Computer Active (UK)

Brother MFC-L2750DW Mono printer puts rivals in the shade

Less colour, more speed

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By now there must be at least one multi-function inkjet printer/ scanner per UK household. For everyone who doesn’t have one, someone else still has an old one they stopped using because the ink got too expensive and the paper kept jamming, alongside the new one they y saw in the supermarke­t after Christmas tmas for 35 quid. But here’s an alternativ­e: a multi-function black-and-white A4 laser printer (MFP). It comes in a similar ilar format, albeit a bit bulkier, with a sheet heet feeder for the colour scanner on top.

Unlike some, the MFC-L2750DW can scan as well as print both sides of the paper (duplex), and it also incorporat­es a fax machine, if you have a telephone socket handy and still know people who fax. And for all those doubters who associate mono lasers with clunky old office tech, this one has a big colour touchscree­n, Wi-fi, Airprint for your iphone or ipad, and Mopria for Android devices, with NFC for instant connection.

It also works well with Dropbox, and you can print from or scan to your online storage or via email. Everything has security options, too, if you’re sharing a printer with others.

The MFC-L2750DW also promises to print up to 34 pages per minute (ppm), a lot more than most inkjet printers. Cunningly, we sent it a 34-page Word document – and it came out in 60 seconds. If we’re being picky, that didn’t include the lazy 12 seconds it took to start up, but it’s still pretty quick, and you get full, crisp 1200dpi quality at that speed.

A fancier document with graphics forced it to slow down a bit, but reducing the resolution to a still profession­allooking 600dpi brought it back on track. Print quality was excellent except for photos, which – as we’d expect – showed some ugly banding. A mono laser printer isn’t the best choice for that.

The 50-page automatic document feeder (ADF) churned through 10 single-sided scans in 34 seconds, and photocopyi­ng 10 pages both sides took just over a minute and a half. These are all good speeds. The catch is that after the 700-page starter unit runs out, Brother’s high-yield toner cartridges cost around £53 per 2,600 pages, plus a £62 drum replacemen­t after 12,000.

At 2.5p a page, it’s no cheaper than an inkjet. But for higher volumes of work, it might well be more practical.

A no-nonsense mono laser printer, with a few surprising mod cons

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