
- #KODAK ESP 3250 SCANNER DRIVER WINDOWS 10 DRIVERS#
- #KODAK ESP 3250 SCANNER DRIVER WINDOWS 10 DRIVER#
#KODAK ESP 3250 SCANNER DRIVER WINDOWS 10 DRIVERS#
Step4: Now, download the drivers – you have two options to download the drivers: 1 and 2, see below.Step3: Determine your OS system type: 32bit or 64bit – Click here for more detail.Step2: Secondly, determine your operating system – Click here for more details.Note: Look at the printer front, top and back physically to get the exact model number. Step1: First of all, determine your printer’s exact model number – Click here for more details.While it would fit nicely into a light-duty environment, other models in this price range are faster or better performers on plain paper.Follow the steps below to get ready to download. Though the Wi-Fi in the Kodak ESP 5250 is tempting, other than that this MFP is an unremarkable device that happens to have very inexpensive inks. Offsetting those low ink costs somewhat, however, is the need to buy special paper to get the best results. A page with all four colors costs a mere 9.1 cents. The color cartridge contains cyan, magenta, yellow, and photo-black inks, as well as a clear protective coating. Included in the box are standard-size supplies: a 442-page black cartridge that costs $10 to replace (2.3 cents per page) and a 219-page, unified, five-color cartridge that costs $15 to replace (6.8 cents per page). The ESP 5250’s ink costs are the lowest in the industry. The ESP 5250’s scan and copy results were good overall, too. However, using Kodak’s own photo paper, the same images dazzled–rivaling or surpassing output from the Canon Pixma MP560 and the HP Photosmart Plus, depending on the test. Plain-paper prints were adequate: Text seemed charcoal rather than black, and images appeared slightly grainy. In PCWorld Labs tests, the ESP 5250 was only slightly faster than the ESP 3250, generating 4.7 pages per minute printing text, and 2.7 ppm printing graphics. The documentation accompanying the ESP 5250 is top-notch, and setting up the Wi-Fi connection is quite easy: The unit presents you with a list of available networks, and you just select one and enter the password. Setting the scan area got tricky when the borders were close to the unit’s maximum 11.5-by-8.5-inch area, requiring more zooming and scrolling. The scanner lid hinges are not double-jointed, so thicker media is harder to scan. The prop arm for the scanner unit seemed wiggly at the joint.
#KODAK ESP 3250 SCANNER DRIVER WINDOWS 10 DRIVER#
The driver and the LCD walk you through manual duplexing on the PC but for the Mac, you’ll find just a klunky workaround documented on Kodak’s support site. A single media slot takes MultiMediaCard, Memory Stick, and SD Card. Its single, 100-sheet front input tray also catches up to 50 sheets of output, right on top of unused sheets–a common, but clumsy, design among low-cost models. Other than that, the ESP 5250 is a sparsely featured machine. And in the back of the machine is a roller insert that helps you clear paper jams (though we experienced none). It’s best for light-duty school or home use.Īside from the Wi-Fi, one highlight from the ESP 5250’s feature set is the 2.4-inch, tiltable color LCD, whose menus are as intuitive as the navigation buttons that work with it. Otherwise, it’s essentially the same average-quality, slightly slothful machine as its $20-cheaper cousin, the Kodak ESP 3250 All-in-One. The Kodak ESP 5250 All-in-One color inkjet multifunction printer costs only $150 (as of February 5, 2010) and includes Wi-Fi connectivity–a nice feature to have at this price point.
