yon Leveron blog

John's musings on the Interknot cowpath

Printer goodness – Brother HL-2170W Laser Printer

Posted by John on August 27th, 2009

The UPS gent arrived with this a bit before 5 PM yesterday; yay!

Even after careful review, I must admit I just wasn’t sure what to expect from a $120 (shipped) black and white laser.

Brother HL-2170W 23ppm Laser Printer with Wireless and Wired Network Interfaces

So far at least, it has exceeded my expectations.  Since even the home network has long been gigabit copper Ethernet, I decided to go the wired network route.  Call me a curmudgeon, but even though the wireless network setup was trivial I just really don’t have a need at present to put my documents out over the wireless, so I won’t; wireless B/G mode is disabled for the printer for now.  I can see that being handy if you wanted to power the printer in another room, however;  mo cabling needed!  (I have no idea if the wireless mode, assuming full strength / max speed G mode, would limit the output speed of 23 ppm or not)

Setup was a breeze, installing a standard Ethernet cable into the printers 10/100 port on the rear side. (which is where the USB cable input is, if so inclined).  Note to buyer : neither cable included, so plan appropriately so you are not stranded / charged shipping or tax for something small.

(side note : since my D-link switch has automatic crossover capability, I did test the printer out of curiosity with an old crossover cable relic; worked fine, though I suspect the printer had nothing to do with it)

I have not tested the USB mode, so I can’t comment there.  I suspect it works pretty well, since many folks would choose that method of connection.  I do like that it’s capable of that, should I ever need it.

I did read the quick install manual thoroughly before even opening the drum / toner pack.  Leisurely installation of cables, drum / toner, and untaping the top feed holder was about 5 minutes worth; checking out the paper tray, fanning the ole stack of 250 sheets, and installing was maybe another 3.  Have to adjust all of the widgets in the tray, just to see what sizes are possible, y’know.

I printed the built-in test page, as the manual noted it would no longer be available via a single touch button once the first print job was sent from the computer.  Check; it was in the highest resolution mode, and included graphics and font text designed to show off how well it prints.  It worked; the print quality was truly outstanding, much better than much higher priced office workgroup lasers from only a couple of years ago.

Just to be contrary, I of course skipped 100% of the driver disk that came with the Brother.  I’ve been running Windows 7 RTM, Ultimate 64 for a few weeks, and of course having that popular conversation with a number of vendors : “We’ll support that new OS once the final version ships”.  Well, this is the final version, even if it’s not on retailers shelves for a bit.  Early adopters – always have to be prepared for this :)

I did make sure in my research that the HL-2170W was Vista 64 compatible, a strong indicator that it would work (more or less) under Win7 64 bit.  I let Windows look for the printer, and it found it via two interfaces : the built in web interface, and the “standard” printer interface.  Being somewhat old fashioned there I suppose, I went with the standard.

Installed fine.  Tested fine via the Windows Test Page print job many of you are familiar with.  Another page to the home recycle bin.  I set the sleep time via the web interface, for example http://172.30.100.5/ to one minute.  The large glowing led power button can be set to dim significantly or turn off when sleeping; I chose to dim it, so I’d know the print had power still. (I print so little that it and the scanner are on an external surge suppressor, on the filter-only side of the UPS; makes it easy to leave both powered down 100% instead of sleeping, considering my very low use there)

SleepIsGood

The speed is pretty much on with their 23 page per minute claim; timed output from hitting “print” on the computer, to a sleeping printer was measured at 14 seconds until the page started emerging.  I consider that plenty good for my own home office needs.

It was simple to set the resolution way down to 300 dpi from their highest default, and to set toner saver on.  I’m not trying to impress with the output, and the visual difference to me takes pretty close looking.

I’m impressed, and so far feel this is a great printer for the money.  No more dried out inkjet bits, and I really don’t need the capability or expense of color.  Since it has enterprise type page count for the printer, as well as the current drum and toner cartridges, we’ll see how many pages we get out of the starter “1000 page” toner cartridge that’s included with it.  I predict it’ll be a while before I report back here.

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