Olympus Camedia P-10 Digital Photo Printer

By Alex Kidman on 13/12/2004

More Olympus reviews , RRP: AU$199.00

The good:

  • Very, very fast
  • Quality prints

The bad:

  • Extremely noisy
  • A one trick pony
  • Tied to specific printing media

The bottomline:

While it's a visually appealing photo printer with solid quality output, unless you only want to print in a couple of smallish sizes, it's hard to recommend the P-10.

Buying choices:

Users' rating:

9/10

Design
The P-10 is a cube-shaped printer, strongly reminiscent of Apple's ill-fated G4 cube, and not just because of the shape-based similarity -- it shares the same strong lines and striking visual appeal as well. The front panel is decked out in an aquamarine blue colour with activity lights to indicate access, paper and ribbon usage. On the top right hand front facing is the power button, and at the base sits a flap which hides the unit's paper tray. Just to the side of that is the Pictbridge connector -- the P-10 should work with any Pictbridge compatible camera, although naturally enough Olympus would prefer you to use one of their models -- and for what it's worth, that's what we tested with. Flip the P-10 around and you'll find the power port as well as USB connector for direct PC connection, although in the model supplied to CNET.com.au, no USB cable was provided.

Given its size (196x190x166mm and 2.3kg)  the P-10 isn't exactly a portable printer, but it is small and compact enough that it can more or less be tucked away in any handy corner.

Features
The P-10 is a dye sublimation printer, which means it uses specific custom print ribbons and paper to print rather quickly to 4x6" paper only. Fast is nice, but the specific downside, as with any dye sublimation printer, is that you must use the specific designed ribbons (which load in from the side) and paper -- a quick bit of online trawling revealed an average selling price of around $99 for this pack, giving you a rough costing of 99c/print, which isn't spectacular for prints of this size.

The P-10 can manage a few print tricks even given its limited paper capabilities -- it'll do borderless prints up to its maximum paper size, and can print to a smaller 3.5x5 inch size. While you can connect to your PC via USB, or to a Pictbridge capable printer, the P-10 lacks any kind of memory card slot, so if you're looking for that kind of functionality you'll need to search elsewhere.

Performance
There are two main things you'll notice while using the P-10. Firstly, it's not a good idea to put the printer on a desk right near yourself, as it's one of the noisiest photo printers we've tested for a while -- all that compact space didn't leave much space for noise buffering, obviously. The other thing you'll notice -- and for a printer this noisy, it's a real saving grace -- is that compared to a traditional ink printer, the P-10 is blindingly fast at pumping out 4x6" prints. During our testing the P-10 stuck to its manufacturer's claim of 40 seconds per print extremely closely, and for a consumer-level photo printer, that's quite impressive.

We noticed one odd quirk when hooking up the P-10 to our test desktop -- for some reason under Windows XP, it kept pointing to the Spanish language version of the printer driver. It really doesn't matter much, as the P-10's driver is on the simpler side; you'll find few of the colour compensation tricks that printers from manufacturers like HP or Canon offer with their colour photo printers in the P-10's driver.

The P-10 is a nice, albeit noisy, printer, but it is hampered within its price range by being something of a one-trick pony, and many consumers would be well served to consider their options in the larger printer area, where it's possible to perform other print jobs. But if you know you're only ever going to want 4x6 shots, and you're going to want them as quickly as possible, it's certainly a solid option.

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anonym
14/02/2007, 11:15 AM

rating
8
/10

I was surprised that Olympus does not ship an icc profile nor is one available for download from their website

Pros: The pics look much better than from any ink jet printer

Cons: Some cropping / resizing occurs even if the pictures are in 4x6 format :(

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19/03/2006, 09:35 PM

Very Good

I also have a HP multi function machine which prints photos. However without purchasing an additional "photo" cartridge to enhance them I find the Camedia P 10 produces very high quality 4 x 6 photos with the one cartridge. Could you please advise on how much a new cartridge (incl paper) would be and where I can purchase it in the
SE suburbs of Melbourne, as my existing one has run out.

Thankyou

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Rene
17/07/2005, 01:24 PM

Great looking prints for $0.39

I bought the printer to complement my Epson printer. The print quality is outstanding. Since most of the prints I make are 4x6 anyway, it works great. I have had many inkjets and wanted a dye sub printer for the print quality and durability. the ink jet just can't compare, and its faster. It is louder, but not that much. I always end up using the maufacturers ink and paper anyway. I found just about everybody sells the ink and paper for 36-40 for a 100 sheet pack.

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