
Monochrome laser printers In The Lab
One sage piece of advice offered to budding entrepreneurs is to "do one thing and do it well." Rather than trying to be all things to everyone, see a gap in the market, an under-served segment or see how you can do something better than your competitors and create your business plan around that. Small and medium sized business and enterprise work groups may therefore appreciate the simplicity and performance offered by stand-alone monochrome laser printers.
These aren't the multi-function fax machine, copier, printer, scanner, coffee makers that grace the shelves of your local computer retailer or SOHO supplier. Rather, these are (varyingly) easy to set up, easy to administer and easy to use black and white document printing workhorses for smaller offices and workgroups.
Why go mono?
Inkjet and laser multi-function printers (MFPs) serve as true all-in-ones and in many cases, are an ideal choice for a home office. Inkjets offer often incredibly low initial cost of ownership but the value proposition falls apart if you need to do anything more than sporadic photocopying and if you receive more than a few faxes or print more than a few documents ("few" in this case being a scientific measurement stand-in for "not many but we're not entirely sure exactly how many").
Laser MFPs tend to be more expensive at retail but have a lower overall cost of ownership than their inkjet counterparts. That said though, in offices of more than a few (a literal few, in this case) people, an all-in-one document centre is likely to experience some traffic jams which rank only slightly below paper jams on the list of printing pet peeves. While Jane from accounting is trying to fax off year end figures, John in marketing is scanning documents and trying to print off a dozen copies of a presentation for tomorrow's meeting. Meanwhile, Milton is searching for his Swingline stapler and listening to the radio at a reasonable volume from nine to eleven while he's collating (Office Space, anyone?).
The monochrome lasers we had in for testing are stand-alone document printing centres. They would be ideally suited to a medium-sized office or workgroup that will use a central office fax machine and a central copier and document scanning centre.
A note on HUB: The Computer Paper's review methodology. Each printer was tested in as close to an even comparison as possible. Things like the way certain functions or features are labeled (econo mode, toner saver or eco mode are all different names given to essentially the same function, for example), but can be fairly compared and contrasted across the various manufacturers and models.
In the course of our testing, we used a 10-page black and white document without line breaks, indentations or any special formatting in both our single-sided and duplexed text printing tests. We also used a 13-page stock photo catalogue in PDF form with approximately 10 per cent image coverage to test monochrome image reproduction. There was no appreciable difference in print time per page as compared with our text-only document.
First page print time was tested from the moment the print button on our freshly formatted Windows XP Professional box was pressed to the moment the first page dropped in to the document tray.
Our measurements for a printer's noise level were highly scientific and involved walking away to a point that the sound of the printer was no longer annoying while the printer churned out pages.
Price: Manufacturer's suggested retail price where available. Retail partners may sell for less. Dimensions: From widest point to widest point, including displays. PPM (manufacturer supplied): The manufacturer's listed page per minute (PPM) based on a best case scenario. PPM (real world, printer default settings): B&W print time/10pg = sec. per pg. and 60sec./sec. per pg.= PPMPPM (real world, duplex): Same equation but measured while printing the same document in automatic duplex mode. Duplex: Automatic and/or manualConsumables cost: Manufacturer's suggested retail price (MSRP) for a high-yield if available (assuming direct order through consumables management feature of printer interface when present). Assumes use of cartridge return programs and the discounts associated therewith when available.
E352dnLexmark http://www.lexmark.ca/ $508.75Dimensions: 38.5 x 25.5 x 32cm (WxHxD) Weight: 11.4kgPPM (manufacturer supplied): Up to 35PPM (A4 paper) PPM (real world, printer default settings): 24.9PPM (real world, duplex): 14.6Duty cycle: 35,000 pg/mo. Duplex: Auto or manualNetwork: EthernetNoise level: 10ft. in default, beside your desk in Quiet ModeConsumables cost: Toner cartridge- $214.65 / 9,000 pg., Photoconductor Kit- $45.90 / 30,000 pg.
The E352dn from Lexmark is a good looking and versatile mono laser printer offering network functionality and full manual or automated duplexing, along with options for booklet, top-bound or side-bound duplexed printouts. It's a capable printer and despite some initial driver installation issues, is the fastest of the bunch with a real world PPM of 24.9. Well short of the manufacturer's spec of 35 PPM but also, including the initial spooling process. After hitting the print button, the first finished page landed in the tray in about 8 sec. Dialing down the print quality to draft doesn't have that much effect on the printer's speed but does offer toner-saving prints with no appreciable loss of print quality, making the Lexmark E352dn a truly usable printer--even for presentations or official documents--when in toner-saving draft mode. The same black and white document sent through in standard setting duplex mode, which is easily accessible via either the printer's two-line mono LCD screen or using the on-screen printer menus, offered a PPM of 14.6.
The printer spools quickly and would be a good choice for workgroups given its 35,000 page duty cycle, 366 MHz processor and 32MB RAM, expandable to 160MB. As a networked printer, it's ideal as a workgroup device. In this context, the noise level is acceptable. If it's going to be sitting on a desk however, a quiet mode scales the speed back and thus, cuts the noise level significantly. If the printer is sigging on your desk, it's worth the sacrifice.
A single sheet or envelope slot on the front of the unit is a nice touch for quick one-off envelopes or label sheets. When using paper from the bottom-mounted, 250-sheet capacity paper tray, it can be loaded with up to 11" x 14" (legal) paper. Beyond 8.5" x 11" however, the paper tray must be expanded such that it juts out of the back of the printer. This issue is not unique to the Lexmark printer in our round-up. However, the included dust cover that keeps the otherwise exposed paper (and thus, the printer's inner workings) clean, is.
ML-3051NDSamsung http://www.samsung.ca/ $299.99Dimensions: 39.5 x 28 x 41cm (WxHxD) Weight: 11.1kgPPM (manufacturer supplied): Up to 28 (A4 paper) PPM (real world, printer default settings): 21.7PPM (real world, duplex): 15.1Duty cycle: 50,000 pg/mo. Duplex: Auto or manualNetwork: EthernetNoise level: 8ft. Consumables cost: Toner/drum cartridge- $129.97 / 8,000 pg.
Samsung's ML-3051ND is a speedy printer that offers high quality output in default mode. It's also one of only two printers in our Lab that incorporates a two-line monochrome LCD panel for accessing some functions from the printer itself and for giving text feedback on the printer's status and, should any problems occur, what's ailing it.
While it's rated for a 50,000 duty cycle, the ML-3051ND is probably best suited to a smaller workgroup or for individual, heavy use home office as it's paper tray feels a bit flimsy and will require extra care to ensure it isn't damaged.
Duplexing and toner save modes are accessible via dedicated buttons on the printer's no-nonsense control panel. Toner save mode creates a readable document suitable for internal office use and filing but that you probably wouldn't want to hand to a client with text looking a bit washed out without sufficient contrast on the page. In default mode however, the ML-3051ND spits out high contrast, easy to read pages and clear monochrome images and charts with the first page hitting the tray in about 10 seconds.
When auto duplexing, the capable printer still manages a respectable PPM of 15.1 with our 10-page heavy coverage text document taking 39.7 sec. from spooling to finished tray.
The paper tray can accept media up to 8.5” x 14" (legal paper) by expanding the tray, which then juts out a bit precariously from the back of the unit. A second tray can be added to boost the printer's capacity from 300 to 550 pages in the lower tray, the same number in the add-on tray and 50 pages in the front-loading multi-purpose tray. Said tray accepts plain paper, envelopes, labels and other media.
Under the hood, a 400 MHz processor and 64MB RAM expandable to 320MB keeps this chugging along smoothly and allows for a large print queue.
For administrators, the ML-3050 series includes the "SyncThru Web Service" for checking the status of the printer on the network, including network and individual settings and updating firmware. The "SyncThru Web Admin Service" that is available on network versions of Samsung printers ups the ante allowing remote diagnostics, configurable problem alerts and more through a dedicated web interface.
HL-5250DNBrother http://www.brother.ca/ $299.99Dimensions: 36 x 23 x 37.5cm (WxHxD) Weight: 9.8kgPPM (manufacturer supplied): 30PPM (real world, printer default settings): 21.7PPM (real world, duplex): 11.4Duty cycle: 20,000 pg/mo. Duplex: Auto or manualNetwork: EthernetNoise level: 10 ft. from deskConsumables cost: Toner cartridge- $129.99 / 7,000 pg., Imaging drum- $249.99 / 25,000 pg.
Brother's HL-5250DN is a no-nonsense networked laser that, despite its lower than the average duty cycle of 20,000 pages per month, is a capable, high-capacity and speedy printer suitable for home office use or in smaller workgroups.
Perhaps its biggest claim to fame is in its huge up to 800 sheet capacity; 50 sheets in the front-loading, flip-down multipurpose tray, 250 in the included paper tray and up to 500 more with two additional purchase add-on paper trays. You'll have to keep an eye on larger jobs however as the output tray will only accept 150 of those printed pages. Paper trays accept up to legal (8.5" x 14") paper easily with snap tray adjustments. When using standard letter-sized (8.5" x 11") paper, the tray and the printer are one self-contained unit. When going beyond letter, the paper tray sticks out the back of the printer.
An incredibly easy to follow set-up guide makes it simple to get the printer up and running within half an hour of opening the box, even for neophytes. This ultra-simple setup speaks to single-user, non-techie offices. For small workgroups in enterprise, small offices and for the more technically inclined home user, there's an extensive web management system designed with network administrators in mind. Here, you can do web-based driver deployment to a workgroup, check the level of consumables, the printer's overall health as well as grab generic PCL drivers for Citrix Metaframe and Windows Terminal Server.
On the first run through, printing several 10-page documents, the printer left an awkward curve the finished product that made it hard to even up the pages. However, after a few run-throughs, this problem self-rectified and didn't occur again.
Our 10-page heavy coverage test document made its way through the printer from initial spool to final page in 27.1 sec for an impressive real-world PPM of 21.7. The first sheet was delivered within 9.7 sec.
Duplexing on the HL-5250, while not the slowest, showed the biggest difference between print time for single-sheet and duplexed pages. Our 10-page test document printed on both sides of five sheets took a manageable 52.5 sec (11.4 PPM) from start to finish.
Under the hood, a 266 MHz and 32MB RAM expandable up to an impressive 544MB keeps things running smoothly.
LaserJet P2015dHP http://www.hp.ca/ $449.00Dimensions: 35 x 25 x 35.5cm (WxHxD) Weight: 11kgPPM (manufacturer supplied): 27PPM (real world, printer default settings): 20.9PPM (real world, duplex): 11.9Duty cycle: 15,000 pg/mo. Duplex: Auto or manualNetwork: Not as testedNoise level: 8 ft. Consumables cost: HP LaserJet Q7553X Black Print Cartridge- $147.99 / 7,000 pg.
The P2015d is a recent entry level small office / enterprise workgroup mono laser printer and enjoys instant brand recognition as a part of HP's generally highly regarded LaserJet line. Eschewing a display screen, the P2015d instead opts for several LED lights that alert to paper jams, low consumables and other such printer mainstays.
Moving up a step from the P2015d, the P2015dn adds network capability, network administration and a print server to the list of marketing bullet points and adds about $120 to the suggested retail price.
The model tested is the basic P2015 with added duplexing functionality. Speaking of which, the LaserJet P2015d spits out duplexed pages (using our heavy coverage text document) at about 11.9 PPM. Single sheets emerged at a speedy 20.9 PPM in standard mode. In this mode, text is crisp, clear and easy to read. In our test presentation document, images are as clear as can be hoped for on a monochrome laser printer at factory default settings. Printing in economy mode, text becomes grey, loses contrast and generally makes it look as if the toner cartridge is dying before its time. In other words, eco-minded or not, you probably wouldn't want to put a document printed in this mode in front of a client, either existing or potential. Toner savings aside, the time savings aren't worth the sacrifice; our test document printed in eco-mode came out just a little more than three seconds faster (23.7 PPM) than the same document printed in standard mode. We assume that the toner savings in eco-mode are considerable.
The smaller than average monthly duty cycle of 15,000 pages per month mean this printer is ideally suited to home offices, some small offices and small workgroups. 15,000 pages is a lot to print in a month, but larger workgroups or offices should step up to a higher rated printer.
That said, the printer's solid feel speaks to reliability and it has what feels like the sturdiest paper tray in the Lab this month. Said tray accepts up to standard letter (8.5" x 11") paper while maintaining the printer's overall footprint. Upping the paper size to legal means the tray juts out the back. With an optional additional 250-sheet paper tray, the P2015d can accept up to 550 sheets; 250 in the included paper tray, 250 in the add-on and 50 in the multi-purpose tray.
A 400 MHz processor is the brains behind the operation and the 32MB RAM that comes standard can be expanded up to 288MB.
One sage piece of advice offered to budding entrepreneurs is to "do one thing and do it well." Rather than trying to be all things to everyone, see a gap in the market, an under-served segment or see how you can do something better than your competitors and create your business plan around that. Small and medium sized business and enterprise work groups may therefore appreciate the simplicity and performance offered by stand-alone monochrome laser printers.
These aren't the multi-function fax machine, copier, printer, scanner, coffee makers that grace the shelves of your local computer retailer or SOHO supplier. Rather, these are (varyingly) easy to set up, easy to administer and easy to use black and white document printing workhorses for smaller offices and workgroups.
Why go mono?
Inkjet and laser multi-function printers (MFPs) serve as true all-in-ones and in many cases, are an ideal choice for a home office. Inkjets offer often incredibly low initial cost of ownership but the value proposition falls apart if you need to do anything more than sporadic photocopying and if you receive more than a few faxes or print more than a few documents ("few" in this case being a scientific measurement stand-in for "not many but we're not entirely sure exactly how many").
Laser MFPs tend to be more expensive at retail but have a lower overall cost of ownership than their inkjet counterparts. That said though, in offices of more than a few (a literal few, in this case) people, an all-in-one document centre is likely to experience some traffic jams which rank only slightly below paper jams on the list of printing pet peeves. While Jane from accounting is trying to fax off year end figures, John in marketing is scanning documents and trying to print off a dozen copies of a presentation for tomorrow's meeting. Meanwhile, Milton is searching for his Swingline stapler and listening to the radio at a reasonable volume from nine to eleven while he's collating (Office Space, anyone?).
The monochrome lasers we had in for testing are stand-alone document printing centres. They would be ideally suited to a medium-sized office or workgroup that will use a central office fax machine and a central copier and document scanning centre.
A note on HUB: The Computer Paper's review methodology. Each printer was tested in as close to an even comparison as possible. Things like the way certain functions or features are labeled (econo mode, toner saver or eco mode are all different names given to essentially the same function, for example), but can be fairly compared and contrasted across the various manufacturers and models.
In the course of our testing, we used a 10-page black and white document without line breaks, indentations or any special formatting in both our single-sided and duplexed text printing tests. We also used a 13-page stock photo catalogue in PDF form with approximately 10 per cent image coverage to test monochrome image reproduction. There was no appreciable difference in print time per page as compared with our text-only document.
First page print time was tested from the moment the print button on our freshly formatted Windows XP Professional box was pressed to the moment the first page dropped in to the document tray.
Our measurements for a printer's noise level were highly scientific and involved walking away to a point that the sound of the printer was no longer annoying while the printer churned out pages.
Price: Manufacturer's suggested retail price where available. Retail partners may sell for less. Dimensions: From widest point to widest point, including displays. PPM (manufacturer supplied): The manufacturer's listed page per minute (PPM) based on a best case scenario. PPM (real world, printer default settings): B&W print time/10pg = sec. per pg. and 60sec./sec. per pg.= PPMPPM (real world, duplex): Same equation but measured while printing the same document in automatic duplex mode. Duplex: Automatic and/or manualConsumables cost: Manufacturer's suggested retail price (MSRP) for a high-yield if available (assuming direct order through consumables management feature of printer interface when present). Assumes use of cartridge return programs and the discounts associated therewith when available.
E352dnLexmark http://www.lexmark.ca/ $508.75Dimensions: 38.5 x 25.5 x 32cm (WxHxD) Weight: 11.4kgPPM (manufacturer supplied): Up to 35PPM (A4 paper) PPM (real world, printer default settings): 24.9PPM (real world, duplex): 14.6Duty cycle: 35,000 pg/mo. Duplex: Auto or manualNetwork: EthernetNoise level: 10ft. in default, beside your desk in Quiet ModeConsumables cost: Toner cartridge- $214.65 / 9,000 pg., Photoconductor Kit- $45.90 / 30,000 pg.
The E352dn from Lexmark is a good looking and versatile mono laser printer offering network functionality and full manual or automated duplexing, along with options for booklet, top-bound or side-bound duplexed printouts. It's a capable printer and despite some initial driver installation issues, is the fastest of the bunch with a real world PPM of 24.9. Well short of the manufacturer's spec of 35 PPM but also, including the initial spooling process. After hitting the print button, the first finished page landed in the tray in about 8 sec. Dialing down the print quality to draft doesn't have that much effect on the printer's speed but does offer toner-saving prints with no appreciable loss of print quality, making the Lexmark E352dn a truly usable printer--even for presentations or official documents--when in toner-saving draft mode. The same black and white document sent through in standard setting duplex mode, which is easily accessible via either the printer's two-line mono LCD screen or using the on-screen printer menus, offered a PPM of 14.6.
The printer spools quickly and would be a good choice for workgroups given its 35,000 page duty cycle, 366 MHz processor and 32MB RAM, expandable to 160MB. As a networked printer, it's ideal as a workgroup device. In this context, the noise level is acceptable. If it's going to be sitting on a desk however, a quiet mode scales the speed back and thus, cuts the noise level significantly. If the printer is sigging on your desk, it's worth the sacrifice.
A single sheet or envelope slot on the front of the unit is a nice touch for quick one-off envelopes or label sheets. When using paper from the bottom-mounted, 250-sheet capacity paper tray, it can be loaded with up to 11" x 14" (legal) paper. Beyond 8.5" x 11" however, the paper tray must be expanded such that it juts out of the back of the printer. This issue is not unique to the Lexmark printer in our round-up. However, the included dust cover that keeps the otherwise exposed paper (and thus, the printer's inner workings) clean, is.
ML-3051NDSamsung http://www.samsung.ca/ $299.99Dimensions: 39.5 x 28 x 41cm (WxHxD) Weight: 11.1kgPPM (manufacturer supplied): Up to 28 (A4 paper) PPM (real world, printer default settings): 21.7PPM (real world, duplex): 15.1Duty cycle: 50,000 pg/mo. Duplex: Auto or manualNetwork: EthernetNoise level: 8ft. Consumables cost: Toner/drum cartridge- $129.97 / 8,000 pg.
Samsung's ML-3051ND is a speedy printer that offers high quality output in default mode. It's also one of only two printers in our Lab that incorporates a two-line monochrome LCD panel for accessing some functions from the printer itself and for giving text feedback on the printer's status and, should any problems occur, what's ailing it.
While it's rated for a 50,000 duty cycle, the ML-3051ND is probably best suited to a smaller workgroup or for individual, heavy use home office as it's paper tray feels a bit flimsy and will require extra care to ensure it isn't damaged.
Duplexing and toner save modes are accessible via dedicated buttons on the printer's no-nonsense control panel. Toner save mode creates a readable document suitable for internal office use and filing but that you probably wouldn't want to hand to a client with text looking a bit washed out without sufficient contrast on the page. In default mode however, the ML-3051ND spits out high contrast, easy to read pages and clear monochrome images and charts with the first page hitting the tray in about 10 seconds.
When auto duplexing, the capable printer still manages a respectable PPM of 15.1 with our 10-page heavy coverage text document taking 39.7 sec. from spooling to finished tray.
The paper tray can accept media up to 8.5” x 14" (legal paper) by expanding the tray, which then juts out a bit precariously from the back of the unit. A second tray can be added to boost the printer's capacity from 300 to 550 pages in the lower tray, the same number in the add-on tray and 50 pages in the front-loading multi-purpose tray. Said tray accepts plain paper, envelopes, labels and other media.
Under the hood, a 400 MHz processor and 64MB RAM expandable to 320MB keeps this chugging along smoothly and allows for a large print queue.
For administrators, the ML-3050 series includes the "SyncThru Web Service" for checking the status of the printer on the network, including network and individual settings and updating firmware. The "SyncThru Web Admin Service" that is available on network versions of Samsung printers ups the ante allowing remote diagnostics, configurable problem alerts and more through a dedicated web interface.
HL-5250DNBrother http://www.brother.ca/ $299.99Dimensions: 36 x 23 x 37.5cm (WxHxD) Weight: 9.8kgPPM (manufacturer supplied): 30PPM (real world, printer default settings): 21.7PPM (real world, duplex): 11.4Duty cycle: 20,000 pg/mo. Duplex: Auto or manualNetwork: EthernetNoise level: 10 ft. from deskConsumables cost: Toner cartridge- $129.99 / 7,000 pg., Imaging drum- $249.99 / 25,000 pg.
Brother's HL-5250DN is a no-nonsense networked laser that, despite its lower than the average duty cycle of 20,000 pages per month, is a capable, high-capacity and speedy printer suitable for home office use or in smaller workgroups.
Perhaps its biggest claim to fame is in its huge up to 800 sheet capacity; 50 sheets in the front-loading, flip-down multipurpose tray, 250 in the included paper tray and up to 500 more with two additional purchase add-on paper trays. You'll have to keep an eye on larger jobs however as the output tray will only accept 150 of those printed pages. Paper trays accept up to legal (8.5" x 14") paper easily with snap tray adjustments. When using standard letter-sized (8.5" x 11") paper, the tray and the printer are one self-contained unit. When going beyond letter, the paper tray sticks out the back of the printer.
An incredibly easy to follow set-up guide makes it simple to get the printer up and running within half an hour of opening the box, even for neophytes. This ultra-simple setup speaks to single-user, non-techie offices. For small workgroups in enterprise, small offices and for the more technically inclined home user, there's an extensive web management system designed with network administrators in mind. Here, you can do web-based driver deployment to a workgroup, check the level of consumables, the printer's overall health as well as grab generic PCL drivers for Citrix Metaframe and Windows Terminal Server.
On the first run through, printing several 10-page documents, the printer left an awkward curve the finished product that made it hard to even up the pages. However, after a few run-throughs, this problem self-rectified and didn't occur again.
Our 10-page heavy coverage test document made its way through the printer from initial spool to final page in 27.1 sec for an impressive real-world PPM of 21.7. The first sheet was delivered within 9.7 sec.
Duplexing on the HL-5250, while not the slowest, showed the biggest difference between print time for single-sheet and duplexed pages. Our 10-page test document printed on both sides of five sheets took a manageable 52.5 sec (11.4 PPM) from start to finish.
Under the hood, a 266 MHz and 32MB RAM expandable up to an impressive 544MB keeps things running smoothly.
LaserJet P2015dHP http://www.hp.ca/ $449.00Dimensions: 35 x 25 x 35.5cm (WxHxD) Weight: 11kgPPM (manufacturer supplied): 27PPM (real world, printer default settings): 20.9PPM (real world, duplex): 11.9Duty cycle: 15,000 pg/mo. Duplex: Auto or manualNetwork: Not as testedNoise level: 8 ft. Consumables cost: HP LaserJet Q7553X Black Print Cartridge- $147.99 / 7,000 pg.
The P2015d is a recent entry level small office / enterprise workgroup mono laser printer and enjoys instant brand recognition as a part of HP's generally highly regarded LaserJet line. Eschewing a display screen, the P2015d instead opts for several LED lights that alert to paper jams, low consumables and other such printer mainstays.
Moving up a step from the P2015d, the P2015dn adds network capability, network administration and a print server to the list of marketing bullet points and adds about $120 to the suggested retail price.
The model tested is the basic P2015 with added duplexing functionality. Speaking of which, the LaserJet P2015d spits out duplexed pages (using our heavy coverage text document) at about 11.9 PPM. Single sheets emerged at a speedy 20.9 PPM in standard mode. In this mode, text is crisp, clear and easy to read. In our test presentation document, images are as clear as can be hoped for on a monochrome laser printer at factory default settings. Printing in economy mode, text becomes grey, loses contrast and generally makes it look as if the toner cartridge is dying before its time. In other words, eco-minded or not, you probably wouldn't want to put a document printed in this mode in front of a client, either existing or potential. Toner savings aside, the time savings aren't worth the sacrifice; our test document printed in eco-mode came out just a little more than three seconds faster (23.7 PPM) than the same document printed in standard mode. We assume that the toner savings in eco-mode are considerable.
The smaller than average monthly duty cycle of 15,000 pages per month mean this printer is ideally suited to home offices, some small offices and small workgroups. 15,000 pages is a lot to print in a month, but larger workgroups or offices should step up to a higher rated printer.
That said, the printer's solid feel speaks to reliability and it has what feels like the sturdiest paper tray in the Lab this month. Said tray accepts up to standard letter (8.5" x 11") paper while maintaining the printer's overall footprint. Upping the paper size to legal means the tray juts out the back. With an optional additional 250-sheet paper tray, the P2015d can accept up to 550 sheets; 250 in the included paper tray, 250 in the add-on and 50 in the multi-purpose tray.
A 400 MHz processor is the brains behind the operation and the 32MB RAM that comes standard can be expanded up to 288MB.
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