expect to see fax and an Automatic Document Feeder (ADF), but not a memory card reader.Īnd this is what you get. The Canon PIXMA MX340 is a member of Canon’s small-business range of inkjet all-in-one printers.
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