Canon Pixma TS8050 review: Price
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Canon Pixma TS8050 review: Features And Design
Canon says that the new TS8050 is 30 percent smaller than previous models in the range, and at 139mm high, 372mm wide and 324mm deep it’s certainly small enough to sit on a desk or a shelf in a home office or bedroom where space is a bit tight. However, Canon manages to pack in plenty of useful features that help to justify the printer’s relatively high cost. As well as the 9600x2400dpi printing, the TS8050 includes a 2400x4800dpi scanner and copier.
The main paper tray holds 100 sheets of A4 paper, but its focus on photo printing means that there’s a second tray that holds 20 sheets of photo paper, and a third tray for printing on CDs and other types of disc. As well as standard USB and wifi connections, the TS8050 also supports AirPrint for Apple’s iOS devices, while Canon’s Cloud Link feature allows you to print photos from social media such as Instagram.
Canon Pixma TS8050 review: Printing Performance
The complexity of the six-ink printing process means that the TS8050 isn’t the fastest printer around. Canon quotes speeds of 15 pages per minute for text documents, 10ppm for colour graphics, and 21 seconds for a 10x15cm postcard print. We actually got closer to 12ppm for text, and 7ppm for graphics, while our postcard prints took 30s. Even so, those speeds should still be perfectly adequate for most home users and, of course, the five inks used for photo printing ensured that our test prints really were extremely good, with crisp, bold colours and subtle, attractive flesh-tones in portrait photography. Oddly, though, text output using the printer’s standard quality setting was a little heavier than we’d expected, and lacked the near-laser-quality smoothness that you can now get from some inkjet printers. It’ll be fine for most routine documents, but if you really need top-quality text then you might want to switch to the slightly slower Fine setting.
Canon Pixma TS8050 review: Running Costs
A set of five standard colour cartridges comes to around £45.00, although Canon quotes a different number of pages for each individual colour cartridge, which makes the cost calculations rather complicated. After a bit of head-scratching and calculating with Excel, we estimate that colour printing with the standard cartridges works out at about 10.6p per page, which is on the higher end of average printing costs. But if you spend around £59.20 for a set of five XL cartridges then that price comes down to just 6p per page – which is very good for colour printing of this quality.