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Arkscan 2054A-LAN Thermal Shipping Label Printer

 & William Harrel Former 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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Arkscan 2054A-LAN Thermal Shipping Label Printer - Arkscan 2054A-LAN Thermal Shipping Label Printer (Credit: Arkscan)
4.0 Excellent

The Bottom Line

A plain-vanilla label printer with robust connectivity and low running costs, the Arkscan 2054A-LAN is a strong choice for professional settings, notably shipping.

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Pros & Cons

    • Huge selection of easy-to-load label stock
    • Decent print quality
    • Robust label-design software
    • Wide range of applications and connectivity
    • Works with lots of shipping software and platforms
    • Zebra label-printer emulation
    • Lacks Mac software

Arkscan 2054A-LAN Thermal Shipping Label Printer Specs

Color or Monochrome Monochrome
Connection Type Ethernet
Connection Type USB
Connection Type Wireless
Cost Per Page (Color) N/A
Cost Per Page (Monochrome) 3.2 cents
Direct Printing From Media Cards
Maximum Scan Area N/A
Maximum Standard Paper Size 4.25" roll
Monthly Duty Cycle (Maximum) Not rated
Monthly Duty Cycle (Recommended) Not rated
Number of Ink Colors 1
Printer Input Capacity Roll feed
Printing Technology Thermal (Paper Labels)
Rated Speed at Default Settings (Color) N/A
Rated Speed at Default Settings (Mono) 5 inches per second
Scanner Optical Resolution N/A
Scanner Type N/A
Standalone Copier and Fax N/A
Type Printer Only

The Arkscan 2054A-LAN Thermal Shipping Label Printer ($259) is a professional-grade machine with much in common with the Zebra GC420d Direct Thermal Printer reviewed here in early 2018, and a direct competitor to the Editors' Choice Brother QL-820NWB and QL-1110NWB. (Both of those are comparably featured and priced networkable label printers.) All four of these machines, in addition to Brother's other QL-series models, make terrific shipping-label printers. They also support several other label types, from simple file-folder tabs to small signs and container content tags. The Arkscan handles a wide range of labeling tasks, and it supports label rolls and die-cut fanfold stacks from third-party vendors, which helps reduce running costs. Overall, it's a versatile labeler at a respectable price, and a host of connectivity options make it available to everybody in your office. It earns an Editors' Choice as our latest favorite midrange professional label printer.

A Diverse Label Printer

The 2054A comes in two flavors: the 2054A-USB and the 2054A-LAN. Yes, as you might guess, those last three letters designate the models' connectivity.

The 2054A-USB connects to a laptop or desktop solely over USB. The 2054A-LAN supports not only USB but also Ethernet and Wi-Fi, which not only makes it networkable but also lets you print from your smartphone or tablet.

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These are similar connectivity options to those of the Brother QL-820NWB and QL-1110NWB, except that the Brother models also support the peer-to-peer network protocols Bluetooth and Wi-Fi Direct. Zebra charges an extra $149 for Ethernet on its model, and it doesn't support Wi-Fi, which precludes you from using most mobile devices. Note that the QL-820NWB offers an add-on battery that allows you to use the printer sans cabling, but the other machines listed so far do not.

The Arkscan 2054A-LAN measures 6.5 by 8.3 by 9.4 inches (HWD) and weighs 4.8 pounds. That's a hair larger and heavier than the Zebra GC420d and considerably heftier than the Brother QL-820NWB, but much closer in size to the QL-1110NWB. 

Like most of today's dedicated label printers that are operated primarily from computing devices (PCs, smartphones, tablets, and so on), the 2054A-LAN has no control panel to speak of. The only controls are a power button, and a release button on the side to open the hatch that covers the rolls of label media.

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In addition to rolls, the 2054A-LAN supports folded stacks of die-cut labels, as shown below. You can stack them behind the machine or purchase an inexpensive feeder bin.

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A label printer's size is influenced mainly by the largest labels it prints, which in this case can be up to 4.25 inches wide. The longest label can measure 4.25 by 6 inches, except when the machine is in its so-called "long-document" mode. Then, it can print banner-size labels up to 90 inches long.

Of the other labelers mentioned here so far, the Zebra and Brother QL-1110NWB (and two other Brother QL-1000 series models) support up to 4-inch media, whereas the QL-820NWB (and two other QL-800 series machines) hold blank labels up to 2.4 inches wide. We'll look more closely at label media and the economics of using this printer in a moment.

Compatibility and Functionality

In many ways, the Arkscan 2054A-LAN emulates a few Zebra models, to the extent that, as you can see in the image below, it even looks like a Zebra machine.

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According to Arkscan, the 2054A-LAN can print on any kind of thermal label paper, including all free shipping labels from UPS and FedEx, and other thermal shipping labels in sizes 4 by 6 inches, 4 by 8.25 inches, and 4 by 6.75 inches. It's able to print shipping labels for a whole host of shippers and online services: Amazon, EasyPost, eBay, Etsy, PayPal, Shopify, ShipStation, ShipWorks, ShipGator, Shippo, ShipWire, ShippingEasy, XPSship, UPS WorldShip, Stamps.com, and many others.

The bundled software includes the very able BarTender UltraLite Label Making Software for Windows. It contains the text design features, graphics and bar codes, and most serializing capabilities for printing sequentially numbered labels.

Testing the 2054A-LAN: Five Inches per Second

Depending on the label printer itself and the type of label being printed, the methods used for assessing printing speeds vary. Arkscan rates the 2054A-LAN at 5 inches per second (ips), the same speed as Zebra's GC420d. I ran my speed tests over Ethernet from our standard Intel Core i5 testbed running Windows 10 Pro. (See how we test printers.)

For my tests, I printed an assortment of label types and sizes, from small file-folder tabs to large 4-by-6-inch shipping labels, and for the most part, the Arkscan and the Zebra models both lived up to their 5ips rating. The two Brother label printers came in slightly slower, at around 4.4ips, but still fast enough for most applications.

How do the labels look? Just fine. Like its Zebra competitor, the Arkscan prints at 203 dots per inch (dpi). The two Brother QL series machines mentioned here allow you to select among six print resolutions, ranging from 100dpi to 600dpi.  For the most part, most of the labels you'll print won't benefit significantly from being printed at a higher resolution, though some with embedded graphics and grayscale objects certainly will. That said, given its likely typical application (shipping labels, and text labels for drawers and files), I saw nothing to complain about with the 2054A-LAN's output.

The Consumables: Reasonable Running Costs

The Arkscan supports a wide range of labels. In width, they can vary from a minimum of 0.75 inch to a maximum of 4.25 inches. Length runs from a minimum of 0.4 inch to a maximum of 90 inches. More costly plastic and vinyl labels are available. Pricing varies widely with size and media type.

Depending on several factors, including how many you buy and where you buy them, 4-by-6-inch rolls, for example, sell for about 4 cents per label, while smaller 2.25-by-1.25-inch labels can sell for as little as half a cent each. Similar (but proprietary) labels from Brother, Dymo, and Leitz can cost several times that much.

As I noted about the Zebra GC420d when I reviewed it, it supports the same kinds of third-party media. It's these vast discounts on label costs with non-proprietary media that make Arkscan's enterprise-grade labeler a smart choice for high-volume labeling environments. Plus, it lists for a few hundred dollars less than its most direct Zebra competitors.

Final Thoughts

Arkscan 2054A-LAN Thermal Shipping Label Printer - Arkscan 2054A-LAN Thermal Shipping Label Printer (Credit: Arkscan)

Arkscan 2054A-LAN Thermal Shipping Label Printer

4.0 Excellent

A plain-vanilla label printer with robust connectivity and low running costs, the Arkscan 2054A-LAN is a strong choice for professional settings, notably shipping.

Get It Now

Buy It Now

About Our Expert

William Harrel

William Harrel

Former Contributing Editor

Bill's Experience

For nearly a decade, Bill focused on printer and scanner technology and reviews for PCMag, and wrote about computer technology since well before the advent of the internet. He authored or co-authored 20 books—including titles in the popular Bible, Secrets, and For Dummies series—on digital design and desktop publishing software applications. His published expertise in those areas included Adobe Acrobat, Adobe Photoshop, and QuarkXPress, as well as prepress imaging technology. (Over his long career, though, he covered many aspects of IT.)

In addition to writing hundreds of articles for PCMag, over the years he also wrote for many other computer and business publications, among them Computer Shopper, Digital Trends, MacUser, PC World, The Wirecutter, and Windows Magazine. He also served as the Printers and Scanners Expert at About.com.

Bill's Expertise

  • Imaging and prepress technology
  • The SOHO, SMB, and enterprise printer and scanner markets
  • Printer and scanner technology (and accompanying software)
  • Consumer-grade and pro-grade photo printing
  • Mobile printing and scanning
  • Optical character recognition (OCR)
  • Document management

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