Canon Pixma iP4000
Editor's note: We have changed the rating in this review to reflect recent changes in our rating scale. Click here to find out more.
Canon includes a few photo-friendly apps on the installation CD, including PhotoRecord for making and personalizing a photo album; Easy-PhotoPrint for tasks such as quick, borderless printing and red-eye correction; and Easy-WebPrint, which ensures that you can print an entire Web page without cutting off the edges. Canon's drivers are extremely easy to use and offer enough advanced options to keep the family digital-photo geek busy. The drivers are organized into tabs. The Main tab lets you adjust print quality, paper type, and colors (including a manual option for regulating individual color levels and intensity). It also features the Print Advisor button, which asks questions about your intended print job and adjusts driver settings accordingly. Other tabs include Page Setup for paper size, borderless printing, and manual duplexing (printing on two sides); Stamp/Background for adding stamps and watermarks; Effects, which lets you create simulated illustrations and vivid photos; and Profiles, which saves your personal print settings. There's also a Maintenance tab for cleaning, tweaking printhead alignment, and setting the quiet-print mode.
Competing printers typically ship with only a pigment-based tank and make a composite black for photo printing out of cyan, magenta, and yellow. In contrast, the iP4000 ships with a dye-based cartridge for photo printing and a pigment-based black for text files. The dye-based black does give the iP4000 a leg up on the competition, but the iP4000's output still has its problems.
Text looks nice and dark at arm's length, but close inspection by a trained eye reveals a lot of feathering around the edges of the letters. Still, the average consumer probably won't notice the text blips and in fact might prefer the dark text, even if it means sacrificing some crispness. When we printed a mixed text-and-graphics document on high-resolution paper with the driver set to standard-quality/high-resolution paper type, the output looked much better. Black text elements were crisp around the edges, with no feathering visible to the naked eye.
In our test photos, the iP4000 did a good job capturing tricky details such as the illustration on a postage stamp and the rivets in a robot suit, but we saw slightly more dithering and banding in the background than we'd like. Also, we saw visible dots throughout our test photos, which seriously affected the smoothness of skin tones. For truly excellent photo printing, check out the HP Photosmart 7960 or the Epson Stylus R800.
![]() | Photo speed | ![]() | Text speed |
CNET Labs' project leader Dong Ngo contributed to this section of the review.
The Canon Pixma iP4000 comes with an industry-standard one-year warranty. Toll-free tech support is available Monday through Friday from 8 a.m. to midnight and Saturday from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. ET. You can find free, well-written tutorials, FAQs, and downloadable manuals online. Canon provides e-mail support, but we got only somewhat helpful automated responses to a few general questions. The Q&A troubleshooter helped a lot to isolate our problem, though Canon could stand to round out the multiple-choice options. Overall, Canon's support site is useful and easy to navigate.