![]() Still, it worked without a hitch during testing, with no smudges, misprints or paper jams, and print quality is excellent for the price. We measured just under 16 pages per minute (ppm) when printing mono pages and 6ppm in colour. It isn’t as easy to use as a printer with a touchscreen interface, though the control panel on the top of the unit is simple to operate and the companion Brother Mobile Connect app is excellent, as long as you’re happy controlling your printer from your phone or tablet. Printed pages are ejected through the front slot, and below this is the main (and only) paper tray, which is capable of holding 150 sheets of A4 paper. The unusually large cartridges are housed behind a front flap where the printer bulges slightly on the right-hand side. It’s still quite compact, though, and its uncluttered off-white casing blend into the background more successfully than Brother’s other office inkjets. It’s a fraction bigger than many A4 all-in-one devices because the cartridge compartment is larger and deeper than normal. This is Brother’s smallest INKvestment model, and I must immediately point out that it isn’t compatible with the super-high-yield INKvestment cartridges that give up to 5,000 pages per cartridge. However, it does offer high-quality colour printing and scanning, and comes with enough ink in the box for 720 black-and-white pages or 480 colour pages. There’s also no touchscreen, it can’t print on both sides of a sheet automatically (though you can do this manually), and you have to scan one page at a time. It has to be connected to a PC via USB or Wi-Fi network, because it has no Ethernet port. It can print, scan and copy, but – not being stuck in the 1980s – won’t fax.
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