Typical price: £100
What is it: A dye-sub photo printer
What we think: A good passport and ID photo printer, but its per-print cost and lack of features make it a weak choice for the home photo enthusiast
Polaroid PP46d photo printer Review
Reviewed on: 19 April 2005
Though it has many of the accoutrements of a home photo printer, the compact Polaroid PP46d really wants to be sitting on the desk of your corporate facilities manager, printing identification photos. It does so competently, but its prints are expensive, regardless of whether you're watching a family budget or a departmental bottom line.
The 300dpi printer uses a four-pass (CMY plus overcoat), dye-diffusion thermal-transfer system, generating high-quality, borderless 100x150mm (4x6-inch) photos in about 90 seconds. You'll need to supply the cable, but you can connect the printer to a Windows machine via its USB 1.1 interface, or you can print directly from CompactFlash Type I, SmartMedia, Memory Stick, Memory Stick Pro, or Secure Digital/MMC cards. Memory Stick Duo, xD, and Mini SD are supported, but they require an optional adaptor.
The LCD preview/status screen on the printer is tiny, and scrolling through a large set of images on a memory card calls for saintly patience. However, the Polaroid PP46d supports DPOF (Digital Print Order Format), so you can create lists on your camera before putting the media card into the printer and printing from that list. You can also tag images as you scroll through them for batch printing.
In addition to single-print and batch-printing modes, you can print a 25-image index sheet or one of numerous multi-image, ID/passport-print formats. The PP46d allows you to alter the brightness and sharpness of your image before you print, but any serious image adjustment will need to be made before you send the pic to the printer.
The Polaroid thermal photo paper and ribbon pack costs about £17 and will give you 36 prints, working out to a relatively expensive cost of about 47p per print. Interestingly, the photos seem optimised for viewing under office lights; in daylight, flesh tones are too cool, but they look okay under incandescent and best under fluorescent lights. So even if your ID photo makes you look like Medusa, in an office's synthetic glow, your PP46d-printed badge will show you hale, hearty, and rosy-cheeked.
Edited by Lori Grunin
Additional editing by Nick Hide
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