Lexmark X9350

By Alex Kidman on 29/01/2007

More Lexmark reviews , RRP: AU$349.00

The good:

  • Simple wireless printing
  • Inbuilt duplexing
  • Document feeder for fax
  • Good print quality

The bad:

  • Awful paper tray
  • Slow wireless printing

The bottomline:

The X9350 offers a good quality print experience, but the much lauded wireless printing ability really isn't that stunning.

Buying choices:

Editors' rating:

7.4/10

Users' rating:

6.6/10

Design
Lexmark's designers have obviously decided on a basic design motif for their recent printers. In trying to describe the X9350, we could think of no words more suitable than: "it looks like the X5470 with bits bolted on". And that's basically true; while the X9350 is less fussed about smooth white lines, and won't quite mesh with your iPod the way the X5470 does, they've both obviously fallen out of the same designer's grab-bag of tricks. Lexmark positions the X9350 as a SOHO multi-function device (MFD), so its design incorporates more business-centric features, such as a document feeder and inbuilt duplexing. The front panel has fax controls, basic copying buttons and a flip-up LCD screen for picture preview and menu selections, which sits above the main paper tray. And it's the paper tray that's the X9350's Achilles' heel. More on that shortly.

Features
The X9350 is an inkjet MFD with either 4 (cyan, magenta, yellow and black) or 6 colour printing (via an optional photo printing cartridge) with integrated 4800dpi scanner and fax capabilities. Media slots on the front of the printer accommodate all the standard media card types -- CF, MMC/SD, MemoryStick and xD for direct photo printing -- as well as PictBridge support. The supplied paper tray can accommodate up to 150 sheets of standard paper, as well as a wide variety of other printable media, although it can't handle direct CD/DVD printing.

The X9350 can be connected via a standard USB cable -- Lexmark even provides one in the box -- or via Ethernet. As well, it supports wireless printing from Windows and Mac platforms, and it's this feature that Lexmark promotes heavily with this particular model. It even sports a natty little green display light to indicate that it's a wireless printer.

Performance
Setup of the X9350 -- beyond the tedious insertion of cartridges and unraveling of mysterious bits of tape that are part and parcel of any printer installation -- revolves around the supplied driver CD. We installed the X9350 across a network of Windows XP and OS X machines, although it's worth noting that the driver CD is Windows only, so there's a 19.8MB download before you can get started on OS X. The software not only installs the printer drivers, but also enables you to quickly and moderately-simply set up the printer's wireless functions. This approach is eminently preferable to the one employed by some other wireless gear we've sampled, which force you to use SMS-style data entry on the numeric keypad for configuration. The setup process also involves setting up a wireless scanning profile that'll automatically save scanned documents to a network-connected PC. We expected to hit all sorts of firewall permission problems with this, and were pleasantly surprised to find it a smooth and simple process.

The only spot that stumped us during the setup process was putting paper into the X9350. It'll support plenty of paper types, and even has guidelines for common paper sizes, such as 4x6-inch photo paper. What it doesn't support with the paper tray fully closed is A4. We're still scratching our heads to work out why. What makes it worse, though, is that the printer's quick start guide neglects to mention this fact; you've got to delve into the much thicker product manual to work this out. Nobody wants to spend a lot of time setting up a printer. Well, nobody sane anyway. It also took us some time to work out the optimal positioning for the paper tray, which juts out ever so slightly when loaded with A4, before we could reliably avoid paper jams.

Print quality and speed with the X9350 was acceptable but never spectacular and, predictably, it was a touch slower printing large files over the wireless network than when connected via USB or to a wired network. Photo quality was likewise good but not great, especially when using the 4-colour cartridge.

With an asking price of AU$499, the X9350 doesn't represent terrible value but within the SOHO sphere it's arguably a touch on the costlier side. Especially when you consider the raft of low-cost laser printers flooding the market. While the in-built wireless capability does offer some definite advantages in convenience, by allowing you to set the printer up anywhere you choose, the lower speeds achieved by this unit in wireless mode make this a less compelling feature than it might seem at first.

Like this article? Click below to send it to your mobile for free!

busy mum
03/04/2008, 09:25 PM

rating
8
/10

i brought the printer bout a week ago,i think its great,its keep away from the kids so they can't reach it,thats way i bought wireless, great invention thats for sure......

Report offensive comment

Richard Simmonds
24/01/2008, 03:35 AM

rating
2
/10

I so want to like this printer however it keeps letting me down. Wireless prining and scanning is useless, the connection keeps dropping out. If your system goes on standby, don't expect to be able to print or scan again without re-installing the drivers!

Pros: Neat Idea

Cons: Unstable - Almost unusable as a wireless printer

Report offensive comment

smokey2705
03/11/2007, 09:02 AM

rating
8
/10

Purchased 4 wks ago from Officeworks Online $175 - got to be the best bargain! Great printer, fast, good quality, fax works well as does the duplexer.

Pros: Fast printing, easy to use duplexer, good fax facilities, easy to use copier - great small business tool.

Cons: Forget the wireless, too difficult to set up and too slow in operation. Simple fix, use USB!

Report offensive comment

velvet8772
27/08/2007, 11:50 AM

rating
2
/10

Do Not buy this if you use Mac. I have had nothing but problems with this machine, which is unfortunate, because I really like all the features it offers. I have been on the phone with Lexmark several times, had to re-install over 10 times (not kidding) and Lexmark's technician's even told me there are "known" compatability issues with Mac's.

Report offensive comment

mikedgolf40505
06/08/2007, 03:25 AM

rating
8
/10

Great machine

Pros: Love wireless printing. Great print quality. Speed is good.

Cons: Had some Vista setup issues at first, but they have been resolved.

Report offensive comment

babygirl28980
12/05/2007, 04:30 PM

rating
8
/10

This printer is great! No problems with the printer once up and running. Steps in setting up the printer was fine except for the wireless set up which was abit confusing. Not enough settings or troubleshooting information for wireless. However, we finally got it all working nicely.

Pros: Fast printing, excellent paper feeds, great wireless printing. Prints wireless from 2 rooms away! - overall a great all in once multifunction printer

Cons: Only minor issue was the wireless setup!

Report offensive comment

Dean
03/03/2007, 07:32 PM

rating
10
/10

I bought this printer a couple of weeks ago and it has been fine.

Pros: Wireless printing, scanning. Option to scan to pdf. Not heavy. Fits a lot of paper in the tray. Has a wireless indicator.

Cons: The review states that the wireless printing is slow. I don't think so. It works well for me.

Report offensive comment

thebusygirl
25/02/2007, 06:58 PM

rating
7
/10

I bought this printer/scanner/fax to scan files to pdf - which many other brands do not. I wanted to scan many documents quickly and with the adf this is possible. I am still testing it but I am happy so far!

Pros: Scans to pdf via adf. The ocr is better than my brother laser mfc. It is fast. It has a printed setup manual and a printed user guide that comes with it - with so many other brands requiring you to use internet or print your own this is a refreshing change! I like the cashback option - this swayed my purchase!

Cons: It cannot set fax auto answer rings past 5 rings! My answer machine has two settings '2' and '7', of which I like 7. With the Lexmark requiring the answer machine to pick up before it I need to set my answer machine to '2'. I find this annoying but not off-putting.

Report offensive comment

  • Leave a comment

All fields marked with * are required

What do you think

Rate this product:

Need help? Read our guidelines for what each number rating represents.

Your e-mail will not be displayed

You must read and type the 6 chars within 0..9 and A..F

You must read and type the 6 chars.

  • Dell V305w All In One

  • HP Deskjet F4280 All-in-One

  • Lexmark X4650

  • Oi!: Turn your photos into a movie

  • Brother MFC-7440N

  • Lexmark X4875

  • Photos: Annoying hardware, a rogues' gallery

  • HP Photosmart C8180

  • Printer's gel-like ink works on everything

More articles »

Find the right printer

Brand
  • Multiple options can be selected

    Membership benefits

    Create a personalised homepage

    Create a personalised homepage

    Choose your interests from our 16 categories and only see articles relevant to you. Sign up for a free CNET.com.au membership now!