🚀 Elevate your office game with speed, smart scanning, and wireless wizardry!
The Canon Color imageCLASS MF634Cdw is a robust all-in-one laser printer delivering sharp 1200x1200 dpi color prints at 19 ppm, featuring one-pass duplex scanning, wireless connectivity with Alexa voice control, and a 3-year U.S.-based warranty for reliable, professional-grade performance.
Duplex | Automatic |
Resolution | 1200 x 1200 |
Additional Printer Functions | Fax |
Warranty Type | limited warranty |
Control Method | Voice |
Controller Type | Vera, Amazon Alexa |
Print media | Glossy photo paper |
Scanner Type | Sheetfed |
Maximum Copy Speed Black and White | 19 ppm |
Display Type | LCD |
Compatible Devices | Smartphones, PC |
Printer Type | Laser |
Additional Features | temperature_proof |
Printer Output Type | Color |
Item Weight | 48.4 Pounds |
Item Dimensions D x W x H | 15.7"D x 17.8"W x 18.1"H |
Paper Size | 8.5 x 14 Inches |
Maximum Sheet Capacity | 250 |
Media Size Maximum | 8.5 x 14 inch |
B&W Pages per Minute | 10 ppm |
Initial Page Print Time | 12 seconds |
Color Pages per Minute | 19.00 |
Wattage | 500 watts |
Hardware Connectivity | USB |
Connectivity Technology | Wi-Fi |
Color | white |
3**D
Is This A Printer Revolution Or Just Another Rage Inducing Machine?
Update 2 5/1/2018: If your computer and devices cannot find the printer after you've installed it, it's probably your router reassigning a new IP address for you printer. Go into your router settings and assign a static IP address for the printer, then reinstall the printer. Your devices won't lose connection to it again.Many people have asked if my review is for the MF634. Yes it is and it was $244. The price is still about the same. If you see a higher price of $300+, then it's because amazon ran out of stock and it automatically switched the price to the next supplier that's selling. Their price is higher. Just wait until amazon restock and you'll get it for under $250.Update: If you have a problem with features like scan to USB memory stick, then it's not broken. You have to unlock it in the settings. It makes sense because it is a very common feature in offices these days to prevent people from scanning and saving the docs to memory sticks. My office does the same thing. You can only scan and send it to your computer so everything stays secured and only employees of that office can use it. I can see that for home users, this is not needed.Intro:Mankind's worst enemies have always been the printers. It works most of the time when all you want to do is print something you can easily read on the screen but rather have it on paper because you're an old stuck-in-your-way disgruntled office worker. That or you just like to smell the death of bleached dead trees. That is your only redemption when it comes to vengeance towards printers and unfortunately only the trees paid for it. When you need to get that TPS report printed out, or when you need print out your Power Point presentation notes for your speech, it will give you endless network errors, jams, and won't recognize any paper you put in because it can. That is why I Rage Against The Machine incorrectly. But sometimes I do feel like printers are the government. New printers always made extravagant promises that made you think it will solve all your problems and then failed to deliver in practice. The features are often gimmicky or just don't work like it should. After countless updates and reworked drivers, it still failed to deliver your paper properly in full much like how I am expecting my Social Security checks when I retire in 30 years. Can this be the new machine that can trump them all or will it be cancer all over with driver updates that feels like remissions?I paid $244. i wanted an AIO with duplex print and scan. I needed it to have a small foot print and an easy to use large LCD screen. I don't want an HP or Epson in this category due to my previous problems with them. Brother is out of the question that this range as it is just not as good. However, Brother is a great value for sub $150 laserjet printers and very reliable/cheap to operate.Quick FYI. For those looking at this printer, you're probably looking at the M277dw as well. Both are very similar in price and specs. However, 2 major differences stood out.1. The HP does not have duplex scanning2. The HP has a 3in screen, which is ok at best3. The HP cost $100+ moreOk that's 3. And to be frank, even if the HP was the same price, I still wouldn't pick the HP. In my opinion, there are literally no available product that is competitive to this Canon AIO under $350. Its closest competitor is actually the bigger version of this, the MF731cdw, that can be found priced between $360-500.Why do I pick the Canon printer? That's simply because of duplex printing AND scanning. If you ever had to scan double sided prints manually with a single side scanner, it takes about 3-5x the time and 2x the error/jam rate. In addition to that, it is usually considered a feature worth $50-100. That is what I typically see in pricing for the past 10 years. As far as printing quality, Canon and HP shares many of their tech through licensing. That is why you typically see them both having about the same print quality. So why pick the more expensive printer with less features and cost more just to do about the same? This is not about brand, this is about getting your money's worth. Now if you're looking for a heavy duty office printer with plenty of available service contracts options and warranty peace of mind, pick HP despite the cost difference. But this printer is for a home office or very small office and I doubt it would be worth it as by the time it needs service, there is a new version that cost just as much as the labor for service you needed.Install:Easy to install. You no longer need to plug it into a computer to set it up initially. Just plug it in, fire it up, and go through a few simple steps on the screen of the printer. The toners are already installed. It will print a sheet of rainbow colors and ask you to scan it so it can calibrate. Then you go through networking. Wifi works fine and hasn't dropped the connection yet. Although initially, it had problems being recognized by the Canon App. It fixed itself after about 30 minutes and now it works fine.As far as computers go, I didn't have to install anything. Windows 10 recognized it immediately without installing drivers provided by the DVD that was included. My iMac and macbook also picked it up via Airprint without any problems. Again, no software install by you needed. This is about as close to plug and play as you can get for a wireless printer.I had the printer update its firmware with a few taps on the screen. Again, you don't need to go through the complicated process like every printer I've ever had (and I have plenty) of connecting it to your computer, then download the software and do funky stuff. Sure it's not that complicated but it's annoying, takes way too much time, and add another app onto your computer that you barely use. You used to have to use a different app to update the firmware and another to update the driver. Now, you can say good bye to all that and I'm glad Canon went this route.The app also allow you to scan a QR code on the screen for it to find the printer on your network. Pretty neat feature to make install easier. The QR code apparently contains the wifi information like IP address and stuff. Helps if you have multiple printers on the network.Prints:Color pictures actually looks pretty good. I still wouldn't use it for framing photos. However, it is significantly better phtoto quality than my old Epson WF7610. Of course, it is nowhere near as good as my Pixma Pro 100. Here are some pros and cons1. The colors are actually very vivid like Canon claimed. This is a first for AIO printers that I've experienced as they are usually dull even with calibration.2. Unfortunately, although it is vivid, the colors are not accurate.3. Regardless of what photo and format you send to the printer, they all end up looking like compressed JPEG pics.4. Comparing it to my Pixma Pro 100 side by side, there are very noticeable differences on how the printer blends the colors, color accuracy, and the amount of color gradients. Even for black and white photos, it isn't photo quality.5. But it is still the best AIO laserjet printer by far that you can buy for under $300.Please note that if all you do is print overly processed and compressed JPEG pics from your phone camera, then I doubt there are much differences between this and a real pro printer mainly because of the quality of the photo. The pro printers will still print better but the margins are much lower.Black and white prints are good and the blacks are deep. Much deeper blacks than the Brother laserjet and the Epson as well. I guess the downside to that it may use more of your toner. However, the deeper blacks makes prints much easier to read.Print speed is what I expected from an office printer. I didn't exactly time it but it seems to be spitting out my prints about 10 seconds after I hit print. Just enough time for me to walk over and pick it up. 19 page per minute is pretty typical office printer speed. If you've never had a problem with it before, it isn't going to be a problem now. Canon's main advantage is the 12 sec or less first page output. The Brother printer took much longer and so did the Epson.Both the Epson and Brother printers are noisier. I'm not sure if this is due to age. However, the Epson shakes a bit when it prints and it's just annoying. The Canon makes plenty of noise but it is a steadier more soothing noise. Overall, the Brother printer makes the same noise, just slightly louder.Electric draw. Many people don't realize how much energy a laserjet takes to print. The Brother printer would start up and you can see the lights on the same circuit goes dim for a split second. The Canon didn't exhibit that problem. I don't know why or care to find out. However, I would imagine they require about the same energy to heat up the ink. If I was to engineer around this problem, I would have a capacitor to store energy for that short burst of high energy draw. That way you won't have a surge of energy draw from your circuit. The Brother laserjet was a cheap $120 printer so I'm guessing no point in building in that extra capacitor.Features:It has everything you need except NFC. You can print from your phone, computer, or tablet if you want. It supports Google print, airprint, windows print, etc... with minimum setup. I tried it all, it worked. I printed a photo straight from my Photo App on the iPhone.You can plug a USB stick in and print stuff from there. The large LCD screen makes it easy.I wish it had an SD card reader but it seems the newer printers don't include it anymore.This Canon's output tray, if you can even call it that, is bad. You can tell just by looking at the picture. Although not a big deal, it's annoying when you go to grab your prints and sometimes need several attempts.Value:Ok, let's get this one straight. Just a few years ago, getting a decent high quality laserjet for $250 is a phenomenal deal. But if you want duplex printing and double sided scanning that works well, you're paying $400+. Today, we can have it all for about $250. That's crazy considering when laserjet used to be $500+ not that long ago. Maybe I'm getting old and my memories of having to go to the library to print still lingers. That harsh noise of the printer sounding like it was stabbing itself as it prints in resolutions so low, you can literally see the pixels. It's 2017, and it's the year printers stopped giving us nightmare. All you need is about $250.Back to my original question. Is this the much needed printer revolution or another rage inducing machine? It is neither. There really isn't anything new here. However, it does work well. This printer is just keeping promises printers made 10 years ago. While that is kind of a revolution in itself over the usual disappointment, there are no real defining feature that I can call a revolution. Unless working properly is a feature. But I digress, it is a great printer at a great price and I voted for it with $244 dollars or approximately 5,546,974.00 Vietnamese Dongs as of the current exchange rate.It's rare I would ever recommend any printer except a cheap Brother laserjet simply because it's cheap, reliable, and doesn't try to wow you with stupid feature that ends up only in disappointment which later morphs into a mix of rage, fear, uncertainty, and doubt. However, if you are looking for a small foot print office grade reliable fully featured AIO printer that works, perhaps throwing down the extra ~$100+ over that cheap Brother Laserjet is a good idea. Here are a few scenarios when you know you can afford this Canon over a cheap $120 Brother laserjet:1. When you've graduated past ramen noodles for dinner and can afford a smartphone with more than 16GB of storage.2. When you've "elaborated" your resume to brilliant status and landed a job that elevated from poverty to middle class level where tipping over 15% at a restaurant doesn't make you feel like the waiter is rich compared to you.3. When you go to a baseball/basketball game still sitting on the upper deck, but you actually have a beer and nachos in your hands instead of pretending you're so into the game that those things don't matter.4. When you play with your dog because you want to play with your dog, not because you're too broke to do anything but play with your dog.5. When you no longer call customer service over a bill regularly because you "forgot" to pay just this one time so please don't charge late fees.6. When the phrase "gas money" never comes out of your mouth anymore.7. When turn down RSVP for birthdays but still sent a presentI ended with 7 because 7 is a lucky number. According to Chinese proverbs, 7x7 = 49. Half Life 3 is confirmed to launch on the 49th of this month. If you are rich, then I don't know why you are buying this printer. There are bigger better ones for rich prices. If I was rich, I would have a stand alone printer in my basement not connected to my network so it is unhackable. Then I would hire a butler and send him to the printer with a usb stick and print directly from it. I would only use parchment paper. My printer could only be fed parchment paper manually one at a time. The butler has to tie my prints with a red string forming a perfect bow tie served on a tray lined with the grainiest ostrich leather in taupe.FYI, it's really easy to unbox if you read the instructions on the box. It's really heavy so it's the best way. Trust me, I took it out the hard way by lifting it. There are only a few pieces of tape holding the double box. Once you cut it, it just kind of unfold and you have the printer sitting right there. No need to struggle. Canon thought of everything but I he-man it and now my back hurts.
C**T
Great Printer - Poor Touch Screen (its a printer tho so who cares)
Works amazing for a small business that occasionally needs to do color printing. Works great with my iPhone, iPad, and WiFi devices and it’s like 4 years old now. Prints really fast if youre doing multiple copies of something. The touch screen does feel very dated/clunky/slow but luckily you rarely need to use the touch screen.
A**R
Cannot prevent streaking and fading
I have a brother b&w laser printer and decided to get a color laser. The canon was reasonably priced for me and seemed to do everything that I want it to do. I have had it for a year now. The printer always had minor streaks and fades, but then it began to get worse until it is like you see in the picture above. I have tried troubleshooting and done everything that is suggested by the canon website including cleaning the assembly, cleaning the paper feeder, having it go through condensation settings, trying different settings through the control panel to clear up smudging, ink spots, fading, etc. No matter what I do, the streaking and fading is so terrible that it cannot be used for anything. It's that bad. So this makes this a complete waste of time for me and I"m out however much I paid for it originally (I don't even remember). In addition, the scanner never worked for me from day one. It definitely is communicating with my computer to sending some kind of data after scanning, but then it says I don't have the right scanner software and then exits out. This is after I loaded the latest combined driver which has the scanner software included in it, so exactly what scanner software is it that I don't have if it's not offered by the company itself in their latest software download? Frustrating! I even decided to load several optional scanner drivers, but no luck and a supreme waste of my time. So I'm out a scanner as well. Finally, little things that are aggravating as well. For instance, I was locked out of the device so I couldn't even set it up originally without having to call canon so that they could tell me the preset code to get into the scanner. I don't remember having to call brother when setting up their printer. Oh, and there is no interface software on the pc that allows you to do anything. That's right, nothing. If you use the utility program that creates a shortcut that comes with the downloaded software driver, it just sends you to the website to download the latest driver. What? Everything has to be done on the device itself. With brother printers, or HP, there are programs that allow you to interface with your computer to the device and change settings, troubleshoot, preview a scan, monitor, etc. Not a thing like that for canon. I really regret buying this. I will call canon sometime or other because I'm so busy right now, even writing this review is time out of my day that is inconvenient, but I was so angry that I had to write this to warn anyone else who may buy this piece o' S. I may just buy another color laser from brother or HP because I really don't have time to continually troubleshoot this piece O' S.
Trustpilot
5 days ago
2 months ago