Epson Stylus Photo RX620 review: Epson Stylus Photo RX620
Epson Stylus Photo RX620
People like a single integrated device that meets several related needs, especially when it comes to electronics. In one compact box, the Epson Stylus Photo RX620 combines a digital photo lab with a home inkjet multifunction. You can approach this machine kiosk-style to print digital photos straight from memory cards or PictBridge cameras and to make scans and photocopies, or plug it into your computer to use the bundled software. The RX620 even comes with an adapter so that you can dust off and scan slides and film negatives--a feature surprisingly rare among photo multifunctions and perhaps its best selling point. For all this, the $299 price tag is reasonable, but two failings--slow output and disappointing print quality--make the RX620 hard to recommend over the similarly priced HP Photosmart 2710 or even the lower-budget Brother MFC-420cn. We like the Epson Stylus Photo RX620's straightforward, attractive design. This rounded, glossy, dark-gray-and-silver device stands a foot high and covers 17.5 by 18 inches of desk space. No trays or flaps stick out, since paper feeds from a 120-sheet vertical slot in back and exits into a pocket in the base of the machine. This all-in-one can print legal-size documents, but they'll flop unsupported over the letter-size paper tray.
The RX620's front face provides a PictBridge port for connecting to a digital camera, plus four slots that accept CompactFlash Types I and II, MicroDrive, SmartMedia, Secure Digital, MultiMediaCard, xD Picture, Memory Stick, Memory Stick Pro, and Memory Stick Duo digital-camera memory cards. The centerpiece of the control panel is a brightly lit 2-by-1.5-inch color LCD that displays photos from the flash cards. Since the RX620 doesn't fax, no numeric keypad clutters its panel layout.
The Good
The Bad
The Bottom Line
The lid for the scanner and copier slides up on its pegs and detaches completely to make room for fat books. With an easy tug, the white backing inside the lid also comes off, revealing a transparency backlight and a template that can hold four mounted slides or a six-exposure strip of 35mm negative film for scanning. The glass bed accommodates letter and A4 size paper to scan or copy, too, but it lacks an ADF (automatic document feeder), so it can't capture larger documents.
Maintaining the RX620 is straightforward. The top half of the RX620 lifts up wide on its hinges, so that even ham-handed people can reach the six inks inside. You can replace each ink color individually as it runs dry, unlike most other all-in-ones, such as the HP Photosmart 7210, that force you to spring for a new multicolor cartridge when just one color runs out.
The machine's LCD menus are easy to navigate. However, it took us a while to get used to the menus' lack of a home screen: the LCD continues to display the last item you looked at, even after restarting, which could confuse first-time users. But we like that, unlike most devices in this class, you can enlarge or reduce photocopies by indicating the percentage or by entering the sizes of the original and the final.
Epson provides plenty of software for operating the RX620 from a computer, too. The printer driver, compatible with Windows versions since 98, plus Mac OS 9.1 and up, has basic and advanced modes. Basic mode lets you pick the image type, while Advanced lets you control contrast, brightness, saturation, and individual color densities, though you get slim choices over positioning watermarks and picking their colors.
The RX620's software package clusters around Epson's Smart Panel, a floating window with buttons that open the application appropriate to your task. You get Epson Scan for directing a scan job; Copy Center to set up photocopies; and a full version of image editor ArcSoft PhotoImpression 5.0, unlike other machines such as the Dell 962, which come with demo versions of software for editing photos and creating photo-intensive projects. Unlike the HP Photosmart 2710, Epson doesn't provide a document-archiving database to organize your photos. Nor do you get OCR (optical character recognition) software that would convert scanned text to a Word file; this makes sense, given that the slow scanning and lack of an ADF (automatic document feeder) make the RX620 an inappropriate choice for text-intensive office work anyway. The Dell Photo All-in-One 962 is a better bet for all-around business use.
Tanks of ink run $19.99 for black and $12.34 for each of five colors. According to Epson's estimates, ink costs about 3.4 cents for a page of plain black text, and about 17.9 cents for a lightly covered page of graphics, on the high end compared to similar products. A heavily inked full-page photo would use more than that, of course, but if you print glossy, high-quality photos, the cost of paper might dwarf that of the ink.
You can use this machine to print from your enabled smart phone, PDA, notebook computer, or camera cord-free via Bluetooth, if you add a $70 adapter that plugs into the printer's parallel port. And if you want to pop this machine onto your Wi-Fi network, Epson sells an external 802.11g server for $180--a rare option. This and the office-oriented Dell 962 are one of few all-in-ones that offer such an add-on.
SpeedThe Epson Stylus Photo RX620 disappointed us when we clocked it printing text at only 2.1 pages per minute (ppm); that's less than half the average speed of photo multifunctions we've recently benchmarked. However, the RX620 printed our high-resolution glossy test photos about 30 percent faster than most, at 0.41ppm. It scanned grayscale documents at 4.5ppm and color documents at 4.1ppm, nearly a page slower than average. And on monochrome copies it slipped to 1.5ppm, far behind similar machines.
Quality
We might overlook the RX620's overall slow performance if it compensated with excellent image quality. However, while the output we saw would be good enough for casual use, you can find better. Text was less dense than with other printers, and letters had jagged, stepped edges at all sizes, likely due to poor bidirectional alignment of the printheads. With color graphics printed on inkjet paper, the printer produced smooth gradients and realistic shading and textures, but we found washed-out colors and a soft-focus look throughout. Our high-resolution photos on glossy paper demonstrated good detail, but colors didn't pop out, due to low contrast. The washed-out look extended to both our color and grayscale test scans, which were also blurry.
(Longer bars indicate better performance)
Copy | Color scan | Grayscale scan | Photo | Text |
(Longer bars indicate better performance)
Color scan | Grayscale scan | Photo | Graphics on inkjet paper | Text on inkjet paper |
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The Epson Stylus Photo RX620 includes a meticulously illustrated setup poster and an 80-page manual that covers using the transparency adapter, printing various layouts, and working with camera cards; the manual also has an extensive troubleshooting section. The utilities and applications have their own onscreen manuals in a mixed bag of help file, HTML, and PDF documents. For such an inexpensive device, Epson's support policies include a generous one-year exchange warranty with paid shipping and lifetime free tech support, available weekdays on an automated toll-free line. Live phone support with a human, on the other hand, is available only weekdays from 6 a.m. to 6 p.m. PT--a drawback if you're diving into weekend photo projects. Epson provides documentation and driver downloads, FAQs, and e-mail access to technicians on its Web site.