he Brother MFC-J470DW is an easy-to-use multifunction inkjet printer
that also operates as a dedicated fax machine, copier and scanner. Its
list price is $100 (£108, AU$149), but it's widely available online for
up to 30 percent less. The MFC-J470DW offers faster than average output
speeds and business-friendly features like an auto-document feeder
(ADF), an auto-duplexer for printing on both sides of a single sheet of
paper, and a software suite that opens the door to cloud prints and
scans (including the ability to print from iOS and Android
devices). The ink costs are also lower than many name-brand printers in
the sub-$100 range, earning the MFC-J470DW a strong recommendation for
use in any office or home work space.
Brother advances the design of the MFC-J470DW beyond
that of its clunky older siblings with a compact footprint that measures
16.1 inches wide by 14.7 inches deep and 7.1 inches tall (that's 24.6
by 47.6 by 45.2 cm). It's not the smallest printer on the shelf, though
-- Epson still holds the bragging rights for its "Small-in-one" series
like the XP-420 , but the reason those are so tiny is because they don't have the productivity features of the MFC-J470DW.
Offices can save money on paper by using the duplexer, a useful
piece of integrated hardware that automatically flips over a sheet of
paper to print on both sides. There's also a 20-sheet auto-document
feeder (ADF) tray on top that's useful for batch scanning or faxing
using the dedicated phone line. Of course, if you want to go digital,
you can also perform a "PC Fax" using an Internet connection to
communicate directly from your computer to the unit -- faxing a document
without first having to print it.
Brother MFC-J470DW
Price as reviewed
$99.99
Dimensions in inches (width x depth x height)
16.1 x 14.7 x 7.1 inches (24.6 x 47.6 x 45.2cm)
Functions
Print/copy/scan/fax
Inks
4-ink tank (black, cyan, magenta, yellow)
Automatic 2-sided printing (duplexer)
Yes
Automatic document feeder
Yes, 20 sheets
Memory card reader
No
Connectivity
USB 2.0, Wi-Fi, Google Cloud Print, Apple AirPrint, Brother Cloud apps
Paper input tray capacity
100 sheets
Display
1.8-inch color LCD screen
If you're looking for relics of Brother's older designs, check out
the control panel. The buttons for mode selection, menu navigation and
phone number entry are all made of mushy rubber that feels uncomfortable
to use and brings the overall user experience down a step. At least you
get a 1.8-inch color LCD display on the left side that shows you things
like ink levels, setup assistance and the location of paper jams
(although I thankfully experienced none during testing).
Brother bills the MFC-J470DW as a "Work Smart" printer, which might
explain the lack of photocentric features like a memory card reader and a
PictBridge-compatible USB port for pulling photos directly off flash
storage drives and digital cameras.
But that doesn't mean you
can't occasionally print photos on this machine. In fact, the removable
paper tray on the bottom has plastic tabs that easily adjust to
accommodate popular photo paper sizes like 4 by 6 and 5 by 7, in
addition to the standard sizes like letter, legal, executive, and even
envelopes and index cards.
The flatbed glass scanner also fits up to letter-size documents and
can save projects in a variety of formats onto a hard-drive folder, an
email message, a Microsoft Office project, or directly into the free Scansoft PaperPort document-viewing software that Brother bundles with the machine.
If you follow the
simple manual instructions and connect the printer to your Wi-Fi
network, you can even set the scanner to automatically send projects to
your compatible mobile device running the Brother iPrint&Scan app
for iOS, Android/Amazon Fire, Windows Phone 7 or 8, and BlackBerry
(Cortado).
Like many of the big-name printer manufacturers,
Brother offers a full suite of cloud printing software that lets you use
your smartphone or tablet
in conjunction with Web services like Facebook, Flickr, Dropbox, and
more to view your projects across a wide landscape of services.
Additionally, Brother also works nicely with Google Cloud Print and
Apple AirPrint to send wireless jobs to and from the printer using the
Google Chrome Web browser and Apple iOS devices, respectively.
Inks and supplies
The ink cartridge bay sits behind a flimsy plastic door to the right
of the paper tray and houses the cyan, magenta, yellow, and black
cartridges that feed to the printer. The cartridges are so easy to
install that you probably won't even need the manual to figure it out,
and the easy access door is convenient for swapping them out -- the
process is much more convenient than lifting the whole scanning bay and
auto-document feeder.
You'll also spend less on ink refills
compared to competitive printers in the sub-$100 category, even more
over time with continued use. Assuming you invest in Brother's XL
capacity cartridges that offer more ink for less up front, the costs add
up to 2.4 cents per page of color ink and 4.1 cents for a page of black
ink.
That's less than the same XL ink costs of the Epson
XP-420 (3.5 cents for color, 5 cents for black), so you'll save money if
you do end up printing a lot of color photos and business handouts,
even if you don't get a memory card reader to help you do so.
Performance
The MFC-J460DW registered high marks in CNET's speed tests, well
within the acceptable range for a sub-$100 inkjet printer. It flew
through our standard 10-page black text sample document at a consistent
rate of 9.78 pages per minute, double the speed of the equally-priced HP Officejet 4630 all-in-one.
The Brother's print engine also bested the competition in the
full-color graphics page tester with an average speed of 3.93 pages per
minute. For comparison, the Epson XP-420 couldn't even churn out a
single page in the same test, with only .42 pages printed per minute. If
speed is a priority for your business, the Brother MFC-J460DW deserves
your dollar.
Photo quality is also above average for what I
expect out of a $100 printer. The separate ink tanks provide an extra
level of detail that competing printers with a single tri-color tank
can't offer, and there's a noticeable difference in the smoothness of
color transitions, especially in facial tones and multicolor portraits.
The software driver lets you cycle through different print qualities
to conserve remaining inks, and you'll be more than satisfied with the
printer's color reproduction -- the darker spots of our sample image are
dense and unmarred by bleeding colors. Bright colors pop as they
should, and the text is well-formed all the way down to smaller font
sizes.
Conclusion
Business environments require a
versatile printer that offers cost-saving features and has the potential
to increase productivity, and the Brother MFC-J470DW delivers strong
results on both fronts. You get all the tools you need to get creative
with print projects without paying too much of a premium on ink
cartridge refills. In addition, the ability to use your mobile devices
to view and send jobs to the printer through a host of cloud-based
applications will keep this printer relevant in your office for years to
come.
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