Epson’s B-510DN inkjet is designed compete with serious colour laser printers, with a 10/100 Ethernet port, automatic duplexer and maximum duty cycle of 20,000 pages in a calendar month. At just 0.5p per mono page and 2.5p per page of mixed black and colour printing using high capacity cartridges, it costs less to run than any other colour printer we’ve reviewed in recent memory . Print speeds are also faster than most inkjets at just under 20 pages per minute for draft text, 14.3ppm for standard quality text and 10.7ppm for colour documents.
A mono LCD screen allows you to adjust network and paper handling settings . A web interface reproduces some of the functions from its unwieldy menus, along with consumable monitoring and the ability to restrict printing rights by IP address. The built-in menu’s nozzle cleaning and head alignment settings are reproduced in the only in the printer driver installed on your PC.
TheB-510DN has a 500 sheet paper feeder , designed to handle plain paper, plus a 150-sheet rear tray buried under a flap at the top of the printer . This can handle specialist media like envelopes, card stock and photo paper of thicknesses up to 256gsm. Photo printing, although a secondary feature to fast, cheap text, is amazingly good, with accurate colours and only a very slight gritty quality obvious on closer examination .
Print quality is generally pretty good , but this does vary as this machine is more dependant on paper quality than laser printers, which can produce sharp, glossy looking text and images on almost anything. We tested the B-510DN on a variety of settings and with a large range of papers. Mono prints were excellent in both Draft and the default Text quality modes, even when printed on 80gsm paper. Making the most of our illustrated business documents took a bit more effort. Switching from Text to Text & Graphics mode made a difference of just three seconds to the time it took to print 24 pages, but it’s definately worth doing as it visibly reduced the marks left by the passage of the print head.
The biggest betterment came when we turned our attention from 80gsm copier paper to 100gsm inkjet paper – both text and graphics were visibly sharper. 100gsm paper costs around four times as much as 80gsm, which adds a hidden cost to your prints, but is essential if you want to make the most of this printer. Inexpensive ink costs help to offset this.
We worked out our printer ink costs using an 8,000 page extra high-yield black epson ink cartridges, which costs £42 , and 7,000 page high-yield colour ink cartridges at about £45 each. Lower capacity cartridges are available if you don’t have such high printing requirements. The printer comes with standard capacity cartridges: enough for 3,000 black and 3,500 colour pages.
If you are a heavy printer user then the running costs are very low for this printer . Three years’ medium use, averaging 500 mono and 250 colour pages every month, will cost a total of £586, while three years’ heavy use (2,000 mono and 1,000 colour pages monthly) comes to an unbelievably low £1,421.
B-510DN is a fantastic business printer, despite needing 100gsm paper for the best results, but don’t rush out and buy one. At present it’s worth shopping around for a steal on its largely-identical predecessor, the B-500DN. In addition, a cheaper version, the B-310N, is also available, and the only thing missing is the automatic duplexer. Finally, most home and small office users will do better with our favourite £60 budget business inkjet, HP’s Officejet 6000.