
Our test photos showed good colour, plenty of detail in the foreground, though some loss in darker, shadowed areas. Photo reproduction supports Kodak’s claim that it no longer needs two blacks and an overcoat layer to get quality images.
Kodak printer software esp c315 software#
This is a function of the scanner and scanning software as much as the print engine and the quality of scans from the 1200ppi scanner is good throughout. There was some slight haloing of black text over colour, but a colour copy came through very well, with colours closer than normal to the original. Draft mode text remains well-formed and given the increased speed can be freely used to save ink and time.Ĭolour graphics also reproduce well, with good, bold primaries and minimal patchiness in areas of solid colour. It’s certainly well up to general use in a home or home office environment. Black text is sharp and shows very few signs of spatter or print misalignment. The quality of the prints is generally well above average. These are both good speeds for a printer in this class. The five-page black text and colour graphics test returned 3.3ppm, closer to spec than normal text, but still slow in comparison to similarly-priced competitors.Ī single-page colour copy took a reasonable 29s and 15 x 10cm photo prints took 43s at normal quality and 55s at best quality. The only way we could get speeds approaching Kodak’s claims, in fact exceeding them, was in draft mode, where the printer managed 8.6ppm. Under test, even these proved optimistic, as we saw 3.5ppm on our 5-page black text document, increasing to only 3.8ppm on the longer, 20-page one. Kodak claims fairly modest speeds for the ESP C310, identical to those for the ESP C110 at 6ppm for black and 4ppm for colour. That’s all there is to the physical setup of the machine. The two new ink cartridges, with a more traditional arrangement of black and tri-colour inks, clip into the semi-permanent print head, once you’ve clipped that into the head carrier. The printer provides a wizard which handles all the searching and authentication. This is very easy to set up, particularly if your router supports single-button WPS setup. If you go for the ESP C310 rather than the ESP C110, it almost has to be because of its wireless connection. At the back is a single USB socket for cable connection.

These are all clearly laid out and very easy to understand.

The control panel comprises a small LCD display, set at an angle into the top panel, along with six control buttons and a navigation ring. Next to the card slot is a small, blue Wi-Fi indicator. A single memory card slot takes SD and MemoryStick cards and there’s no PictBridge/USB socket. The A4 flatbed scanner has no Automatic Document Feeder (ADF) and its hinges don’t extend, making it awkward to scan from books.

Paper feeds through to the hinged-down front cover, which has a two-stage telescopic support set into its front edge. The rear paper tray support comes folded down on top of the scanner lid and when raised can take up to 100 sheets of plain paper or 20 photo blanks, though not at the same time. The new printer has the same fairly austere, textured, black plastic lines as its cheaper sibling, broken only by Kodak-yellow highlights along the front edge of the scanner lid and around the Start button. It costs around £15 more than the earlier machine, so is it worth it for the wireless?
Kodak printer software esp c315 Pc#
However, it appears to be available only from the DSG group (Currys and PC World). Kodak’s new range of all-in-ones continues to grow, with the ESP C310 being pretty much a wireless version of the ESP C110 we looked at recently.
