Epson Stylus Photo RX560 Review
Sunday, October 15, 2006
Whenever I read about inkjet printers, more often than not, it is complaints about how expensive the ink cartridges are and that we live in a rip-off society. Over the years, I have come to learn (as some of you may have also experienced), that some manufacturers do in fact charge extortionate amounts for refills. Epson do not fit into this category, they have always touted how individual ink cartridges save you money and followed through with very good pricing. The Epson RX560 fits right into this category, using six individual ink cartridges, which can be replaced for as little as £6.99 each, so running costs for this all-in-one unit are going to be very good.
Now, I may as well admit it, but having reviewed many printers before, this is my first time to take a look at an all-in-one solution. The RX560 offers a six-colour inkjet printer, that fits into Epson’s ‘Stylus Photo’ range, it also has a flat bed scanner, so you can scan either in Epson’s software or in any twain compliant application, such as Photoshop, but wait, there’s more, you can also place something on the scanner glass and copy it, without even switching your computer on.
All this, plus there is also a memory card reader on the front of the unit, along with a 2.5 inch LCD screen for viewing settings and the photos stored on your memory card. So again, you can print out great looking photos without the use of a computer. There is also Pictbridge support, so you can connect you digital camera direct to the printer.
To top things off, the RX560 is also capable of printing directly onto CD’s and DVD’s that have a white printable surface. I have used an Epson R300 before and printing direct onto a disk is very handy. The RX560 delivers the sort of quality you would expect, with the only change here being the mechanism for sliding in the CD tray. Tucked away inside the paper output tray is a small blue lever, pop this down and the paper tray then adjusts to allow you to insert your disk in the supplied holder... it really is that simple.
So, the RX560 seems to offer a lot of features, but how good does it perform? I am hoping that it delivers the goods we have all come to expect from Epson, read on to find out…
First up, we will take a look at the printing quality. New inks in the form of Claria ink technology promise superior quality and up to 200 years durability when stored correctly. This sounds fantastic and is a great advance for keeping prints looking good for a very long time. The actual depth and vibrancy of the prints are astounding, the 5760x1440dpi resolution (when used) delivers so much detail that you will not be able to distinguish the Epson prints from lab photos.
The scanner offers an A4 size flatbed, an optical scanning resolution of 1200x2400dpi, with software supplied that is fully twain compatible, allowing you to use the scanner directly from within Photoshop. The resulting scans, as with the printouts are very details, have good depth and more importantly when scanning, they are very true to the original, with colour accuracy being very good. In use the scanner is a little noisier than a standalone flatbed, this is probably due to the noise of the scanhead being amplified by the cavernous printer underneath it. Don’t take this comment too seriously, as it is not obtrusive at all.
The menu system is superb, a nice bright 2.5 inch LCD screen which changes according to the mode you are in. A three-way mode button allows you to choose between ‘Copy’, ‘Memory Card’ and ‘Speciality Print’. When you have selected your mode, to the right of the screen you have four way arrow control buttons, with an OK button in the centre, plus a button at each corner of the screen. The main arrow control buttons allow easy navigation around the menu system and everything is laid out logically. With so many options and settings to choose from an intuitive menu is essential and Epson have done everything right.
Memory card support is good too, with compact flash, secure digital, memory stick and xd picture card slots hidden behind a smoked plastic panel. Navigating through the pictures is really easy and you can select individual pictures to print, all pictures, or go through selecting a different quantity of each one to print. You can even scan off the flatbed straight onto a memory card. The RX560 also acts as a memory card reader, so you can transfer your photos onto you Mac or PC from the printer. This is great as it means if you were previously using a memory card reader you regain one of your used USB ports. The printout of photos (I was using 7x5 glossy paper) is both quick and delivers stunning quality yet again.
The Epson RX560 offers so much to the end user and at a very reasonable cost. Think about it, if you were to go and buy a good quality inkjet printer, you are looking in the £100 range at least, add a scanner into the equation and to get a scanner of equal quality you need to splash out another £100, then add in a memory card reader at say £15, a colour inkjet copier at £100 and you can soon see where I am going with this. For under £150 you can have it all, great printouts, excellent scanning, all that extra convenience, wrapped up in a nicely designed, well laid out unit. The RX560 should be top of your list if you are looking for an all-in-one device. Now I just have to beg Epson to let me keep this one, I can feel the withdrawal symptoms already.
To download a printable PDF version of this review click here.
Product supplied by Epson UK
Retail price: £149.00
Contact: 08702 416900
Link to product.
1 Comments:
- At 3:48 pm, said...
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Good quality print outs... BUT...
This printer drinks though ink like an inkoholic!
Every time you need to change a cartidge you'll find you need to run a "nozzle check pattern" then head cleaning (xx amount of times), then just when you think your set, another ink runs out...!
Go through the process all over again for yet another new cartridge, then... wait for it... another one will more than likely need replacing!!
It's now that you realise that the first brand new shiny cartridge is down a quarter on ink with all the nozzle checks and head cleaning, and you've not even really printed anything with it yet!!!
Why make it so it uses ink from all cartridges when running head cleaning? Why not just the specific colour thats blocked? (Because Epson like you to use plenty of ink maybe!?).
You may also run into the situation where when doing a large photo quality A4 print the printer stops half way through it to tell you one of the inks is out! Worse still, it then continues on a brand new sheet having fed the last unfinished print through! How you'll laugh that your printer has just wasted two sheets of expensive A4 premium glossy!
This individual ink cartridge thing is just a con I believe, maybe just to sell you more cartridges.
Oh, and if one cartridge runs out of ink, it won't work at all without a full set... Not even black and white prints, so you'll need to keep lots of replacement cartridges on hand if you do quite a bit of printing...
You could try contacting the customer support at Epson about these issues, but they've made their money, and are guaranteed a nice little future income with this guzzler, and so they just knock you back with auto-reply emails and nonsense...
You know what, I loved Epson printers, but I think I'll never buy one again...
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Dave
Dave has been in the graphic design industry for 14 years. Long time reviewer of technology related products, he is Owner/Editor of Geekanoids.
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