The Canon Pixma MP960 replaces last year's Pixma MP950, and at AU$599, it is Canon's top-of-the-line photo all-in-one. For the hefty price tag, you get a multifunction that offers fast print speeds and a wealth of features including a built-in duplexer and a negative/slide scanner. If you're an amateur photo hobbyist with high-volume printing needs and can afford this price range, the MP960 will prove its worth. We give the MP960's photos a slight edge over competing all-in-ones, which is to be expected with its better ink system. The similarly priced HP Photosmart C7180 all-in-one offers additional features such as wireless networking and fax, but loses out to the Pixma MP950 in print speed and quality.
Design
The colour scheme of the Pixma MP960 is the reverse of last year's model's: Its blocky body is silver with black trim. It sits 428mm wide, 226mm deep, and 417mm tall and weighs 12 kilograms, so make sure you have the desk space for it. The flatbed scanner holds up to A4-size originals, and the lid's hinges extend to accommodate thick originals. Hidden behind the platen protector in the scanner lid is a sleeve that holds as many as 12 photo negatives for scanning. There is a separate sleeve for scanning up to 8 slides at once. Because both sleeves are so big, only one fits behind the platen protector at a time. You'll have to find a safe spot for the other.
The Pixma MP960 offers two input sources: a cassette in the front and an auto sheet feeder in the rear. You can toggle between inputs using the Feed Switch button in the control panel. The front panel folds out to serve as an output tray. Like its predecessor, the Pixma MP960 has a built-in duplexer for automatic double-sided prints, including photo prints (for a photo album, for example).
Two memory card slots let you use most common types of memory cards with the printer, though some card types require an adapter (not included). A PictBridge port lets you print from PictBridge-enabled cameras, but it can also be used with an optional Bluetooth adapter for wireless printing from Bluetooth devices, such as PDAs and phones. The Pixma MP960 also has a built-in IrDA port for wireless printing. Unfortunately, you can't use the PictBridge port to connect USB storage devices, a feature we'd like to see Canon include in future versions of its photo multifunction printers. Other printers, such as the HP Photosmart D7360, allow you to print straight from USB thumbdrives or transfer photos between memory cards and thumbdrives.
Compared to the previous MP950 model, the control panel is the biggest departure on the Pixma MP960. It employs the scrollwheel design seen on Canon's most recent printers, including the Pixma MP810 and the Pixma MP600. The scrollwheel allows you to peruse the menu on the built-in 3.5-inch colour LCD, half an inch smaller than the display on the MP950. (The 2006 refresh of the Pixma line seems to include smaller LCDs across the board.) We like this design because it consolidates most of the menu tasks and reduces the number of buttons in the control panel.
The Pixma MP960 uses the same ink system used in the Pixma MP950, a seven-ink system with each colour occupying its own tank. We like this system better than the MP600's five-ink system, because the extra inks provide greater colour variation. The photo print cost is the highest among Canon printers, but not unreasonably so.
Features
The Canon Pixma MP960 is undeniably designed for home users with a photocentric focus. It's a USB-only printer, though you can network it using a print server. It lacks an automatic document feeder and fax functionality, as well as networking capabilities, though all of these features are more commonly found on office multifunctions. (The exception is the Dell Photo 966, which we consider an office printer in photo printer's clothing.) With its wealth of features, though, the MP960 is a photo hobbyist's playground.
When printing from a memory card, you get tons of features that are standard for Canon all-in-ones. For example, you can print all photos, print only those within a particular date range, or print selected individual photos. Alternately, you can print a photo index of the contents of your card. Again, you can choose to print an index of all the photos or select images by date range. After printing the index, you can bubble in the images you want printed and scan the index to finish the job.
As you print photos, you can make adjustments to the image directly on the printer itself. Using the menu options, you can turn date and file-number printing on/off, opt for red-eye correction, crop and rotate the image, or add an effect such as sepia tone or illustration style, which renders your photo in pen-and-ink style. If you want to tweak the image, you have your choice of Vivid Photo, Photo Optimizer Pro, Noise Reduction, Face Brightener, and Image Optimizer, or you can manually adjust individual components, such as brightness, contrast, and colour hue. We saw greater differences in pictures in which we adjusted components such as brightness and contrast than when we used broader adjusters, such as Photo Optimizer Pro.
The rest of its features are standard. You can scan photos or documents to a number of different programs on your PC as a number of different file types, attach them to an e-mail, scan to PDF, or simply save the scanned file to a folder. Using the included scanner sleeves, you can scan 35mm negatives or slides and save the scans to your PC or print the photos from the film. The printer lets you scan regular colour negatives, black-and-white negatives, and colour positive film (also called reversal film). You can scan up to 12 35mm negatives or up to eight slides at a time. When copying, you have a range of options such as 2-on-1, 4-on-1, image repeat, borderless copy, and two-sided copy. You can also reduce or enlarge your original from 25 to 400 percent.
Performance
We were pleased to see some significant speed improvements in the Pixma MP960 over the Pixma MP950, though it still lagged behind some of the older Pixma models in scan speeds. It printed text files at a zippy 9.42 pages per minute, a slight improvement over the MP950's 8.86ppm. It flew through 4x6 photos at a rate of 1.98ppm, more than twice the speed of the MP950. Colour scans and grayscale scans were completed at about the same rate: 7.39ppm and 7.34ppm, respectively. Both numbers are well behind those of the Canon MP800's 10.75ppm (colour) and 11.88ppm (grayscale) and the Canon MP830's 10.75ppm (colour) and 11.61ppm (grayscale). The Canon Pixma MP810, recent successor to the Canon Pixma MP800, took a nosedive in scanning speeds. One of HP's top-of-the-line photo all-in-ones, the HP Photosmart C7180, offered all-around slower performance.
(Longer bars indicate better performance)
| Colour scan | Grayscale scan | 4x6 photo | Text |
We were also pleased to see that the Pixma MP960 maintained excellent print quality, though we preferred the MP950's scans to those of the MP960. The text prints were dark and sharp, with only minor jaggedness marring the characters. The colour graphics print showed excellent colour handling, pleasing saturation in colour blocks, and smooth curves. The print's photo elements were also impressive, showing excellent colour handling and great detail. The 4x6 photos exhibited sharp details and colours that popped, though we would've liked a bit more warmth in skin tones. The grayscale scan showed plenty of detail, though we noticed a bit of compression in both ends of the grayscale, resulting in some lost detail in both highlights and shadows. The colour scan was also sharply detailed, but the colours were blown out, and the scanner had some difficulty handling bar-code-style patterns. Across the board, we preferred prints from the Pixma MP960 to those from its competition, such as the HP Photosmart C7180, though the HP's scans were better than the Canon's.
Problems with the scans aside, photo hobbyists will be very pleased with the print quality of the Canon Pixma MP960. You'll take a hit in all task speeds except for photo speeds, though.
(Longer bars indicate better performance)
| Colour scan | Grayscale scan | Photo | Graphics | Text |
Canon provides a one-year limited warranty for its consumer printers, as well as a year of free, toll-free phone support. You can extend the warranty to three years for AU$149. You also can get tech support via e-mail, and Canon says it will respond within 24 hours. Canon's site has FAQs, a troubleshooting tool, downloadable drivers and software, and PDFs of product and software manuals.
Like this article? Click below to send it to your mobile for free!




Monique from Australia
07/06/2008, 11:34 PM
rating
7/10
We bought this printer about a year ago. Take my advice - in a home with more than one computer, not being able to print from a USB (thumbdrive) stick is extremely annoying! Also I wish so much that it has wireless capabilities.
Pros: Good quality. Very fast. Better quality than the HP C7180 (compeditor).
Cons: NO wireless capabilities... Grrrr! (Seriosuly, it's annoying). Can't print from USB drive.
Report offensive comment
Monique from Australia
07/06/2008, 11:14 PM
rating
7/10
We bought this printer about a year ago. Take my advice - in a home with more than one computer, not being able to print from a USB (thumbdrive) stick is extremely annoying! Also I wish so much that it has wireless capabilities.
Pros: Good quality. Very fast. Better quality than the HP C7180 (compeditor).
Cons: NO wireless capabilities... Grrrr! (Seriosuly, it's annoying). Can't print from USB drive.
Report offensive comment
Donthaveone
20/05/2007, 09:49 PM
rating
6/10
NO BUILT IN NETWORK CAPABILITIES! OH-NO! :-(
Pros: Multi-function. Reputible brand - Canon. Individual ink tanks. BIG 3.5 " LCD display. Easy scroll wheel on control panel. Ease of use buttons on control panel.
Cons: NO BUILT IN NETWORKING :S
Report offensive comment