Trusted Reviews is supported by its audience. If you purchase through links on our site, we may earn a commission. Learn more.

Canon PIXMA MG4150 Review

Verdict

rating-star rating-star rating-star rating-star rating-star

Pros

  • Remote printing with Cloud Link
  • Quick and easy maintenance
  • AirPrint compatibility

Cons

  • Slow colour print
  • Fuzzy colour copies
  • Large footprint when open

Key Specifications

  • Review Price: £87.00
  • Duplex print
  • 60mm fold-up LCD display
  • Wireless connection
  • Fold-away paper trays
  • HD Movie Print

All-in-one printers start at well under £100, but if you can afford slightly more than an entry-level price, you can get useful extra features at around £80. Canon’s PIXMA MG4150 sits close to this price and includes duplex print, wireless connection and several remote printing utilities.

Although Canon’s more expensive all-in-ones are starting to dispense with full, high-gloss black cases, this isn’t true of the PIXMA MG4150, which is as shiny and fingerprint-prone as its predecessors. Fairly boxy looking, but with large radius curves to its vertical corners, it includes what Canon calls a Fast Front design for its paper trays. This equates to a fold-down paper feed tray and a secondary, internal one, which forms the output tray. There’s an extra support which swivels out from the front edge of the feed tray, to support the end of printed pages. Overall, the arrangement almost doubles the depth of the printer’s footprint, so you’re likely to want to close it back up again when you’re not printing.
Canon PIXMA MG4150 - Controls
The control panel includes a 16mm LCD display, coupled with three soft buttons to select main functions. It has one of Canon’s intuitive click-wheels for menu selection and assorted secondary buttons for easy and versatile control. At the front to the left of the trays, we have twin sockets for SD and MemoryStick cards, while below that resides a large, blue-ringed power button.

Canon PIXMA MG4150 - Open
The printer can be connected via USB or Wi-Fi, though wireless is more versatile and is easy to set up. It also supports AirPrint and remote printing via Canon’s nifty Cloud Link utility. This makes it pretty easy to print from most smartphones and tablets.

The whole front panel folds down for access to the twin cartridge holders, one with black ink and the other tri-colour.

Canon rates the PIXMA MG4150 at 9.9ppm for black and 5.7ppm for colour. In our tests we saw a maximum speed of 8.1ppm, for the 20-page text test and slightly less, around 7.9ppm, for the five page documents. So good speeds when printing black text, but unfortunately the same can’t be said for colour pages.

We can understand why printers have to pause when printing duplex pages; if they didn’t, the ink on the first side(s) would smudge while printing the second side(s). The Canon PIXMA MG4150 does this, but it also does it while printing single-sided colour pages.
Canon PIXMA MG4150
We measured pauses of around 14s during four of the five pages in our text and colour graphics test, which increased the time taken to 2:48 and cut the overall speed to 1.8ppm. This is very slow though hardly a surprise, since the https://www.trustedreviews.com/canon-pixma-mx435_Printer_review Canon PIXMA MX435 (which uses the same cartridges and ink) took an identical time during testing.

What is odd is that machines using the earlier 510-513 cartridges – a black and tri-colour arrangement, as here – aren’t held back by these pauses. It’s hard to see why Canon would change ink formulations to one which takes so much longer to dry that it cuts the print speed to this level.

A colour copy only took 31s and photos printed in 1:08 to 1:39, in standard and high quality modes, respectively. Print quality on plain paper is very clean, almost laser-sharp on single-sided pages. On duplex pages, where dye-based colour inks are used together to build up the text, the result is less sharp and less black, more a dark grey.

Colour graphics are generally smooth, though blues and greens default a little dark. Copies are more faded and fuzzy, as the scanner isn’t that good, despite its comparatively high resolution. Photo prints are, as usual, very detailed and with a natural colour palette. Canon still maintains its position at the forefront of consumer photo reproduction.
Canon PIXMA MG4150 - Cartridges
You only need to buy two cartridges for this machine, but you can go for standard or high yield, with the high yield being much more economical. At the best prices we could find, we calculate an ISO black page cost of 3.8p and an ISO colour cost of 7.4p. These are both reasonable running costs, from an £87 machine.

Verdict
While the PIXMA MG4150 has many of the features that make other machines in the range very good home all-in-ones, there are some drawbacks, not least its slow colour and duplex print speeds. Colour copies are also not as good as from some rival machines. Still a fair printer, but there’s more competition for this one.

Canon PIXMA MG4150 - Feature Table

Canon PIXMA MG4150 - Speeds and Costs

Trusted Score

rating-star rating-star rating-star rating-star rating-star

Score in detail

  • Print Speed 6
  • Features 8
  • Value 7
  • Print Quality 7

Features

Networking Yes
Card slot SD, MemoryStick
Connection Type USB
Extra Features 60mm LCD display, duplex, remote print

Physical Specifications

Height (Millimeter) 152mm
Width (Millimeter) 449mm
Depth (Millimeter) 304mm
Weight (Gram) 5700g

Printing

Type Inkjet
Duplex Yes
Paper Size A4
Colour Yes
Number of Catridges 4
Sheet Capacity 100 sheet tray
Print Resolution (Dots per inch) 4800 x 2400dpi
Rated Black Speed (Images per minute) 9.9ipm
Rated Colour Speed (Images per minute) 5.7ipm
Max Paper Weight 300g/sm
Print Without PC Yes

Functions

Scanner Yes
Copier Yes

Scanning

Scan Resolution (Dots per inch) 1200 x 2400dpi

Why trust our journalism?

Founded in 2003, Trusted Reviews exists to give our readers thorough, unbiased and independent advice on what to buy.

Today, we have millions of users a month from around the world, and assess more than 1,000 products a year.

author icon

Editorial independence

Editorial independence means being able to give an unbiased verdict about a product or company, with the avoidance of conflicts of interest. To ensure this is possible, every member of the editorial staff follows a clear code of conduct.

author icon

Professional conduct

We also expect our journalists to follow clear ethical standards in their work. Our staff members must strive for honesty and accuracy in everything they do. We follow the IPSO Editors’ code of practice to underpin these standards.

Trusted Reviews Logo

Sign up to our newsletter

Get the best of Trusted Reviews delivered right to your inbox.

This is a test error message with some extra words