

Colour printing is good but photo output leaves a little to be desired so you’ll need to use the top 4800dpi setting and photo ink cartridge to get the best from printing your digital photos.Ĭolour is good with smooth transitions across colours for work on graphics so mixed colour and text documents certainly look the part.

However, 1200 x 1200dpi black text output is under par, characters are not crisp.

Duplex printing is built-in but finished pages are held up by a delay before printing the second side to allow drying time, which is a tad frustrating but the output is not bad for such as device. Once up and running, print speeds are best described as average, a little less than two pages per minute for a colour print - half Lexmark’s claim of five pages per minute. Once sorted, you can disconnect the USB cable and then move the printer to its permanent home. Wi-Fi is slightly more tricky as it depends on having a wireless network up and running (of course) and you need to connect the device with the USB cable as well whereby you enter the wireless network name and protocols in place (WEP passwords and so forth).
#LEXMARK X9350 INK CARTRIDGES SOFTWARE#
Ink installation of the black or tri-colour (cyan, magenta and yellow) or the additional Photo colour tank (with extra light cyan and light magenta included) is simple they click home into their respective carriage when the machine is hinged open while connecting up and installing the software is more complex as you need to choose your connection type impressively, the 9350 offers Wi-Fi, USB and Ethernet connectivity.įor USB2 and Ethernet connection, the process is straight forward enough and a good step-by-step set-up approach using the supplied set up guide. To control the 9350 and well thought-out control panel angles from the front of the machine and houses a nice LCD and a nice set of large controls and a good sized four-way jog button and a numerical key panel. In short, Lexmark has covered all the bases in terms of what the 9350 can deal with. There’s also a PictBridge slot for direct connection of a compatible digital camera. To the right of the sheet feeder are four memory card slots that accept CF Type II, Memory Stick (Pro), SD/MMC and xD-Picture Cards. At the base we find the protruding from the front a 150-sheet paper cassette that acts as a delivery tray, printed pages feed out onto its top. The top layer is a 50-page auto-document feeder, beneath this sits the A4 flatbed scanner element while below here the hinged top section lifts up to reveal and gain access to the twin ink cartridge slots. As if put together by some techno-archaeologist, the 9350 is designed in layers, each “strata” of the grey and white block featuring a part of the machine, which together form the whole. (Pocket-lint) - The X9350 is a bulky, blocky looking AiO that has just about all the features you’d need from a small or home office multi-function device.
