The Stylus Photo RX650 isn’t just Epson’s latest all-in-one, it’s also the most expensive machine on test. Fortunately, it’s full of features.
You’ll find a CD/DVD printing tray, so you can flip the output tray upwards and slide it in to create a photo-quality label on a printable disc in two-and-a-half minutes. Finally, there’s a transparency adaptor stored within the scanner’s lid for scanning filmstrips and slides using the supplied Epson Scan software and drivers. We scanned a row of four negatives in five-and-a-half minutes and were presented with four perfectly cropped images with reasonable detail levels. The colour accuracy was superb, so if you have a lot of negatives to digitise this is a slightly better choice than the HP 3110.
When we reviewed the RX630 a year ago, we were impressed with its photo printing but not its text quality. This seems to have been addressed: text is now more than acceptable, if painfully slow, at 2.7ppm at Normal quality. Photo quality is still impressive, particularly in our 6 x 4in borderless print tests. You can print directly from any type of memory card using the 2.5in LCD screen.
But the RX630’s main appeal was the fast CCD scanner, and the RX650 continues this trend. A 300ppi 6 x 4in scan completed in just 10 seconds and the 10 x 8in 600ppi image took just 31 seconds – nine seconds faster than the next fastest, the HP 3110.
The quality is superb too, with only the 3110 scoring higher overall. Some pictures lacked detail, but colours were accurate, especially in our most demanding test, the 1200ppi skin-tones image. This leads to high-quality copies of photos, although we had to wait almost seven minutes for them.
Running costs came to only 57c per 6 x 4in photo when printing continuously. In our intermittent testing, this increased to 91c, still very cheap.
When the RX650 itself costs $400, the HP 3110 is better value overall, although the quality and speed of the Epson’s scanner and copier can make up for this. However, the slow print speed pushes it further behind the 3110. The CD printing and transparency scanning could still make it one for your shortlist, though.
Comments
Own this product?
Post your review and
you could WIN a share of $3,000 worth of tech prizes!
Thoughts on this article? Add a comment below.
Be the first to comment on this article.