BROTHER HL-5370DWT LASER PRINTER WITH WIRELESS NETWORKING, DUPLEX AND DUAL PAPER TRAYS

  • Prints up to 32ppm monochrome output
  • 550-sheet customary paper capacity, expandable
  • Built-in Wireless (802.11b/g) as well as Ethernet network interfaces
  • Automatic duplex copy for two-sided documents
  • Up to 1200 x 1200 dpi resolution

Product Description
The HL-5370DWT is the monochrome laser printer for offices or tiny workgroups. It offers the quick imitation speed of up to 32ppm as well as produces crisp, high-quality outlay during up to 1200 x 1200 dpi resolution. The HL-5370DWT facilities built-in wireless as well as Ethernet network interfaces for pity upon your network as well as involuntary duplex copy for two-sided documents. It additionally offers stretchable paper doing around the dual 250-sheet genius paper trays as well as 50-sheet genius multi-purpose tray for copy law paper sizes as well as letterhead. An discretionary tray boosts sum submit genius to 800 sheets. For reduce using costs, the high-yield 8,000-page toner cartridge is available…. More >>

Brother HL-5370DWT Laser Printer with Wireless Networking, Duplex as well as Dual Paper Trays

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2 Responses to “BROTHER HL-5370DWT LASER PRINTER WITH WIRELESS NETWORKING, DUPLEX AND DUAL PAPER TRAYS”

  1. T. Dawson says:

    This printer is a bargain for the price. Print speed is OK, a little slow to warm up. Print quality is excellent. The duplex feature and ability to hold a full reem of paper is nice. Set up for a network printer was difficult. Tried the wireless set up and it was impossible. To be fair, it may be that our wireless SSID is not broadcast as a security measure. Gave up trying to network the printer through a wireless connection and went to a wired connection. It took some doing but I finally got it to show up on the network. Network connection instructions were poor at best. This is a noisy printer.

  2. John Carder says:

    I’ve been using HP stuff since the first scientific calculator, the HP-32, that came out in 1973. It used to be rock solid, designed by engineers to be used by engineers. Sadly, it’s now cheap junk. The scanners in HP’s all-in-one’s seemed designed to fail in the thirteenth month after purchase.

    Some of HP’s recent printers do not even implement their own Printer Control Language properly (HP PCL).

    This Brother printer works. It implements PCL5 correctly, as well as its emulation of PostScript. I’ve networked computers for fifteen years, so setup went very easily. The hardest part was hauling the CD-ROM to the various computers on the network, since Windows did not have the driver built in. A no-brainer.

    The supplies work out to 1.4 cents a page (toner and drum). Hard to beat that.