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Lexmark C3426dw

A capable middleweig­ht colour laser, offering pinsharp prints at good speeds and great cloud support

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PRICE £310 exc VAT from printerbas­e.co.uk

Lexmark’s GO Line series of lasers is aimed at businesses with relatively light printing needs, and within that family the C3426dw is the top-end colour model. It delivers good speeds and excellent output quality for a low starting price: the trade-off is running costs, which are a little steeper than you’ll find with other lasers. The starter cartridges supplied with the C3426dw are only rated for 1,500 pages, after which Lexmark’s 4,500-page high-yield replacemen­ts work out to 1.9p per mono page and 10.4p for colour.

As long as you can live with that, the C3426dw is a very respectabl­e A4 colour laser, claiming a swift 26ppm print speed in both colour and mono, and integrated duplex printing. Paper capacity is ample for its intended role, comprising a 250-sheet lower tray (which can be supplement­ed with one or two extra 250-sheet trays) plus a single-sheet MPT and a 100-sheet output bin. It’s user-friendly too, thanks to a 7.2cm colour touchscree­n – a big step up from the little two-line LED displays found on cheaper GO Line models.

As you’d expect, the C3426dw can be used with a direct USB connection, but also supports both Ethernet and 802.11n wireless. We found setting up the latter impressive­ly painless thanks to Lexmark’s Mobile Assistant iOS app, which automatica­lly located the printer and helped us connect and configure it.

Lexmark cagily promises print speeds of “up to” 26ppm, but our tests showed that this is easily attainable once the printer has warmed up: our 26-page test Word document was delivered in 61 seconds, after a wait of around ten seconds for the first page. A graphic-heavy DTP document proved more of a challenge, but print speed dipped only slightly to 24ppm. Double-sided prints from Word came out at 13ppm, cutting performanc­e precisely in half.

These speeds were all achieved using Lexmark’s default 4800CQ resolution – equivalent to 2,400 x 600dpi – and we really can’t fault the quality. Text was perfectly sharp and clean at sizes right down to 6pt, while mono photos revealed high levels of detail even in darker areas, with only a hint of banding. Colour reports were vivid and eye-catching, and our test chart looked superb, with smooth,

“The C3426dw delivers good speeds and excellent output quality for a low starting price: the tradeoff is running costs”

even transition­s across complex fades. The driver offers a standard 600dpi mode as well, but we found this made no noticeable difference to quality or speed.

With such great results, and relatively high running costs, you might need to prevent staff from using the C3426dw for personal prints. This is easily done via the printer’s web console: you can block all public access to mono or colour printing with a click, and set up user accounts to determine what features each person is allowed to use.

Document security, meanwhile, is taken care of by a walk-up-and-print option that holds sensitive jobs until a PIN is entered at the touchscree­n; frequently printed documents can be stored on the printer for future use, and when printing multiple copies you can proof one copy before releasing the rest.

Cloud support is strong too. Lexmark’s Cloud Connector portal lets you link Box, Dropbox, Google Drive and OneDrive accounts to the printer, after which a PIN-protected icon for each one appears on the touchscree­n, from which you can browse and print files. We could also use Lexmark’s Mobile Print iOS app on an iPad to print documents, web pages and photos, and share the printer with other installed apps. The printer doesn’t have an NFC sensor for tap-toprint operations, but it does support AirPrint and Wi-Fi Direct.

If you regularly print hundreds of pages per day then there are more economical printers out there, but SMBs with modest printing needs will find the C3426dw a worthy choice. It has enough security features to keep a tight rein on usage plus good cloud support, and output quality is a match for much more expensive lasers.

SPECIFICAT­IONS 600dpi A4 colour laser 26ppm colour/mono dual-core 1GHz CPU 512MB RAM 7.2cm colour touchscree­n Gigabit Ethernet 802.11n wireless USB 2 duplex 250-sheet drawer single-sheet manual feed slot rec. monthly duty cycle: 2,500 pages 411 x 394 x 244mm (WDH) 16.1kg 4yr warranty on registrati­on

250-sheet lower tray, £97 exc VAT

 ??  ?? LEFT The web portal and driver handle cloud connection­s and driver print security
LEFT The web portal and driver handle cloud connection­s and driver print security
 ??  ?? ABOVE With a colour screen and classy design, this feels like a premium printer
ABOVE With a colour screen and classy design, this feels like a premium printer

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