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Canon imagePROGRAF iPF6100 - Perspective
Canon imagePROGRAF iPF61003.50Explain star rating
RRP
$5445.00

Review Date

Wednesday, 12th of December, 2007

What's Hot

Consistent colour, better images

What's Not

Profiles don't match the names of the papers that Canon sells

The Final Word

The imagePROGRAF iPF6100 should put an end to talk that Canon can't compete in the professional photo printer market. With a better ink formulation and an improved printhead, this 12-ink printer produces excellent images on both glossy and fine-art media. Canon needs to clean up its profile management, but overall, the iPF6100 is a very good printer that fits in well in a competitive market.

Canon imagePROGRAF iPF6100 professional printer
PC Advisor staff (PC Advisor) 12/12/2007 15:51:23

The $5445 Canon imagePROGRAF iPF6100 is one of two new wide-format printers from Canon, both of which use the same 12-ink printing architecture.

Despite Canon's dominance in the professional digital-camera market, the company has not replicated that success with its pro printers. It's not for lack of trying: Canon has released at least four high-end printers over the past two years, but they generally come up short when put up against comparable printers from Epson or Hewlett-Packard.

With the release of the Canon imagePROGRAF iPF6100, however, Canon is finally closing in on its peers with a printer that offers excellent print quality and good print speeds at a competitive price.

The Canon imagePROGRAF iPF6100 prints on roll paper up to 24in (610mm) wide, although like many roll-fed units it can take sheets one at a time, from 8x10in up to poster paper at 20x30in in size. Its sibling, the imagePROGRAF iPF5100, which isn't yet available in Australia, has a maximum print width of 17in, and includes both roll support and a paper tray for loading sheets. Both printers can handle paper up to 1.5mm thick.

Basics

The Canon imagePROGRAF iPF6100 uses 12 individual, pigment-based ink cartridges: cyan, photo cyan, magenta, photo magenta, yellow, black, matte black, red, green, blue, grey and photo grey.

It uses 11 of the inks when printing, opting for either the matte or the stock black ink (often referred to as photo black) based upon your chosen paper type. If you're printing on glossy or semi-gloss photo papers, the Canon imagePROGRAF iPF6100 uses the photo black ink; it uses the matte black when printing on smooth-finish, matte, and fine-art papers. The grey and photo grey are designed to produce enhanced black-and-white images, as those similar inks found in Epson's Stylus Photo R2400 and Stylus Pro 3800 printers do.

As is the case with most wide-format printers, the Canon imagePROGRAF iPF6100 is a large, heavy unit, but it is quite easy to set up. You'll need two people to get it out of the massive box and on to its stand, but you can be up and running in a little over an hour, thanks to the printer's clear quick-setup guides and its large LCD screen, which offers helpful, step-by-step instructions for loading paper and ink.

The Canon imagePROGRAF iPF6100 has both USB 2.0 and Ethernet interfaces, and once you get it up and running, it's largely plug-and-print.

The discs come with a print driver, online manual, and a well-designed plug-in for printing directly from within Adobe Photoshop (versions 7 through CS3). The plug-in bypasses the print driver, and supports the printing of 16-bit images directly to the printer.

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