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Xerox Phaser 7100/DN

 & Tony Hoffman Senior Writer, Hardware

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The Xerox Phaser 7100/DN color laser printer can churn out high-quality photos and graphics at up to tabloid size for smaller offices. - Laser Printers
4.0 Excellent

The Bottom Line

The Xerox Phaser 7100/DN color laser printer can churn out high-quality photos and graphics at up to tabloid size for smaller offices.
Best Deal£588

Buy It Now

£588

Pros & Cons

    • Low price for its capabilities.
    • Prints at up to tabloid size.
    • Very good photo and graphics quality.
    • Auto duplexer.
    • Good speed.
    • Relatively fast at duplex (two-sided) printing.
    • No port for USB thumb drive.

Xerox Phaser 7100/DN Specs

Color or Monochrome 1-pass color
Connection Type Ethernet
Connection Type USB
Cost Per Page (Color) 13 cents
Maximum Standard Paper Size Tabloid
Monthly Duty Cycle (Maximum) 52000 pages per month
Number of Ink Colors 4
Print Duplexing
Rated Speed at Default Settings (Color) 30 ppm
Rated Speed at Default Settings (Mono) 30 ppm
Type Printer Only

The Xerox Phaser 7100/DN ($1,599.99) is the best of a growing group of small-office color laser printers that can print at up to tabloid size, and it comes at a relatively low price. It has all the features of the Xerox Phaser 7100/N, and it adds an automatic duplexer for two-sided printing. The 7100/DN loses little time in duplex (two-sided) over simplex (one-sided) printing, even though it has to flip each page over to print the second side. It delivers even better quality output than the Xerox 7100/N, earning it our Editors' Choice nod as a budget-priced, tabloid color laser printer.

The blue and white laser printer measures 16 by 21 by 19.7 inches (HWD) and weighs 97 pounds, so you'll need at least two people to move it into place. It has a 400-sheet standard paper capacity, which is split between a 250-sheet main tray and a 150-sheet secondary tray, both of which can fit up to tabloid-size (11-by-17-inch) paper. Up to three additional 550-sheet are available as options (at $399 each), as are a wireless adapter ($219) and a productivity kit whose centerpiece is a 40GB hard drive ($499).

The 7100/DN has standard Ethernet and USB connectivity. I tested it over an Ethernet connection with a PC running Windows Vista. The recommended driver, which installs by default, is PostScript; users can also install included PCL emulations, PDF Direct, or XPS drivers from the bundled setup disc. I ran all our tests using the default PostScript driver.

Print Speed
I timed the 7100/DN at 6.1 pages per minute (ppm) in duplex mode on the latest version of our business applications suite (using QualityLogic's hardware and software for timing). That's a decent speed considering its rated print speed of 30 pages per minute. (Rated speeds are based on text-only printing, while our test suite combines text pages, graphics pages, and pages with mixed content.) As expected, it was faster in simplex mode (7.7 ppm), testing at a near-identical speed to the simplex-only Xerox 7100/N (7.6 ppm). In simplex mode, it even edged out the significantly more expensive Xerox Phaser 7500/DN, which was rated at 35 pages per minute for both color and black-and-white printing and ran at 7.1 ppm in our tests. The 7100/DN was faster at duplex printing than the OKI C831DN, another lower-priced color tabloid printer that tested at 7.5 ppm in simplex, but a relatively pokey 5.3 ppm when I switched it to duplex mode.

Output Quality
The 7100/DN's output quality was very good for a color laser, with average text for lasers, and above-par graphics and photos. Together, the output is good enough for printing advertising materials, such as trifold brochures or real-estate handouts. In our testing, text was good enough for any business use, except for some requiring very small fonts.

Graphics should be fine for most business uses, including PowerPoint handouts, and could be used for basic marketing materials. The main flaw—a minor one at that—was that mild blotchiness was visible in some darker backgrounds.

Nearly all the photo prints passed as true photo quality when seen under glass at arm's length. Colors were good and well saturated. There was a slight loss of detail in bright areas in a couple of prints.

As a budget duplexing color laser printer that can print up to tabloid size, the Xerox Phaser 7100/DN offers good speed and very good overall output quality. Photos were even better than with its near-twin, the Xerox 7100/N. The 7100/DN's output quality was better than that of the OKI 831DN, which is similar in price and features, and it was faster than the OKI printer in duplex mode as well.

Although the 7100/DN lacks the Xerox 7500/DN's natural-language software color control—which lets people with no technical knowledge of color mixing easily tweak colors from print to print by using a series of drop-down menus, with commands such as "green colors slightly more green."—its output quality was nearly as good. The Xerox 7500/DN also has bigger paper capacity (600 sheets standard) than the 7100/DN, a slightly faster rated speed, and is built for higher print volumes (with a 150,000-page maximum monthly duty cycle), but it comes in at nearly twice the price.

If you don't have a need for duplex printing, the Xerox Phaser 7100/N offers everything else that the 7100/DN has, for $200 less. But the 7100/DN provides even better output quality, as well as two-sided printing, and is an easy pick as Editors' Choice for budget, tabloid-size color laser printers.

Final Thoughts

The Xerox Phaser 7100/DN color laser printer can churn out high-quality photos and graphics at up to tabloid size for smaller offices. - Laser Printers

Xerox Phaser 7100/DN

4.0 Excellent

The Xerox Phaser 7100/DN color laser printer can churn out high-quality photos and graphics at up to tabloid size for smaller offices.

Get It Now
Best Deal£588

Buy It Now

£588

About Our Expert

Tony Hoffman

Tony Hoffman

Senior Writer, Hardware

Since 2004, I have worked on PCMag’s hardware team, covering at various times printers, scanners, projectors, storage, and monitors. I currently focus my efforts on 3D printers, pro and productivity displays, and drives and SSDs of all sorts.

Over the years, I have reviewed smart telescopes, iPad and iPhone science apps, plus the occasional camera, laptop, keyboard, and mouse. I've also written a host of articles about astronomy, space science, travel photography, and astrophotography for PCMag and its past and present sibling publications (among them, Mashable and ExtremeTech), as well as for the former PCMag Digital Edition.

The Technology I Use

I have a Lenovo ThinkPad T14 laptop that's my work daily driver, an HP Pavilion Aero 13 as my primary personal laptop, and an Asus ProArt P16 for detailed photo work. (I also have an older Dell XPS 13, which now stays at home full-time.) For storage testing, I rely on our three custom-built Windows testbeds in PC Labs, as well as a 2024 MacBook Pro.

My primary home monitor is a BenQ EX2780Q, a gaming monitor with a great sound system and excellent image quality. I use that panel for writing, watching videos, and working with photos. I also have an HP 27 Curved Display—one of the first general-purpose curved monitors—which I have paired with an Acer Aspire desktop computer. My multifunction printer is an Epson Expression Premium XP-7100 Small-in-One. I also own an Epson Perfection V39 flatbed scanner, which I use for photos and short documents, and a Canon Selphy CP1300 small-format photo printer for turning out snapshots.

My first cell phone, in 2006, was a Motorola Razr; since then, it’s been all iPhones—I currently have an iPhone 15 Pro. I use my iPhone a lot for casual photography, though I also use a Sony DSC-RX100 VII and a Canon G5 X Mark II for everyday shooting. For much of my travel photography and astrophotography, I use either a Sony A7r II or A7 III, paired with a variety of lenses ranging from a Sony 14mm f/1.8 prime to a Sony FE 70-300mm f/4.5-5.6 G OSS zoom lens. I also pair the A7r with a RedCat 51 for deep-sky star shooting. For astrophotography, I also use the Seestar S30 and S50 and the Unistellar Odyssey smart telescopes, which are essentially astronomical cameras controlled through one’s mobile device.

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