Canon PIXMA MG2120 has a dull, unpolished finish.
In terms of the
underlying print engine, though, all three Pixmas are essentially the
same printer. For instance, they all use the same two-cartridge ink
system, which employs one black ink tank and one three-color tank. As a
result, they all have the same exceptionally high per-page cost to print
each page.
In terms of the underlying print engine, though, all three Pixmas are
essentially the same printer. For instance, they all use the same
two-cartridge ink system, which employs one black ink tank and one
three-color tank. As a result, they all have the same exceptionally high
per-page cost to print each page.
Canon PIXMA MG2120 has a dull, unpolished finish.
In terms of the underlying print engine, though, all three Pixmas are essentially the same printer. For instance, they all use the same two-cartridge ink system, which employs one black ink tank and one three-color tank. As a result, they all have the same exceptionally high per-page cost to print each page.In terms of the underlying print engine, though, all three Pixmas are essentially the same printer. For instance, they all use the same two-cartridge ink system, which employs one black ink tank and one three-color tank. As a result, they all have the same exceptionally high per-page cost to print each page.
If you're shopping for a low-cost printer, it's counterproductive to choose a model with a high cost per page. Paying too much for each print—depending on how much you use the printer—can significantly increase the cost of owning it. Here's what we mean: When you use Canon's so-called "XL" black cartridge along with its standard-yield three-color (cyan/magenta/yellow) tank, monochrome prints cost a whopping 7 cents per page, and color prints run about 14.5 cents each. Compare that to several competing models, such as Kodak's new Hero AIOs (which also use two-tank systems); with those, you'll see costs per page as low as 2.2 cents for monochrome and 7 cents for color. The Canon PIX-MA MG2120