Canon imageCLASS MF4370DN Laser All-in-One Printer
- 1 to 2 sided printing,copying, and faxing
- Print and Copy up to 23 ppm
- Quick First Print provides first copy in approximately 9 seconds
- Built-in Networking and Energy effcient with only 3W of energy used
- 35 sheet ADF and 250 sheet Paper Cassette tray
Product Description
Desktop Functionality in an Affordable Network-Ready Device Print, Copy, Fax, Scan and Network using the imageCLASS® MF4370dn Networkable: The imageCLASS MF4370dn delivers large-office network capabilities in an affordable compact package. It can be connected over an Ethernet, so everyone can easily share printing, PC faxing and scanning directly from their PC. Smart Paper Handling: The MF4370dn boasts print and copy speeds of up to 23 pages-per-minute (ppm) for letter-sized output, and delivers Quick First Prints or copy pages in approximately nine seconds. It has the versatility to duplex print directly from a PC as well as duplex print incoming faxes and copy letter-sized documents, helping reduce paper consumption in the home or office. Through the device’s 35-sheet automatic document feeder (ADF), the unit will also copy single-sided documents and output double-sided pages for quick and efficient workflows. Multifunctional: The imageCLAS… More >>
Canon imageCLASS MF4370DN Laser All-in-One Printer
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5 comments
L. Shansky on December 10, 2009 at 11:17 pm
I was interested in buying this printer (it may be a great printer, haven’t gotten one yet). The Amazon page said it was on sale, eligible for free shipping, and when I added it to my cart the price reduced from $399.99 to $263.87 (a rather odd price)–nice savings! Wanted it quickly, though, so I thought I’d see if I could pick one up same-day at Best Buy for close to the same price. Looked online at Best Buy, and sure enough, they had one on sale for $229.99, but it was online-only. I started to order one, figuring if shipping through BB was cheap enough, it’d still be a little cheaper than Amazon. Lo and behold, shipping through BB was $33.88–bringing the total price to $263.87. Methinks “Prime” shipping just means Amazon prices the shipping into the price of the product. Wonder how much “extra” they charge for shipping if you DON’T have Prime?!?
InspectorGadget on December 11, 2009 at 2:06 am
Missing manual feed select in the driver. It really sucks for printing Quicken checks or any kind of form. You have to run over to the printer, load your form, say a quick prayer that no one prints from the network, run back to your workstation, and then send your print job. If someone else prints before you get back to start your job, it spoils your form, and then locks up the printer for everyone because it’s waiting for more manual-feed pages to complete that job.
THIS COULD BE A BIG INCONVENIENCE FOR A SMALL-OFFICE ENVIRONMENT.
Every laser printer I’ve every owned or used had a manual select setting in the driver paper source setting, from the original, lowly HP Laserjet II. Not the MF4370; its paper-select software setting has only “Auto”. An oversight, you might say. But no, it turns out it’s by design.
You see, the worst thing about this is the arrogant attitude of the company (after talking to 4 tech support people including two managers and one senior support tech) that it’s simply the way it was designed from the first printer in the series and I shouldn’t need to use it. And when I pressed the issue, I got the “I’m sorry you feel that way” brush-off and then denial that it was an issue. I can’t believe how condescending that is. I even got that line from a customer relations representative.
One tech support person first couldn’t believe it was missing. Then when he tried it himself his attitude abruptly changed and became a statement of policy: “That’s the way it was designed and that’s the way you have to use it.”
It’s easily addressed in a driver and/or firmware update. But they have to consider it a problem first in order to “fix” it. Right now they’re laughing at customers who are inconvenienced by it.
After talking to five people, I finally got an offer from a customer-relations person to submit it as a customer request. But then I got the “I’m sorry you think it’s a problem” line and I hung up before I exploded. So don’t expect a fix for this any time soon.
Very unfortunate because it seems like a pretty good printer otherwise. But my faith in Canon support has been reduced to zero. I’m going to try to get Amazon to take this back.
consumer guy on December 11, 2009 at 2:56 am
I purchased this all in one for my home office to print, scan, and copy using a relatively new iMac. After more than 6 hours of phone customer support I’m sill unable to scan. The device causes text to bleed down four inches down the page. The Canon technician maintains that this constitutes “scanning”. Of course this is a non-starter but it is even worse than that. The technician informed me that even if the image scanned perfectly, if I scanned more than one page, for each page I would need to individually frame each page with the mouse which could be a real hardship for large documents. Also, the device periodically failed to show as an option in image class or preview. I also had problems with printing — it is necessary to save .pdf and word documents before printing, something I never had to do with my more primitive Brother printer scanner. The Canon customer service were largely oblivious to Macs. All in all a terrible time-wasting experience.
Weekend Woodman on December 11, 2009 at 3:16 am
I have used this unit for about two months now. My computer is a P/C. I am very satisfied with the print speed and quality. I am also using the scan feature a lot because I extensively send documents as email attachments. So far I have no complaints about the scan speed or any problems with the document feeder. I would say that the quality of the scans is only fair at 300 dpi. When making copies I have the same comment. The copy quality is adequate, but nothing more than that.
K. Nguyen on December 11, 2009 at 6:00 am
I owned several HP ink jet and you name it. Cost me a fortune with all the ink and the hassle. Besides how the wireless feature on HP cost. This printer is a must. Cheap, affordable, high quality, easy to use and excellent feature. I own a small health care business so I print stuff out daily and all the staff love this way more than the HP. Canon customer service was excellent. I actually spoke to someone in US not in Parkistan or India. They walked me through and so polite and patience. I ended up buying 2 of them to reserve for back up later and threw my darn HP into the recycle. One draw back that I wish they do have is the send fax in 2-sided printing to other it doesnt have that feature. Same for scanning from 2 sided to 1. Never break down.