Marque | BROTHER |
---|---|
Couleur | White-417 |
Taille de l'écran | 9.3 Centimètres |
Connexions | Ethernet WLAN |
Appareils compatibles | Smartphones, Tablets, Laptops |
Disponibilité des pièces détachées | Information indisponible sur les pièces détachées |
Autres vendeurs sur Amazon
+ 79,52 € Livraison
Image indisponible
couleur :
-
-
-
- Pour voir cette vidéo, téléchargez Flash Player
Brother DCP-L3550CDW Imprimante laser Ethernet LED USB2.0 Ethernet 2400 x 600 DPI A4 WiFi
Marque | BROTHER |
Technologie de connectivité | Wireless, Wi-Fi, USB, Ethernet, Apple airprint |
Couleur | White-417 |
Usages recommandés pour le produit | Kantoor, Home |
Vitesse d'impression maximale (couleur) | 18 ppm |
Vitesse d'impression maximale monochrome | 18 ppm |
Poids de l'article | 23.2 Kilogrammes |
Presse écrite | Paper (plain) |
Capacité de stockage de la mémoire | 512 MB |
Capacité d'alimentation de feuilles max | 250 |
À propos de cet article
- Cliquez-ici pour vous assurer de la compatibilité de ce produit avec votre modèle
- Brother
- DCPL3550CDWZU1
Produits fréquemment achetés ensemble
- +
- +
Les clients ayant acheté cet article ont également acheté
Informations sur le produit
Descriptif technique
Informations complémentaires
Moyenne des commentaires client |
4.5 étoile(s) sur 5 |
---|---|
Numéro du modèle de l'article | 5838142 |
ASIN | B07HN8HJ3V |
Classement des meilleures ventes d'Amazon | #146,286 dans High-tech (Top 100 dans High-tech) #95 dans Imprimantes laser |
Date de mise en ligne sur Amazon.com.be | 15 janvier 2020 |
Garantie et Assistance
Votre avis
Description du produit
Brother DCP-L3550CDW, LED, Colour Print, 2400 x 600 DPI, 250 feuilles, A4, Gris
Commentaires client
Les avis clients, y compris le nombre d'étoiles des produits, permettent aux acheteurs potentiels d'en savoir plus sur un produit et de déterminer s'il répond à leurs besoins.
Pour calculer le nombre d'étoiles et leur répartition en pourcentage, nous n'utilisons pas une moyenne simple. En effet, notre système prend en compte certains critères comme l'ancienneté d'un avis ou encore si l'auteur de cet avis a acheté l'article sur Amazon. De plus, il analyse les avis pour en vérifier la fiabilité.
En savoir plus sur le fonctionnement des avis clients sur AmazonMeilleurs commentaires provenant d’autres pays



In this 3000 series, Brother has produced a ridiculously easy printer to set up and use, which gives crisp and accurate results. The printer is quiet in operation, though there are mechanical clicks in feeding, etc. It is quicker than any consumer inkjet as well as far cheaper to run. It works well with the cheapest paper, even double-sided, and gives superb results with heavier papers and thin card - there's a straight-through feeder if needed, though you'll need plenty of space behind for that.
Some rival models have cheaper-to-use 'official' consumables, a few have cheaper-to-use remanufactured toners.
But if you buy remanufactured high-capacity toner cartridges and then refill these several times, in the way that U-refill Toner Ltd. recommends, it's about as cheap as any colour laser printer gets. There are no cheating lockout chips which prevent using third party consumables or refilling.
Operation is very straightforward: press 'on' and allow a few seconds warmup (the failing of all laser printers, though these are actually LED , not laser), then print from your USB, wired or wireless network; it can (I think) also be set to print wirelessly from a phone. Copying and scanning are as straightforward: a few seconds after switch-on, press the touchscreen for what you want and feed the originals in. No messing about unless you want something awkward, in which case the manual is voluminous and online - I downloaded it as a PDF and have it ready in the computer.
This model is 'basic' in Brother's L5000 touch-screen controlled printer/copier/scanner/fax series; the top model is faster and is the only one with auto-duplex copy/scanning as well as the duplex printing all models have. Worth £100 more? Your call. They share consumables with the MFC-L basic printer-copiers and and HL-L printers, including new drum units at 18,000 cycles, waste toner box similarly and transfer belt and fuser unit at 50,000 cycles. That's better than most rivals, and low-volume users will probably not get to replacing the last two before wanting a more modern replacement - 100 packets is a lot of paper!
The paper draw (the usual half-packet paper load) is at the bottom of the printer. Single sheets can be fed in from a drop-down tray just above the paper draw - all very convenient. The 50-sheet auto-feed scan unit lifts up for flatbed copying, and rises to accommodate books and hold them flat ; below it, the paper is delivered onto the top of the 'works' in the centre section. Paper is fed from front to rear, and unless the 'straight-passage' exit is opened at the rear, paper then exits forwards between the printer and the scanner; there's plenty of space for a pile of copies.
Unpacking and setup is similar to other lasers, beginning with getting rid of plenty of sticky tape, and removing the securing whatchamacallits - Brother has allowed for serious mishandling during shipping across the world. There's a driver CD in the info pack and a fold-out setup sheet, but best to go online for help. The instruction sheet is OK, and the YouTube setup videos meticulous.
The central 'works' of the printer includes the four "drum unit + toner cartridge" sets, the paper transfer belt below them and the fuser at the back. A latch opens up the whole scanner and top of the printer to replace these; they're very easy to get at - drum/toner units just lift out. Essentially, to set up a new printer, each of the four drum unit/toner cartridge assemblies needs to be taken out (just slide the lock tabs and lift), the securing cradles removed and disposed of, then the units dropped back in, one by one. Takes a few minutes. Note that, as with all lasers, don't touch any roller surface or gold electrical contact or you're likely to damage it with finger grease. While they're out, check one for how to pop out the toner cartridge on its own - by sliding the green tab on the right when pulling the handle. This is what you'll replace when toner runs out. Only a 'Toner Value Pack' starter is supplied as new - typical these days.
Finally, a WARNING.
The lifting points of the printer (it's quite heavy, though much less than older models) are at the BOTTOM SIDES and nowhere else. Unlike some other brands, there are no warnings or help at all for where to lift the printer out of its box (except on the printer, so only visible when it's already out!) The correct lift points are difficult to access and not at all obvious, deep in the box. I found 'secure' points halfway down, but they turned out to include the handle to open the printer, and by lifting there, the safety catch is operated, so that only the securing tape then holds most of the weight. If this breaks, the printer falls apart - which can destroy it! In the end, I discovered that the strong bag in which the printer is packed in the box can be used to lift it out safely - though it needs to be pierced to construct handles.

This is an efficiently functional, boxy, but pretty rugged all in one wireless printer/scanner/copier. The plastic it’s made from is matt and for the most part fairly pale in colour, although around the output, flatbed, and controls, there’s a darker contrasting grey.
I connected this directly to my router from the machine itself. Setting up in this way is slightly fiddly as the on screen keyboard is tiny, making selecting the correct characters a bit awkward. Apart from this, the printer has a fairly easy to use combination of touch screen and button interface, although it does feel a little odd to have to use a physical back button rather than an onscreen one. The screen is decent enough for the job it does – but in quality terms not remotely comparable to the touch screen on a smartphone.
The printer is supplied with a software installation disc, but can be downloaded from the manufacturer’s website if you don’t have a drive – indeed, as long as your broadband is decent speed, this is probably easier than faffing about with the usually out-of-date software supplied in hard format with a new printer. I didn’t need to install any new software as my preceding printer was from the same brand, and I’d kept my software up to date – to connect, I just sought out a newly available printer with my iMac, and it connected without issue. The software isn’t always intuitive/as easy as it could be to navigate. Features such as double-sided or reduced quality printing aren’t available from the top-level menu. Draft/resource-saving options could be made more prominent.
You can also print to this from a smartphone/tablet, if you install the Brother app. I have an iPad and an Android phone. The app was easy to install on both, and with this in place the printer could be identified immediately. The space/memory saving interface of the app isn’t my favourite thing ever, but works reasonably well – and even using this you have options to make resource-saving choices such as printing multiple pages to one, and using the duplexing unit to print double-sided. The problems I have discovered with using the app to print are that this does seem to impose constraints on printable file size that aren’t present when working from my desktop, and processing files for printing can be quite slow.
Output speed is a reasonably quick 18ppm (at 5% coverage), though if duplexing function is used this does work rather more slowly.
The copier function works really well, using either the flat bed or sheet feed options with A4 pages, and can also cope with reproducing book pages (though thicker books need to be opened out well to prevent light bleed from turning the centre of a copy black). Adjustments to copying settings can be made fairly easily via the touchscreen menu.


Commenté au Royaume-Uni 🇬🇧 le 7 août 2019
This is an efficiently functional, boxy, but pretty rugged all in one wireless printer/scanner/copier. The plastic it’s made from is matt and for the most part fairly pale in colour, although around the output, flatbed, and controls, there’s a darker contrasting grey.
I connected this directly to my router from the machine itself. Setting up in this way is slightly fiddly as the on screen keyboard is tiny, making selecting the correct characters a bit awkward. Apart from this, the printer has a fairly easy to use combination of touch screen and button interface, although it does feel a little odd to have to use a physical back button rather than an onscreen one. The screen is decent enough for the job it does – but in quality terms not remotely comparable to the touch screen on a smartphone.
The printer is supplied with a software installation disc, but can be downloaded from the manufacturer’s website if you don’t have a drive – indeed, as long as your broadband is decent speed, this is probably easier than faffing about with the usually out-of-date software supplied in hard format with a new printer. I didn’t need to install any new software as my preceding printer was from the same brand, and I’d kept my software up to date – to connect, I just sought out a newly available printer with my iMac, and it connected without issue. The software isn’t always intuitive/as easy as it could be to navigate. Features such as double-sided or reduced quality printing aren’t available from the top-level menu. Draft/resource-saving options could be made more prominent.
You can also print to this from a smartphone/tablet, if you install the Brother app. I have an iPad and an Android phone. The app was easy to install on both, and with this in place the printer could be identified immediately. The space/memory saving interface of the app isn’t my favourite thing ever, but works reasonably well – and even using this you have options to make resource-saving choices such as printing multiple pages to one, and using the duplexing unit to print double-sided. The problems I have discovered with using the app to print are that this does seem to impose constraints on printable file size that aren’t present when working from my desktop, and processing files for printing can be quite slow.
Output speed is a reasonably quick 18ppm (at 5% coverage), though if duplexing function is used this does work rather more slowly.
The copier function works really well, using either the flat bed or sheet feed options with A4 pages, and can also cope with reproducing book pages (though thicker books need to be opened out well to prevent light bleed from turning the centre of a copy black). Adjustments to copying settings can be made fairly easily via the touchscreen menu.




Alors ne faites pas la même erreur que moi.
Le prix du toner pour les 4 cartouches tn247 (les grandes capacités) dépasse le prix d'achat de l'imprimante ! Plus de 400 euros pour du toner.
Je pensais pouvoir mettre du compatible comme j'ai tjs fait, mais non, brother a mis des puces sur ses cartouches de toner afin de vérifier qu'ils vous ont bien plumé. Il y avait une technique pour remettre à zéro le compteur de toner et utiliser des toner compatible mais brother a envoyé une mise a jour sur l'imprimante (connectée à mon réseau wifi) pour bloquer l'utilisation de toner compatible (60euros les 4 cartouches vs plus de 400 euros pour le toner brother).
Passez votre chemin, n'achetez pas cette imprimante et je dirais même n'achetez pas cette marque qui a des pratiques douteuses envers ses clients (pigeons)