Printers have moved beyond just printing documents. Some all-in-one printers lets you remove red-eye when you print photos. Some can even use your cell phone to print from.
So Consumer Reports wanted to know: Should you push your plain printer aside for a multi-purpose, all-in-one machine? Manufacturers are offering many more features on all-in-one inkjet printers.
"Generally, they're offering bare-bones versions of their plain inkjet printers." said Consumer Reports' Terry Sullivan
To compare quality, Consumer Reports put 45 printers through a number of tests. Standardized documents were printed and then compared. Testers also printed photos and evaluated them. Tests show both kinds of inkjet printers were pretty comparable in performance. But there could be big differences in how much it cost to print a page of text or a photo.
"Over the long haul of the printer that can actually add up more in terms of price than the initial sticker price." said Sullivan
For an all-in-one inkjet printer, Consumer Reports recommends the Canon Pixma MP520. It's a Best Buy at $140.
If all you do is print, and don't need an all-in-one printer, Consumer Reports named another Canon Pixma a Best Buy. It's the Canon Pixma iP4500, for $120.