Canon Pixma iP3600
- Manufacturer: Canon (http://www.canon.co.uk)
- Manufacturer: Canon (http://www.canon.co.uk)
- Pros: Price, excellent print quality with both mono prints and colour photos, it's fast too
- Cons: Limited feature set, no LCD or wireless option, black finish looks dirty quickly
- Min specs: Colour inkjet 5-ink with 1 pl Micro-Nozzles & FINE print head printer; Printer Standard Resolution: 9600dpix2400dpi; Direct Printing Port: 1 x PictBridge; USB Ports: 1 x USB 2.0; Easy-PhotoPrint EX; Operating Temperature 5 to 35°C - Humidity 10 to 90%; 41dbA; Two paper trays; 431x296x153mm; 5.4kg
- Price: £64.9 inc VAT
- Star rating:
If Darth Vader was buying a photo printer, the £70 Pixma iP3600 would be near the top of his shortlist. He’d certainly appreciate the acres of black shiny plastic: only the presence of some silver piping and rounded-off edges alleviate its monolithic air.
The minimalist look is echoed by the printer’s functions. You won’t find flash memory card slots, WiFi or LCD displays here. Instead you get a simple PictBridge port, plus power and pause/resume buttons on the front. The standout features are the two input trays – 10 x 15cm and A4 mono or photo paper, plus a second tray to the rear. Lift up the iP3600’s lid and you’ll find the print head with spaces for five separate ink tanks – black, photo black, cyan, magenta and yellow – all of which click easily into place. The iP3600 uses Canon’s ChromaLife 100+ technology, which promises that your prints will last for over 300 years when placed in an album, or 30 years under glass when used with compatible photo paper.
Like previous Pixma printers, the iP3600 turns in a very good performance with mono prints, with suitably black blacks and almost no feathering. Our test sample had a tendency to band one line in every five when examined under a magnifying glass, but that’s not something you’d normally notice, and was most likely peculiar to that machine. Mono output is fast, even at the default setting, taking just 14 seconds to drop into the output tray from when we first clicked Print. It’ll obviously churn output out faster than that in draft mode, but the default option delivers the best mixture of quality and quantity.
With colour prints, performance is excellent. It’s slightly slower than the Pixma iP4600, but the end result is the same – high-quality, colour-accurate photo prints with a complete absence of banding, streaks or other print artefacts. Output using the default setting can look a little washed out, but that’s easily tweaked without taking a considerable hit in printing times. Our best quality print took 4 minutes 2 seconds – 5 minutes faster than the Brother DCP-585CW.
The Pixma iP3600 may be basic, but it gets the basics right. It’s fast and turns out beautiful prints that leave many of its rivals standing.
This product is part of our A4 photo printers group test group product review. Other products in this group are:

It's easy and free to get the latest news headlines, reviews and opinions straight to your email inbox. Sign up NOW to make sure you receive the latest Mac news, reviews and tutorials on your favourite topics.






