Epson Stylus C65

Epson Stylus C65 The Epson C65 brings quality photo printing to the home at an affordable price, but offers little else over its predecessor.

The Stylus C65 is Epson's replacement for the entry-level DURABrite solution, the C63. Arriving more than six months after its predecessor, we were expecting some evolutionary improvements. However, the C65 threw us off our feet on several fronts. For starters, the rated 17ppm for monochrome outputs and 9ppm for colour documents haven't improved. Secondly, the unit actually measures and weighs more than its forerunner. Lastly, the rudimentary Mac OS support has been dropped. Frankly, if you don't have a tendency to use manufacturer-specific software, the C65 has nothing to offer over its precursor.

When we reviewed the C63, we commented about how Epson still styled most of its printers circa as early 2002. You shouldn't be surprised to find the Stylus C65 no different. While there are slight deviations to its older brother in terms of button design and size, the C65 still clads itself with the same curvy cutting and grey-and-black ensemble.

In the tech world where miniaturisation is a sign of progress, Epson strangely hasn't conformed to that idea. The C65 measures 460 x 243 x 193mm when packed and hits the scales at 4.4kg. We didn't mind the 1cm increase in length much, but found the extra 500g heft strange. In any case, the C65 remains easy to hide or tuck away when desktop space is constrained.

Like most consumer-oriented inkjets, setting up the C65 is straightforward. Run the drivers installation CD, connect the printer to the PC--through either a USB or parallel cable--and you're well on your way. Like its predecessor, a USB cable is not bundled with the unit. However, the inkjet sports the legacy parallel port, so you won't have to interrupt your installation workflow when you find out you are missing the USB cable.

Perhaps recognising that patronage for the Mac OS hasn't been spectacular (estimated by IDC to be between 2 and 3 percent of the worldwide market), the Japanese firm has dropped its rudimentary support for the Apple OS, concentrating instead on software for Windows-powered machines. The manufacturer does catch onto other trends with the new Epson PhotoQuicker software sporting a mobile phone print mode to address the burgeoning camera-phone space.

Like the C63, the C65 produced respectable scores in our speed tests when run in draft mode. In "normal" print quality, the unit bordered between slow and average. In any case, this Stylus finished our 10-page test in 76 seconds or a meager 3 seconds faster than the C63. Still, this puts the unit ahead of older midrange dedicated photo printers such as Canon's i470D and i475D. However, with new inkjets expected from the likes of Canon and HP in September, the C65 may find itself fighting an uphill battle.

In terms of photo output, the C65 produces "borderless" or "border-free" photos of 4R size only. Even so, its A4-size image output benches trail the Canon units (which print borderless A4 pictures), clocking 12 minutes for best-quality mode and 5.5 minutes in the photo-quality setting--no improvement over the older C63.

With regard to quality, the results in our tests proved reasonably good. Although the text at 2pt font size came out a little blotchy, it was still legible. For photos, outputs turned out great with little dithering and banding visible when set to best-quality mode. However, the photo-quality setting produced images with visible banding and a lack of detail. We reckon the photo-quality setting made the printheads write half as many passes when compared with the best-quality mode, resulting in significant speed improvements at the obvious expense of quality.

Like its older brethren, the C65's consumables work out rather affordably, especially considering Epson's claim of fade resistance up to 80 years. The black ink cartridge costs AU$20.79 with a manufacturer-rated yield of 540 pages, while each of the colour cartridges costs AU$13.20 and is rated for 250 pages. This works out to just under 4 cents per monochrome and about 5.3 cents per colour output. This makes the colour prints here even cheaper than most competing systems including the decent-performing i475D.

Further value can be derived from the cost of the DURABrite media. 4R sheets are sold in packs of 50 for AU$15.40, while A4 media costs AU$26.40 for 20 sheets. Perhaps the only downside to these affordable photo papers is that they aren't very glossy which may make it less appealing to some.

In all, we were comforted by the C65's reasonable print quality and strong value ratings. However, issues with its lackluster speed remain and the Japanese vendor's lack of support for Mac OS makes this Stylus a hard recommendation. Still, if you don't mind the longer print-time in exchange for affordable, gorgeous photo outputs that last or you feel the introductory mobile phone print mode a godsend, this Stylus can go on your list of considerations. Else, we'd wait out for the next generation of inkjets.

Epson Stylus C65
Company: Epson
Price: AU$179
Phone: 1300 361 054

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Talkback 4 comments

    I changed to Epson from HP, ba ...Anonymous -- 21/02/05

    I changed to Epson from HP, bad decision, I feel very uncomfortable, I don’t figure out where they get 17 ppm. I have trouble printing out from Acrobat Reader, it just slows to cero the O/S (w2k) and have to close out the spooler in Task Manager. The print quality is not as sharp as it claims to be. I’m just selling it out and getting a new “old faithful H.P.”.

    my C65 only gets about 250pgs ...Anonymous -- 21/04/05

    my C65 only gets about 250pgs per black ink cartridge with all three colour cartridges needing replacing every 500pg even though i have never used color. VERY SLOW

    Epson Stylus C65 Printer Eric -- 28/08/06 (in reply to #120116033)

    We use only black ink, but the printer eventually tells us the colour ones are also empty. And they are not ! Something to do with a chip on the cartridge which gets 'depleted' so as to make you think it is empty and you have to buy more.
    Answer? Go to www.cartridgemate.com.au and look up 'chip resetters' . Well worth a go.

    Printer C 65 EPSON Fred Holmes -- 06/02/06

    After 13 Pages WORDS the printer told me that the black ink was finished.
    Wich- was not true. I could hear it sloshing about when shaking the
    Black container. Anyway, a general STOP was the case. A complete new set of ink had to be bought.

    The hotline ? Waste of time and money. The dealer ? Sorry to say I got the printer in Singapore.

    EPSON ? Better buy a real printer.
    HP or LEXMARK.

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