Lexmark C500n review

One of the cheapest network colour lasers on the market

The C500n is a big, hefty beast, complete with heavy-duty 250-sheet paper input tray

TechRadar Verdict

High speed mono, decent colour quality

Pros

  • +

    Easy to replace cartridges

    Good plain paper printing speed

Cons

  • -

    Low toner capacity

    Pricey running costs

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Tune into TV advertising and you'd think that most of the business world is running on Lexmark printers. Unlike some of Lexmark's flimsier inkjet printers, the C500n has a real business-like feel to it with seemingly rock-solid build quality.

It's a big, hefty beast, complete with heavy-duty 250-sheet paper input tray, which you can further boost to a 780-sheet capacity with the option of a secondary 530-sheet feeder.

Scraping through

One popular pastime for laser printer users is generating high-quality colour prints on card as well as paper. These are ideal for using as jewel case inserts and the like. In our tests, however, the C500n completely failed to handle 160gsm laser-compatible card. It scraped large blocks and streaks of toner from the surface of the card on its way through the printer, producing nothing more than a nasty mess.

Switching back to plain paper, the C500n fared much better, with high-quality mono and colour output. Marketed as a fast laser printer that can also handle colour printing when needed, it generated 31ppm mono output in draft mode, dropping down to a 18 second first page time for high-quality mono and a still respectable 24 seconds for colour documents. Colour photos took a little longer at 29 seconds.

As usual, best cost-efficiency is to be had from using the high-yield black and colour cartridges. Yet even then the C500n is pricey for mono, with toner costs of 2p per page. Colour costs are surprisingly reasonable at 6p per page.

The other drawback is that, unlike the Canon and HP printers, there's a separate imaging unit that needs replacing, even if this is only after about 120,000 mono prints (30,000 colour). As such, it lasts about three times as long as the imaging units in some rival printers. Even so, with an imaging unit price of £138, you might be better off buying a whole new printer.

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