Brother DCP-7055 Review

Verdict
Pros
- Quick print for class
- Good text print quality
- Thorough software bundle
Cons
- Very poor greyscale copy quality
- Currently, expensive to run
- No wireless or duplex options
Key Specifications
- Review Price: £111.88
- Relatively high resolution print and scan
- Two-part drum and toner cartridge
- Close to 20ppm rated speed
- Easy-to-use control panel
- Compact, clean lines

The printer doesn’t shout, as it’s all clothed in the same light grey plastic, with none of the complications of an Automatic Document Feeder (ADF) to break up its lines. The scanner lid is hinged on lifting pillars, so you can accommodate thick books, as well as single sheets.
The control panel is very simple, with just 11 buttons to control everything. Because there are no fax or memory card functions, print, copy and scan jobs are easy enough to start and stop and the 2-line by 16-character LCD display is enough to show status information and a simple menu system.
Immediately below the scanner section is the top of the laser printer engine, where papers feed out after printing or copying. Although the top section hinges up, this is only really of use for clearing paper jams. There’s a strange little flip-up support towards the back of the output tray, though the main paper stop sticks out from the front.
As well as a 250-sheet paper tray, generous on a machine obviously aimed at the SOHO market, there’s a single-sheet feed for envelopes and other media. At the back, the only socket apart from the mains connector is for a single USB cable; there’s no wireless link on the DCP-7055.
There’s no duplex facility, either, but there is a good software bundle, including Brother’s own MFL-Pro Suite and ControlCenter 4. There’s also a copy of Nuance PaperPort SE, which includes OCR software.
Brother rates the printer at 20ppm and, surprise, surprise; this is not far off what we saw under test. Our 20-page black text document took 1min 7s to complete, which is a speed of 17.9ppm and a very healthy throughput for this class of printer. Shorter documents, where preparation time is a larger proportion of the overall print time, didn’t do quite as well and here the highest speed we saw was 13ppm.
A single page copy completed in 14s and a 15 x 10cm photo on A4 paper took just 10s, both of which are very reasonable.
We do all our print speed tests with the printers in ready mode, not asleep, so there’s a direct comparison, one with another. However, most printers spend over 90 per cent of their time in some form of sleep mode, using less energy.
For a laser printer, which relies on a heated fuser to stick the toner onto the paper, warm-up time can add significantly to overall print time, if print is only occasional. This Brother machine does pretty well, heating its fuser and starting to print within around 20s. Not all its rivals are as quick.
600dpi print quality for general text is clean and dense, everything you could need for day-to-day documentation. Even in toner-save mode, which is obviously lighter and a little jagged in places, text is adequate for most draft documents.
Greyscale graphics are not so good, with noticeable blotchiness in large areas of grey and a lack of definition between some grey shades. This is also true of our photographic test piece and although the detail is reasonable, this same blotched effect shows in areas of sky or other smooth textures. Our test photocopy of text with greyscale graphics is almost unusable, though, with several greyscales coming out black and obscuring the overlaid text. On this showing, we’d recommend only copying text documents.
Brother provides a starter toner cartridge of just 700 pages, but refills last for 1,000 pages and the drum, into which the toner cartridge clips, is good for 12,000 pages. Even so, we found few Internet suppliers for these consumables and the best price we could get gives a cost per page of 5.1p. This is higher than most other laser devices we’ve tested recently. It may drop as the consumables become more widely available, though.
Verdict
The DCP-7055 is a neat, small multifunction printer for the SOHO market. It’s easy-to-use and quick to print and produces good quality black text. If a good proportion of your print requirements are for greyscale copying, though, you will be disappointed with the output. Running costs are also high, though this may change in the medium-term.
Trusted Score
Score in detail
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Print Speed 8
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Features 7
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Value 8
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Print Quality 7