
Generate professional-looking documents with this Canon ImageCLASS color laser printer. With the ability to print up to 19 ppm, this device lets you speed through jobs, and it has individual color and black ink cartridges, so you only replace what's needed. This Canon ImageCLASS color laser printer delivers a resolution of up to 1200 dpi for easy-to-read text.
A: This is dust cover. When you print using legal sized paper, the tray must be extended via a blue button labeled LGL just inside the tray. This will cause the paper tray to stick out. So after extending the tray and loading legal stock, you then can install the dust cover before sliding the tray back in.
Q: Can I print card stock wt 110 lbs on this printer?
A: Hi I am having the same problem with 110lb paper it works fine with other paper but I need to print on this card stock and it keeps getting jammed and smudged
A: Yes, you can still print just in black even after other colors are drained. The printer alerts you and you just select to continue printing. The life of the black toner is much longer than the printer will indicate. Just keep on going until you visibly see the quality is less than you like and then replace it.
Q: Does this come with toner to begin?
A: Yes it comes with toner but as I understand not as full as new cartridge
Q: Can you print quality photos with this printer?
A: Yes you can, had nothing but good experience with this printer.
Q: What are the operating costs per month when printing 1000 pages per month?
A: In the hundreds of dollars per month if you're printing color copies like me. Each SET of cartridges is only good for about 200 prints, and each toner cartridge (there are 4) is between $70-90. I have never seen a more expensive printer to operate.
Q: Can you scan and save to memory stick?
A: You can save to a USB flash drive.
A: The Nameplate specification is 4.1amps, I put my "kill-o-watt" meter on it. It measured 5.4 amps very briefly during startup, (1-2 seconds) then it dropped to 0.2 amps (sleep mode) . Printing surged to 5.8 amps, then quickly dropped to around 4 amps during the rest of the process. As a comparison... a modern LCD big screen TV uses 1-2 amps, and a 2 slot toaster uses roughly 8.5 amps. If the circuit that you are using is already heavily loaded, then yes, one could pop a breaker.