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Xerox Phaser 6600/DN

 & M. David Stone Contributing Editor

Our team tests, rates, and reviews more than 1,500 products each year to help you make better buying decisions and get more from technology.

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Xerox Phaser 6600/DN - Xerox Phaser 6600/DN
4.0 Excellent

The Bottom Line

The Xerox Phaser 6600/DN color laser printer offers a balance of speed, output quality, and paper handling suitable for a small office or workgroup with heavy-duty print needs.
Best Deal£1699.93

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Pros & Cons

    • Relatively high-quality output.
    • Ample paper handling for a small office or workgroup with heavy-duty print needs.
    • Although print speed is acceptable, it's a bit slow for the price.

Xerox Phaser 6600/DN Specs

Color or Monochrome 1-pass color
Connection Type Ethernet
Connection Type USB
Cost Per Page (Color) 15.4 cents
Maximum Standard Paper Size Legal
Monthly Duty Cycle (Maximum) 80000 pages per month
Number of Ink Colors 4
Print Duplexing
Rated Speed at Default Settings (Color) 36 ppm
Rated Speed at Default Settings (Mono) 36 ppm
Type Printer Only

Aimed at small offices or workgroups with heavy-duty print needs, the Xerox Phaser 6600/DN($798.81 at Amazon) offers capable paper handling as one of its best features. Add in the on par or better output quality across the board, including for photos, and it's a particularly good fit if you need a color laser to print a lot of pages, and also need the output to look good.

Color lasers in this price range have stiff competition in the form of the Editors' Choice HP Officejet Pro X551dw Printer( at Amazon), a laser-class inkjet. But lasers in general, and the 6600/DN in particular, still have an edge on color quality compared with the X551dw. They also have the advantage of there being no way that the output can smudge or smear if it gets wet. Depending on your needs and tastes, these two differences alone may make a laser the better pick.

The 6600/DN also offers somewhat better paper handling than the X551dw, with a 550-sheet drawer, 150-sheet multipurpose tray, and duplexer (for two-sided printing) standard. The 550-sheet drawer is a particularly nice touch, since it lets you refill the drawer with an entire ream of paper even before it's fully empty. And if you need still more capacity, you can add a second 550-sheet drawer ($299 direct) for a total 1,250 sheets. Not so incidentally, if you don't need duplexing, Xerox also sells the Phaser 6600/N ($549 direct), which Xerox says is the identical printer minus the duplexer.

Setup and Speed

As you might expect simply from the paper capacity, the 6600/DN is too big to comfortably share a desk with, at 15.1 by 16.9 by 19.2 inches (HWD). It's also heavy enough, at 56 pounds, so most people would consider moving it into place a two-person job. Once you find a spot for it, however, setup is simple and absolutely typical for a color laser. For my tests, I connected it to a wired network and installed the driver on a system running Windows Vista.

Xerox rates the printer at 36 pages per minute (ppm) for both color and monochrome in simplex (one sided) mode. You should see that speed or close to it when printing text files with little or no formatting. However, the printer installs to print in duplex mode by default, which drops the rating to 24 ppm. And because we run our business applications suite with the default settings as shipped, our official test is for the duplex setting and slower speed. Beyond that, as with virtually all printers, the 6600/DN is much slower than its top speed on our tests, because we include photos and graphics that take time to process.

Xerox Phaser 6600/DN

On our business applications suite (timed with QualityLogic's hardware and software), I clocked the printer at an effective 4.6 ppm. I also ran an unofficial test in simplex mode and got essentially the same speed. In either case, the speed falls in a tolerable range, but is a little slow for the price. The HP Officejet Pro X551dw, for example, came in at 9.2 ppm, and the Brother HL-4570CDW managed 6.8 ppm. In addition, the 6600/DN was unusually slow for a laser for photos, averaging 48 seconds for a 4 by 6.

Output Quality

Largely making up for any points the printer loses for speed is its overall output quality. Text and graphics are both dead on par for a color laser. That makes the text easily good enough for any business need, and arguably good enough for moderately serious desktop publishing applications, depending on how critical an eye you have. The graphics, similarly, are easily good enough for any business use up to and including good-quality PowerPoint handouts. Most people would also consider them good enough for marketing materials like one-page handouts or mailers.

Photos in my tests were above par, and just short of consistently true photo quality. More than half of the photos in our test suite were high enough quality so if you mounted them in a frame behind glass, they'd pass for the level of quality you'd expect from typical drugstore prints. Outside of a frame, only the fact that they're printed on plain paper gives them away. However other photos could only pass for photo quality at a quick glance from a distance. Overall, most people would consider the photos, along with the graphics, as good enough for printing your own marketing materials.

The Xerox Phaser 6600/DN's strongest points are clearly its paper handling and output quality. The one other sweetener that demands mention is that Xerox includes one year of onsite service in the base warranty. If you want a speed demon, you'll need to look elsewhere, but if you don't mind the slower speed, the Xerox Phaser 6600/DN can be an excellent fit for a small office or workgroup that needs a heavy-duty workhorse with high-quality output.

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Further Reading

Final Thoughts

Xerox Phaser 6600/DN - Xerox Phaser 6600/DN

Xerox Phaser 6600/DN Review

4.0 Excellent

The Xerox Phaser 6600/DN color laser printer offers a balance of speed, output quality, and paper handling suitable for a small office or workgroup with heavy-duty print needs.

Get It Now
Best Deal£1699.93

Buy It Now

£1699.93

About Our Expert

M. David Stone

M. David Stone

Contributing Editor

My Experience

Most of my current work for PCMag is about printers and projectors, but I've covered a wide variety of other subjects—in more than 4,000 pieces, over more than 40 years—including both computer-related areas and others ranging from ape language experiments, to politics, to cosmology, to space colonies. I've written for PCMag.com from its start, and for PC Magazine before that, as a Contributor, then a Contributing Editor, then as the Lead Analyst for Printers, Scanners, and Projectors, and now, after a short hiatus, back to Contributing Editor.

I'm pretty sure I'm the only person who worked on every "Project Printer" blockbuster PCMag ever produced, often writing 15 or more reviews for the year's big printer blowout. (I snuck in a single review one year when I was writing a book, strictly so I could keep that claim alive.)

I've always worked for PCMag as a freelancer, which has freed me to take time away to write nine books, be a major contributor to four others, and write for other publications, including Wired, Computer Shopper, Projector Central, and Science Digest, where I was Computers Editor. I also wrote a computer column at one point for The Newark Star-Ledger.

Although I started my career primarily as a science (mostly physics and astronomy) and science-fiction writer (published in Analog), my non-computer-related work runs the gamut from the Project Data Book for NASA's Upper Atmosphere Research Satellite (written for GE's Astro-Space Division) to the script for a video overview of a top company in the gaming industry (that would be gambling, not video games). My books include The Underground Guide to Color Printers (Addison-Wesley), Troubleshooting Your PC (Microsoft Press), and Faster, Smarter Digital Photography (Microsoft Press).

Having covered a wide range of subjects, I've developed a serial expertise in many of them. The ones most relevant to my current work at PCMag.com are all imaging technologies.

The Technology I Use

I buy new PCs for my writing desk infrequently, because it takes a week or more to customize the settings the way I want them. At the moment, I have an HP Envy tower running Windows 10, but it's old enough to have a Windows 7 sticker on it. Its latest lease on a longer life is courtesy of a newly installed 500GB Samsung SSD 870 EVO.

Elsewhere in my house is an assortment of older and newer PCs. The older ones are dedicated to specific tasks, like the one I've been using to slowly digitize all the paper stored in my filing cabinets, while the newer ones are testbeds for printer and projector reviews.

For writing, I use Microsoft Word 2003, because I find it too annoying to take my hands off the keyboard to give mouse commands using the Ribbon. My workhorse printers are a Xerox Phaser 6280 color laser and a Dymo LabelWriter 450 Twin Turbo for labels and stamps. I also have a Canon Pixma iP8720 for printing photos, and a Canon ImageFormula DR-C225 for scanning.

My first computer was bought to replace my IBM Selectric for writing. After rejecting both the IBM PC (which had just been introduced) and the Apple II because of the keyboards, I chose a Vector Graphics Vector 3 CP/M machine with dual floppies. The first MS-DOS machine I was willing to use for writing was the IBM AT, with its much-improved keyboard compared with the original PC and its gargantuan 20MB hard drive.

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