Canon Pixma MP980

By Justin Yu on 12 May 2009

The Canon Pixma MP980 multifunction printer, copier, and scanner is a step up from its predecessor, but the print quality isn't up to standard and it doesn't perform as quickly as the competition.

Editor's rating:7.0 User rating:9
  • Good: Space-saving design • Robust software • Interactive LCD menu • Dual-paper feeds • Fast graphics and photo prints • Auto-duplexer included
  • Bad: Poor print quality • Expensive • No fax machine • Flimsy paper cassette • Slow text output speed • Unreliable wireless performance • Unique grey ink can be hard to find
  • Specs: Inkjet • Photo paper • 3.5 inch • See more specifications
  • RRP: AU$449.00

The Canon Pixma MP980 is a capable all-in-one device that prints, faxes, and copies documents in full colour 4,800x9,600-pixel resolution, thanks to a unique six colour ink bay that includes a special grey cartridge for more distinct greyscale photo prints. The AU$449 MP980 lends a hand to amateur photo enthusiasts with a large 3.5-inch LCD screen, an easy-to-use control panel, and a media card reader, but we're unsatisfied with the difficult wireless setup, the slower-than-average output speeds, and the inflated price.

Design

The Pixma MP980 AIO takes the same shape as the rest of the Canon's MP series, but this year's model gets the shrinking ray, measuring 47cm high by 38.5cm wide by 19.9cm deep. The all-in-one weighs a hefty 10.7kg because of the auto-duplexer built into the back for double-sided prints, so you probably won't want to move it around a lot on your work space. The silver and glossy black body exudes stylish professionalism, and the scanner lid sits so flush against the main body that you can barely tell it's there. In addition, the main output tray and control panel fold in to save space.

The control panel rests on the lid and houses a bright 3.5-inch colour LCD similar to the screen on the Pixma MP970. The menu is arranged in a circle, and you use the tactile dial on the base panel to access the different settings. The wheel and "OK" buttons offer a satisfying click with each selection, but there's also a four-way directional pad surrounding the dial if you don't feel comfortable with the wheel. Most of the time, we preferred the scroll wheel, but the buttons are also easy to use when you know exactly where to go.

The rest of the pad contains the rest of the shortcut buttons, including a Navi button for help with onscreen menus, a home button, instant colour and black copy keys, two buttons to increase and decrease the amount of copies, as well as a stop button to cancel a job in progress. Finally, two soft buttons sit directly underneath the screen to navigate through the onscreen menus.

The printer handles paper input by the main 150-sheet cassette as well as another 150-sheet tray that folds out of the rear. We always prefer two input trays to one and found that using the main tray for plain and the rear tray for smaller photo paper is much more convenient than constantly switching the different sizes. We do have a gripe with build quality of the main tray, which rolls out of the bottom and feels as if it's made out of cheap plastic. Only time will reveal the tray's true durability, but we're disheartened by its flimsy feel out of the box.

Canon uses six individual ChromaLife100 ink cartridges including one dedicated grey cartridge for better quality monochrome photos. At the time of writing, all of the dye-based colour inks and black inks could be found online for around AU$18 each.

Features

The Pixma MP980 offers a collection of features that make life much easier for the home photo enthusiast. You can connect the printer to a computer through a standard USB cord, or to your network with the Ethernet port on the back, or even go wireless with the built-in 802.11b/g wireless print server. There's also a PictBridge USB port on the bottom as well as a full media card reader for transferring and printing photos directly from a digital camera. Unlike the competition, Canon doesn't include a wireless configuration tutorial with its software, so you might encounter problems similar to ours during setup, which requires you to establish a USB connection first. After several days of trying to get our router to connect with the printer, we finally just started clean and reinstalled the driver. After that, everything went smoothly, but it might take you a couple tries before your system connects with the MP980.

The copier on the MP980 has all the features you'd expect from a multifunction printer. You can enlarge the original up to 400 per cent or simply fit the entire document to a page. Other special features include two-sided copying, borderless copying, exact duplication, cropped copy, and 2-on-1 and 4-on-1 photo collages.

Scanning is also typical, with save options that include sending the file straight to your PC, as an e-mail attachment, scanned as a PDF, or simply open it to an application. You can save all documents as TIFF, JPEG, bitmap, or PDF files, and the scanner now supports film and negatives as well. The negative and slide holders are accessible underneath the document protector underneath the lid. The scanner supports document sizes up to 21.5cm by 27.9cm, but the fixed hinge makes it difficult to stretch the scanner cover over thicker documents and books.

Performance

The Pixma MP980 showed significant speed improvements across the board with the exception of the colour text test, where the MP970 scored 7.85 pages per minute to the MP980's 5.75 pages per minute. Compared with the rest of the competition, though, the MP980 fared about average. It was unable to get ahead of the chart-topping Epson Stylus Photo TX800FW and the HP Photosmart Premium Fax all-in-one.

Performance test (in pages per minute)
(Longer bars indicate better performance)
Photo speed (1 Sheet) Colour graphics speed Presentation speed Colour Text speed
Canon Pixma MP970
1.61 
2.07 
2.59 
7.85 
HP Photosmart Premium Fax AIO
1.33 
3.85 
3.82 
7.57 
Epson Stylus Photo TX800FW
2.82 
6.06 
6.6 
6.43 
Canon Pixma MP980
2.52 
2.9 
3.72 
5.75 
Kodak ESP5
1.37 
2.13 
2.21 
4.39 

 

Print quality on the MP980 suffers from the same problems as its predecessor, specifically in our test of colour graphics. Text prints look fine at first glance, but upon closer inspection, we saw many jagged edges and malformed lines. Colour text is marred with white blotchy marks within the letter bodies, and where smaller text should be clearly formed turned out thick and barely legible in two point size. As usual, we also printed out a page of colour graphics on plain paper to test print quality, and we're disappointed again by the washed-out colours and undersaturation. All of the pictures on the document look hazy and dim, especially in facial tones that normally appear vibrant on our monitor.

Service and support

Canon offers a standard one-year warranty. Canon's standard online support options include downloadable drivers and software, manuals, and FAQs.

Topics: printer, pixma, photo, canon, MP980, tray, colour, print, document, ink

Comments (1)

  • donroy gave 9/10 on 04/02/2009 13:36 Report abuse

    • Good: It performs superbly in all functions. Excellent color management in printing, while the film scanning function, both for positive and negative film is very efficient. A cost-effective winner.
    • Bad: None so far

    The fact that this is product falls in the "multi-purpose" category should not deter the demanding user. It is flexible, versatile and efficient in all functions.

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