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Brother HL-5250DN Network Ready Laser Printer with Duplex - Electronics

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Brother HL-5250DN Network Ready Laser Printer with Duplex

List Price: $399.99    Our Price: $229.99

You Save: 43%


Manufacturer: BROTHER
MPN: HL-5250DN

Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours

Features:

  • PCL6 and BR-Script3 (PostScript3) emulations
  • Prints up to 30ppm
  • Built-in internal Ethernet print server
  • Duplex capability for two-sided printing
  • Up to 1200x1200dpi resolution

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Customer Reviews

High Value Printer

I've had this printer for several weeks, now, and I'm totally satisfied with it. The network setup was a snap on my XP box, the built-in duplex works well (using it is a choice), and time to 1st print and output speed are great. Duplex, network, and 30 ppm for under $240 is awesome. A rare plus in this price class is the toner cost.Shopping around for the high yield toner cartridge gets the toner cost down to about a penny a page, a rare thing for a printer not in the office workgroup category.
I didn't pay any attention to the power complaints. First, you never put a printer on a UPS. Secondly, the power consumption while it is warming up and printing is 1/3 to 1/2 the draw of most hair dryers. Any excessive dimming of house lights says more about the wiring in the building than it does about this printer; it may just have to be plugged into a different circuit.
This is a great printer for this price!


Clarifying UPS problems

I have this printer and I am very happy with it. It performs exactly as advertised, and it is very fast.

I'd like to clarify the power supply issue that so many reviewers have commented on.

First of all, this problem is NOT limited to users who plug their printer into the UPS. Many UPSes will detect the line voltage drop caused by this printer as a brownout and go online to protect the attached equipment. This happens even when the printer is plugged directly into the wall (as it should be). This is not just a matter of reading the instructions, it is a real problem.

Whether or not you see this problem in practice depends on a number of factors, including whether the printer is plugged into the same circuit as your UPS, whether you have 15 or 20A service, how far the printer is from the breaker panel, how old your wiring is, whether your UPS has undervoltage regulation or not, etc.

When this printer is heating up and printing, I have seen power draws of 900+ watts and voltages around 104 volts on recent 15A residential wiring. This did not cause my UPS to go online, however it is equipped with undervoltage regulation. Many UPSes would go online at this voltage. In any case, your mileage may vary.

On a completely different note, one small drawback compared with the model it replaces (HL-5140) is that it no longer has a straight through paper path for thicker paper or envelopes to prevent curling.


Nearly perfect

I first saw this printer at the MacWorld Expo and I was impressed by its output, its networkability, and its price. I literally bought one the next day to replace my old HP Laserjet 4M which was finally becoming erratic.

I've been very pleased in almost all respects, with just a few minor criticisms. On the one hand, it is quiet and unobtrusive in energy-saver mode. On the other, when it is sleeping there is no indication that it is still on, short of looking at the on/off button. See what I mean by minor? I didn't run into the power supply issues that another reviewer had complained about.

The duplex function is handy and works well, which is something I can't say about my other printer, an HP Officejet 7310xi All-in-one, which came with a duplexer and a little notice saying that you have to do duplexing manually. The Brother's duplex function can be set as the default, which may have inadvertantly been the case where another reviewer griped about it doing the duplex shuffle, even for a single page. I've not had that problem.

The only aspect that has given me a bit of trouble has been trying to print files directly from Adobe InDesign CS with clear (not screened) type. Whether it is the Brother's emulation of Postscript or its PPD or some mismatch between it and InDesign, I've not yet figured out, but I've had to do a workaround of exporting a PDF and printing from that. (And then only after turning off the "Brother Photo" mode in the Print Settings which seems to be the default for some reason.) For printing from MS Word or the Web, the printer has been speedy and flawless.

So, the InDesign matter aside (for which I dock it one star), it is nifty printer for the price.

Amazon.Com prices and availability subject to change.


 


   

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