ie8 fix

Lexmark E460dw review

Slide 2
Slide 3
Slide 4
Slide 5
Slide 6
Slide 7
Slide 8
Slide 9
Previous
Next

CNET Editors' Rating

CNET Editors' Rating

2.5 stars OK
  • Overall rating: 5.5
  • Design: 6.0
  • Features: 6.0
  • Performance: 4.0
  • Service and support: 6.0
Review Date:

Average User Rating

0.0 stars No reviews. Write a review

The good: Auto-duplexing, built-in wireless print server.

The bad: Very expensive; inconsistent print speeds; poor output quality; ugly.

The bottom line: The Lexmark E460dw is an overly priced one-trick pony that produces mediocre prints at an inconsistent pace. Small businesses looking for a single-function monolaser should turn their attention toward the Samsung ML-2851ND instead.

The Lexmark E460dw is a monochrome laser printer geared toward midsize businesses that demand a high output device that can print documents as quickly as possible. It's a single function printer, so it can't fax, copy, or scan, but it does offer wireless printing via a built-in wireless print server. In our experience, we contend that $700 is far too much to ask for the E460dw--aside from its painfully drab exterior, the output quality for anything other than simple text is far from acceptable and it doesn't come close to printing at its advertised speed. We recommend you stay far away from this laser printer and instead take a look at the Samsung ML-2851ND that offers much cleaner print quality and half the size for half the price.

Design and features
From a design perspective, the E460DW is flat-out ugly. We didn't care for the Samsung ML-2851ND's design, but this Lexmark makes it look like the Mona Lisa--not just because it's 2 inches bigger at 10 inches high by 16 inches wide by 15 inches deep, but mostly because of the painfully cookie-cutter grey and white case. We respect Lexmark's desire to appease a wider variety of office colors by coloring it with a muted palette, but the E460DW looks so boring that you're likely to run right into it if you're not paying attention.

The shape of the device is the standard cube with the printer output tray on top of the box and a wide front panel with a spread of menu buttons and a 3-inch grayscale LCD that sits flush against the front face. The backlit display adds a convenient touch to the user experience, showing you operational messaging, status updates, and printer settings. You can also make direct changes to the printer settings with the four-way directional pad, which is more than we can say for the Samsung that leaves out the LCD screen entirely and cuts the price down to $330 as a result.

A tray pops in the middle of the printer that gives access to the removable toner cartridge, and the bottom-loading input drawer extends out to accept up to 250 sheets of 20-pound paper, a standard amount for any monochrome laser printer. The printer can accept different sizes of media, up to 8.5 inch by 14 inch legal paper. You can also buy an additional high-volume input tray that adds an extra 250 or 500 sheets of paper to the bottom of the printer.

Another benefit to the E460DW is that the back features a built-in 802.11b/g/n wireless print server and antenna to sniff out local Wi-Fi networks. There's an Ethernet port on the back as well for connecting to a wired network. You set up your preferred connection method during the initial connection, choosing between local, wired, and wireless. All three require you to connect the printer to a host computer at first with a USB 2.0 cord. We were able to establish a connection to our wireless network in the lab in less than 5 minutes using the instructions on the driver. The software automatically detects an IP address--all you have to do is specify a security protocol (WEP or WPA/WPA2) and enter in your password.

Once you get started, you can access paper size, function, toggling auto-duplexing (printing on both sides of a sheet of paper), and other general settings through the display, or you can alter the more intricate options through the driver menu, such as print resolution (up to 1,200dpi), security, network information, toner darkness, and more. The software automatically installs a small status monitor into the Windows taskbar, but it doesn't display job progress or notify the user when consumables are running low.

Sponsored Premier Brands on CNET

 

Member Comments

Add Your Comment

Conversation powered by Livefyre

ie8 fix

Quick Specifications

  • Printer Type Workgroup printer - Laser - Monochrome
  • Max Media Size (Standard) A4 (8.25 in x 11.7 in) Legal (216 x 356 mm) Legal (8.5 in x 14 in) A4 (210 x 297 mm)
  • Connectivity technology Wireless Wired
  • Max speed 40 ppm
  • Printer / Interface 802.11n 802.11g USB 802.11b Ethernet 10/100Base-TX
  • Dimensions (WxDxH) 16 in x 14.6 in x 10.2 in

Justin Yu covers headphones and peripherals for CNET. When he's not wading through Web gulch or challenging colleagues to typing tests, you can find him making fun of technology with Jeff Bakalar every afternoon on The 404 show.. Full Bio

ie8 fix