
Functionality meets style in the PIXMA TR7020, a compact wireless All-in-One printer built for your home or work needs. It’s easy to setup, simple to use, and feature-rich — with a clear 1.44” OLED Display, built-in compact Auto Document Feeder, Front & Rear Paper feeding, and Auto-Duplex Printing. The TR7020 can handle a variety of tasks with ease, from scanning a signed contract with the ADF to printing homework assignments from virtual classrooms. Whether printing from your computer or wirelessly1 from your smartphone, the TR7020 is a quality All-In-One Printer for your everyday home and work tasks.
A: Little information about this printer is frustrating, so I took the attached photo of the output port on the back of the printer. It does NOT come with a cable, but they are easy to purchase along with any adapter you may need for your laptop. I really like this model and am pleased with its options, features, and performance.
Q: Csn this print on card stock?
A: Perfect model for even the heaviest cardstock, since it has a separate rear tray you can use so the cardstock does not have to be curled up from the lower paper tray -- it feeds straight through.
Q: what ink cartridges does it use
A: Black: 260 Color: 261
Q: Can it read both sides of a double-sided document when it scans?
A: Among this model's features listed on Canon's site is "Copy or scan multi-page documents like contracts or reports with ease using the built-in compact Auto Document Feeder.' (The ADF lets you load documents from the top so as not to spindle them.) But that does not explicitly say it will automatically scan both sides. The manual, which covers multiple models, states "Both sides of a two-sided document can be scanned simultaneously on models with ADF duplex scanning support." Nowhere that I found is it mentioned that the Pixma TR7020 has ADF duplex scanning, so search for other models that support it.
Q: How easy is it to print addresses on envelopes of all sizes and also print on half sheets of paper?
A: It is very easy just like printing on a regular piece of paper.
A: No