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  Home > Printers > Kyocera FS-C5025N


Kyocera FS-C5025N

Kyocera 1300 364 429  |  Price at time of review $1390

  Author:  Dave Mitchell
Performance:
Features & Design:
Value for money:
Overall Rating: Rating: 5 out of 6

Date:  05/03/2007

In Short
A workgroup laser with a good turn of speed and low running costs, but we expect better quality at this price.

Specifications
600 x 600dpi A4 colour, 20ppm colour/mono • 500MHz PowerPC • 128MB RAM • USB • 10/100 Ethernet • 500-sheet input tray • drivers for Windows 98 upwards.
Review Pricing  


Prices for colour lasers may have dropped enough to make them affordable for small offices, but a drawback of these budget-priced boxes is often high running costs and substandard print quality. As its price tag suggests, Kyocera’s latest FS-C5025N stays away from this market and is aimed at professional users who aren’t prepared to sacrifice on quality and want low running costs.

The printer certainly delivers on the second count, as all toner cartridges last for 8,000 pages and you have a maintenance kit that’s good for 200,000 pages. Overall costs per A4 mono page pan out to 0.9p, while colour pushes this to 4p per page. Compare these costs with TallyGenicom’s sub-$500 8108N, which sets you back 3.2c for a mono page and 22.6c for a colour page, and you can see where Kyocera is coming from.

The printer comes with an integral 500-sheet lower tray and you can add up to three more 500-sheet trays, along with an optional duplex unit. The printer is equipped with a decent 500MHz processor and the base memory can be upgraded to 640MB. Note that Kyocera wants around £210 for an extra 256MB 100-pin DIMM – half that charged by HP. Installing the printer is simple, as the routine hunts down the device on the network and offers the most appropriate drivers. The printer’s web interface is basic, but it does provide plenty of information about consumables, easy access to settings and options to send alerts via email.

To get colour print speeds up to a reasonable level, the C5025N uses a single-pass system, where the toner cartridges are laid out in a line down the paper path. Sure enough, the system worked fine, as our 24-page test DTP document with plenty of colour graphics and photographs was completed in 1min 11secs for 20ppm. Mono speeds were on the money as well, with a 20-page Word document churned out in 58 seconds. The printer’s top resolution is 600 x 600dpi, so there isn’t much to play with in the driver panel – select the top-quality setting or choose from a couple of toner-saving modes.

We found print quality to be disappointing overall. Text across a wide range of font sizes was sharp, and graphs and charts were delivered with no discernable banding. However, colour photos were lacklustre and a slight banding was noticeable in large areas comprising a single colour. The level of detail, particularly in darker areas, was good, but our test pictures lacked the vibrancy we’ve seen with Oki’s C5600n and Lexmark’s A-Listed C522n. Further investigation revealed reasonably smooth fills across colour fades, but grey shades composed of equal mixes of C, Y and M showed too much magenta.

The FS-C5025N scores highly for its speed and low running costs. Although the print quality makes it suited mainly to businesses looking for no more than a splash of colour in reports, the fact remains that as a workhorse laser it makes a good alternative to the A-Listed Lexmark.






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