![]() ![]() In addition to the printer, you’ll find a power cord four starter ink cartridges (cyan, magenta, yellow, and black) a CD with Windows and Mac drivers, ABBYY OCR text-recognition software, and a TWAIN driver for the scanner a phone cord for the fax, and quick-start guides (full documentation can be downloaded from Epson’s website, but unfortunately, it’s for both the WF-7510 and WF-7520, so a user who didn’t know there are a few differences between the two models might find some of the information misleading). With XL cartridges costing only about $30 for the black and $21 for each color, the WF-7510 is economical to maintain. The larger capacity XL cartridges are rated at about 945 pages for black and 755 pages for color. ![]() The High-Capacity black is rated to yield about 385 pages, while the High-Capacity color cartridges are rated at about 470 pages each. The printer supports Apple’s AirPrint and Google’s CloudPrint protocols, as well as Epson Connect for printing from a smartphone or tablet.Īs with its sibling, the WF-7520, the WF-7510 accepts High-Capacity and even larger XL ink cartridges. As for connectivity, you can use a direct USB or Ethernet cable, or go wireless with Wi-Fi. There are card slots for SD, Compact Flash, or Memory Stick, as well as a PictBridge-compatible USB port (for direct connections to digital cameras). ![]() Many of Epson’s printers come with a special tray for printing on CDs and DVDs with printable surfaces, but unfortunately, the WF-7510 is not one of them it isn’t a deal breaker if you don’t care about having this feature.Ĭontrols are fairly standard for a full-featured MFP, with a tilt-out panel that includes a small color LCD and myriad buttons. The non-duplexing automatic document feeder (ADF) has a capacity of 30 sheets. The single paper path, however, limits how heavy of a paper you use can, since there’s no separate single-sheet feed. The input tray is very large, since it accommodates paper sizes that are up to 13 x 19 inches. With affordable XL cartridges, the WF-7510 is economical to maintain. There is only a single paper path, with a 250-sheet-capacity tray located underneath the output tray. The WF-7510 measures 22 x 16.5 x 11.3 inches (without the paper trays extended) and weighs in at a hefty 34.4 pounds. There’s no getting around it: All wide-format printers are large, and the WF-7510, with its additional scanning/copying/faxing features, is no exception. But in all other respects, it’s just as feature packed, providing print, scan, copy, and fax modes along with the aforementioned media handling. It’s less expensive because it lacks the double paper cassettes, duplex printing, and scanning modes that the WF-7520 offers. The WF-7510 is similar to the WF-7520 (a Digital Trends Editors’ Choice). That machine is the Epson WorkForce WF-7510 ($179), a multifunction (all-in-one) printer that can also scan or copy oversize pages, as large as 11 x 17 inches. But if you can get a wide-format printer at a reasonable price, you’ll discover more uses for a device that can churn out large spreadsheets, drawings, and, with 13 x 19-inch output, even things like custom placemats for a party. When it comes to printers, buyers generally don’t think about wide-format printing, since most consumer models only support up to the standard “letter” and “legal” size papers (smaller if it can handle photo prints). No creative software for general consumers ![]()
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