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๐ผ๏ธ Print Like a Pro, Save Like a Boss!
The Epson EcoTank Photo ET-8500 is a wireless all-in-one inkjet printer designed for professionals and creatives who demand vibrant, lab-quality photo prints and versatile media support. Featuring a cartridge-free 6-color Claria ET Premium ink system, it offers ultra-low cost per page and up to 2 years of ink supply per refill. Its intuitive 4.3-inch color touchscreen, dual front trays plus rear feeder, and multiple connectivity options (Wi-Fi, Ethernet, USB) make printing seamless and flexible. With auto-duplex printing, high-resolution scanning, and support for thick media including CDs/DVDs, the ET-8500 blends professional-grade output with smart, cost-effective convenience.














| ASIN | B08R57JK88 |
| Additional Printer Functions | Copy |
| B&W Pages per Minute | 16 |
| Best Sellers Rank | #13,862 in Office Products ( See Top 100 in Office Products ) #27 in Ink Tank Printers |
| Brand | Epson |
| Built-In Media | EcoTank Photo ET-8500 all-in-one, Quick Setup Guide, Power Cable, CD-ROM (User Guide, software), 1 bottle of 552 Photo Black (70 mL), 1 bottle of 552 Black (70 mL) and 1 bottle each of 552 Cyan, Magenta, Yellow, Gray (70 mL) (4) |
| Color | White |
| Color Depth | 24 bpp |
| Color Pages per Minute | 12 ppm |
| Compatible Devices | Laptops, PC, Smartphones |
| Connectivity Technology | Ethernet, USB, Wi-Fi |
| Control Method | Voice |
| Controller Type | iOS |
| Customer Reviews | 4.2 out of 5 stars 1,209 Reviews |
| Dual-sided printing | Yes |
| Duplex | auto |
| Hardware Interface | Ethernet |
| Ink Color | White |
| Item Dimensions D x W x H | 24.1"D x 15.9"W x 13.7"H |
| Item Type Name | Inkjet Printer |
| Item Weight | 24.46 Pounds |
| Manufacturer | Epson |
| Maximum Copy Resolution Black and White | 600 dpi |
| Maximum Copy Resolution Color | 4800 x 1200 dpi |
| Maximum Copy Speed Black and White | 16 ppm |
| Maximum Media Size | 13 x 19 inch |
| Maximum Print Resolution Black and White | 5760 x 1440 dpi |
| Maximum Sheet Capacity | 10 |
| Maximum print Resolution Color | 4800 x 1200 dpi |
| Model Name | EcoTank ET-8500 |
| Model Number | ET-8500 |
| Model Series | Epson EcoTank |
| Number of Trays | 1 |
| Other Special Features of the Product | Borderless Printing, Double Sided Scanning, Wireless, Touch Screen, Display Screen, Auto-Duplex |
| Output sheet capacity | 10 |
| Paper Size | Legal, Letter, A4, Executive, 8" x 10", 5" x 7", 4" x 6", 3.5" x 5", A6, Half Letter, #10 Envelope, User Defined (2.2" x 3.4" to 8.5" x 78.7") |
| Power Consumption | 207 Watts |
| Print media | Paper (plain) |
| Printer Connectivity Type | Ethernet, USB, Wi-Fi |
| Printer Output Type | Color, Monochrome |
| Printer Type | Inkjet |
| Printing Technology | Inkjet |
| Resolution | 4800 x 1200 |
| Scanner Type | Photo |
| Special Feature | Borderless Printing , Double Sided Scanning, Wireless, Touch Screen, Display Screen, Auto-Duplex |
| Specific Uses For Product | Office, Photo |
| Total Usb Ports | 2 |
| UPC | 010343952485 |
| Unit Count | 1.0 Count |
| Warranty Description | 1-year limited warranty |
| Warranty Type | limited warranty |
| Wattage | 207 watts |
C**C
Brilliant photo prints on Epson media
For convenience, I am writing and updating this review as I work with the Epson ET-8500. At this point, I have unpacked the device, completed the setup process, installed driver on my Windows 11 PC, printed test pages, and, most recently. installed driver on my Windows 11 laptop. The remainder of the review summarizes all additional experience with the printer. My inkjet printer experience is substantial. After a lifetime of various HP inkjets, the ink/printhead hassle finally led me to the Epson WP-4090 in 2014. That printer served well and reliably but in the past couple years its print quality has become more spotty. It's consumed nearly six complete sets of ink cartridges and I was looking at needing another set sometime this year. Finally, the increasing cost of cartridges vs. decreasing quality has led me to retire the old gal. Unpacking the ET-8500: Removing all the external blue tape was easy. The quick start guide is vague on removing the internal tape. I opened the scanner to reveal the interior where much additional blue tape is located. However, I could not re-close the scanner because I was at this stage unwilling to force it -- everything in there is plastic. I finally located a Reddit string of someone with the same dilemma. The answer is basically to apply more force to the right side. This worked. There was still blue tape visible on the output tray, but not accessible with the output tray retracted. Based on a web query, I manually pulled out the output tray (normally a NO NO based on all other documentation). I removed the tape but of course couldn't close the output tray. The control panel is useless at this point because it is focused ONLY on filling the ink reservoirs. After more web queries, I manually closed the output tray, as gently as possible. Hopefully, I have not destroyed the output tray automation mechanism. I also noticed that the blue transport lock lever was already in the unlocked position. So this printer came all the way from Indonesia to me with the print mechanism unlocked. I will only find out if there is any damage when I start printing in a few days. Rating so far: Three stars based solely on the infernal complication of what should have been an no-brainer unpacking procedure, aggravated by the poor Epson documentation and dicey web insights. I expect this rating would improve in the next several days as I fill the ink reservoirs, connect up the first PC, and perform initial printing. Completing the setup: Filling the ink tanks. Next morning I'm fresh and ready to proceed with the ink. This turns out to be just as easy as promised. Not a drop was spilled. Finally (I thought) was the moment to load letter paper. A web query explained that you must pull out the large bottom paper tray by yanking on the opened bottom cover. I never would have guessed, but it did the trick. I printed the single "alignment" page which looked great but the control panel defaults to printing a bunch more test patterns, which I was able to skip. By the way, after all that struggle to load paper into the bottom tray, the test page demanded a sheet fed from the rear input. Driver installation onto Windows 11 PC: I should mention that I connect this printer via Ethernet, so no fooling around with Wi-Fi settings. The Epson support page allows all driver and utility components to be downloaded individually, but recommends downloading the single, small, master installer. When this one is run, it asks what components you want, then downloads and installs those. It then automatically finds the printer on the network, configures the PC to access it, and offers to print a test page. Wouldn't you know it, the paper source is still that darned single sheet feeder on the rear. Finally, time to use Word to print my standard printer quality page consisting of various fonts and images. First attempt again demanded the single sheet feeder on the rear. I cancelled that job in the queue and looked much more closely at the print options dialog (need the printer-specific dialog, not the Word dialog to see this). Paper source was Auto, which one would imagine means use the main paper tray if it's full and the rear tray is empty. Evidently not. I had to change the paper source setting to specify the lower paper tray. Then it worked fine. Oh, I see from a web query just now that you must "register" the size of paper loaded into each tray into the control panel. Then, it claims, "Auto" source will work correctly. I will have to try that tomorrow. Rating so far: In view of the successful operation of the printer, in spite of all the shenanigans from the day before that could have broken something, I have raised my rating to Four Stars. Driver installation on Windows 11 laptop. I mention this because the installation procedure (identical to that for the Windows 11 PC, above) ran just fine (downloading multi-megabytes of driver installation files over the laptop's Wi-Fi connection) but hard-failed at detecting the printer. It claimed that the laptop wasn't connected to a network. The only option was to cancel the install and start over. My theory is that the author of this code assumed that if the printer were Ethernet-connected, then the computer trying to find it must also be Ethernet-connected. Nonsense, I agree, but I plugged the laptop into an Ethernet port, reran the Epson installer, and it detected the printer just fine, no hesitation. Heady from this success, I installed the Epson Smart Panel app onto my iPad. Needless to say, this app seems to assume everything is on Wi-Fi (and maybe even Bluetooth, which it demands access to - why?). Of course, it couldn't find the Epson printer. However, there was an option to enter the printer's IP address, which worked. It raises the question, what happens if, next time through the DHCP initialization process, the printer is assigned a different IP address? Today, I also "registered" the main lower paper tray as containing letter-sized plain white paper, using the printer's control panel. After that, print jobs with paper source set to "Auto" printed correctly. Woo hoo! In spite of apparent lame networking assumptions coded within the Epson installation package and IOS Smart Panel app, my cumulative star rating remains, for now, at four stars. Remainder of review: the following experiences will be updated from time to time. Connecting printer to Apple Mac Mini Tahoe. The Epson ET-8500 support webpage allows selection of Apple Mac Tahoe but the resulting download is for Intel silicon. However, I found that the Mac's Setup Add Printer function finds the printer on the network and installs required driver software with one click. The is typical Apple user-friendly experience vs. multiple technical steps needed on Windows. Printing of high-quality art prints. I printed out two of mine on 8.5"x11" premium glossy photo paper. Output quality "Standard", while it prints much faster, yields coarse-resolution ink dot patterns on the print. Output quality "High" prints much more slowly, but the image is rendered mostly at resolution. However, under a magnifying lamp, periodic white dots are visible, lined up in the direction of paper travel (not print head travel). These flaws will prevent the prints from being used in presentations. On the web, I learned that these dots are called "Pizza Wheel" marks and are caused by the serrated exit guide wheels pulling the paper through. Some mitigations are suggested, which I will experiment with in the days ahead. Solution to the "Pizza Wheel" marks: Those flawed results described above were obtained using on some old HP Premium Glossy Photo Paper that I had laying around. Understanding that Epson would optimize settings for their own media products, and also that fresh media is usually recommended, I got ahold of some letter-sized Epson Ultra Premium Presentation Paper Matte and some 4"x6" Epson Ultra Premium Photo Paper Glossy (these two styles were the ones available for same-day delivery). The art prints on the presentation paper were flawless, though the brilliance range was of course somewhat reduced from the glossy print. Next, I started printing out some 4"x6"s on the ultra premium glossy stuff and the results were flawless and brilliant. I kept printing a number of my favorite images until I forced myself to stop. Some letter-size of the ultra premium glossy paper is coming soon, and printing on that will be the acid test. But I am happy enough now and confident enough to raise my star rating of this Epson ET-8500 printer to Five Stars. Full-size (8.5"x11") photo printing: Using fresh letter-size Epson Ultra Premium Photo Paper Glossy, I printed two of my art photos with a variety of dark or well-saturated color areas. These came out brilliant and perfect. The Epson ET-8500 is a winner,
L**1
Unmatched Quality for Images and Photos
This is an 'initial impressions' review after setup and a few weeks use. - Best Use Case: If, like us, your printing needs are 80% creative (artwork, photographs, etc.), 20% light document printing and occasional scanning, then this printer will meet your needs. Even though you won't be buying a new cartridge with a thimbleful of ink every 100 pages, I would not recommend this printer for high-volume workplace printing. It's not built for speed and you'll be filling the paper tray too often to be productive. Likewise, unlike a more office-oriented printer, the ET-8500 does not have a feeder for the scanner. - Unboxing / Setup: While it did take about an hour to set up, the process went much easier than I anticipated based on the reviews I read. We have it connected to our home network via Ethernet and I was able to do all necessary configuration via the printer's touch screen. Aligning the print heads is a rather lengthy process, so be prepared to spend some time on this. Our old printer would semi-self align by scanning the alignment samples once they were printed. With the ED-8500, I had to manually select which alignment settings looked best, which slowed the process considerably. - Hardware Quality: Overall, the printer feels well-built and worth the money. That being said, I do agree with other reviewers who state the paper trays feel a little chintzy and possibly easy to damage if you don't handle them with kid gloves. No problems thus far, however, so I'm simply crossing my fingers with the hoping for the best. On the flip side, I love that the output tray fully retracts into the printer when not in use. Touch screen operation is a veritable godsend compared to the wonky, practically useless LCD on our old printer. In fact, with a thumb drive or (full sized) SD card, you can perform many operations straight from the touchscreen. - Software: While it did install applications I'm not likely to use, Epson's software is much less intrusive, in my opinion, than you-know-who's naggy, resource consuming bloatware. I can't speak to the smartphone application as I have no need for it thus far. I'm also pleased to report that the printer will work without Alexia, which I will never have a need for. No problems with the software and we're able to print from any computer on the network without issue. - Scanning: As I stated above, there's no feed for the scanner, so you'll have to manually change pages if you have a multi-page document to scan. Not a problem for us, though, and my wife loves that she can scan a document straight to her thumb drive without having to bother me while I'm working. Overall quality is more than adequate for all but the most demanding scanning jobs. - Ink: With its foolproof design, filling the six ink tanks couldn't be easier, and after six weeks of use, including approximately 200 pages of image laden documents using the highest quality print level (which would have eaten up two 'XL' cartridges in my old printer), the ink levels in the ET-8500 have barely moved. Furthermore, refilling all six tanks cost only a little more than those two 'XL' cartridges would have. Very happy in this regard. - Print Quality: Even on regular paper at regular print quality, the ET-8500 hands-down smokes anything in its price range. Amp up the print quality and print to photographic paper and the results are absolutely jaw-dropping. Seriously, my brother is a professional large-format printer / sign maker, and the print quality from the ET-8500 rivals his $75,000 4' x 8' flatbed. Rich, vibrant colors pop from the page and are sure to impress even the toughest critic. This, in my opinion, more than makes up for the ET-8500 not being the fastest horse in the race. I will update my review should anything go south, but for now I give the ET-8500 a big thumbs up. For the quality you get, it is well worth the price in my opinion.
D**2
Epson EcoTank ET-8500 is Junk
This is quite possibly the worst printer I've ever used, and Epson customer service does not follow through on anything. I use this printer for my business where I print orders on regular paper, cards on cardstock, and photos on premium photo paper, all of which this printer states it can handle, but none of which works consistently. Documents that should print from tray 2 (paper tray) print on photo paper from tray 1. Anything printed from the rear paper feeder (usually 110 lb cardstock) must be fed one sheet at a time and must be pushed through manually or it will make a loud sound and cause a jam. I contacted Epson about the issues just before the warranty expired. They had me do several things to the printer, take a bunch of photos of ink levels, label on the bottom, etc., and they listened to the awful sound coming from the printer, but completely dropped the ball on sending me a replacement. I called back and no one has a record of the phone call, the photos I submitted, or anything. I do not recommend this printer or anything from Epson.
A**M
Excellent print quality, easy-to-use software, very long lasting ink
This review is for an Epson ET-8500 printer/scanner/copier. ET stands for Eco Tank as the printer uses tanks of ink filled by the user from bottles. The tanks last far longer than the ink cartridges we've all been using and the price per page is far less. The 8500 prints 8.5x11 and 8.5x14 as well as smaller sizes like 8x10, 5x7, 4x6 and printable CDs, DVDs and BDs. The scanner has a maximum resolution of 4800 x 1200 dpi. I bought this printer to replace an Epson RX 580 we bought in late 2006 and for which we must have spent several printer's worth of money on ink. Our primary use has been and remains printing photographs. We feel we require a six-ink printer for this task which limited our printer choices. We have never had any brand other than Epson dating back to the dot matrix printers we used with our homemade PC XT so I will be unable to compare the performance of this printer to other brands. We were sorely tempted to buy the ET-8550 vice the 8500 for the occasional need to print 11x14s and larger as it was only an additional $50 but we simply didn't have the table space for it. The price of this printer has come down significantly from when it was first introduced, so if you're thinking you can't afford it, look again. The unpacking and setup on the 8500 were simpler and more trouble-free than other printers I've used in the recent past. The printer can be connected to your computer via a shared wireless or wired network or a primary tier USB link. You can also print from a thumb drive (USB memory stick), your camera's SD chip, wirelessly from a smart phone or tablet. Epson provides the printer with a unique email address and any images sent to that address (from anywhere on the planet) will automatically be printed by your printer. If you have a voice assistant on your home network, you can control your printer with voice commands. All in all, a very capable and well thought out device. We were nervous about filling our ink tanks the first time. The thought of a bottle of printer ink spilling seemed an absolute nightmare. But, as might have been expected, the process was utterly fool-proof (and you're reading a top notch fool here). The tops of the ink bottles and ink tanks are keyed so you cannot put ink in the wrong tank. Ink does not come out of the bottle till it is inverted on the proper tank and flow stops when the tank becomes full. The first filling will also have to fill all the tubing and what not between the tanks and the print nozzles and so will fill the tanks slightly less full than all further bottles. Loading paper is also painless. The printer has two cassettes: one for 8.5 x 11 and one for 5x7 or smaller. The printer can take thicker paper by two routes in the back: the rear paper feeder at the back on top, and the rear paper feed slot, in the rear. Here is my one unpleasantness concerning this printer but fortunately for you and Epson, the unpleasantness was almost entirely my fault. Either route may be used for thicker paper, such a heavyweight photo paper or thick cardstock. The Rear Paper Feeder at the top rear will still take your paper through almost 90 degrees of bend but not the hard 180 that it experiences coming from the cassettes. Paper loaded into the Rear Paper Feed Slot at the printer's rear, will traverse a completely flat path. Theoretically, you could put a sheet of thin glass through there... but please don't. I have used both with 80 lb (thick) photo paper with no problem whatsoever. The unpleasantness I mentioned was caused when I became confused as to which route was which, deciding that the feeder was the slot and the slot was the feeder. This led me to two lengthy calls to Epson tech support where two different techs spent an inordinate amount of time and effort trying to convince me I had made a mistake without insulting a sacred Epson customer by telling me I had made a mistake. When I finally came to my senses, I wrote a long and heartfelt apology to Epson Tech Support for what I had put them through. Very embarrassing. The printers output on plain paper, card stock and three different grades of photo paper has been absolutely perfect. There will always be some difference between your screen and your printer, particularly with the printer straight out of the box and no attempt having been made to match up the two, but the prints have been more than satisfactory to this point. And I have yet to see any of my ink levels - now visible directly through graduated translucent windows on the printer's front - so much as budge. A good portent. I have looked at refill ink bottles and the cost for a full set is slightly more than a set of cartridges for my RX 580 cost but provides several times the quantity of ink. Interestingly, the colors of inks used has changed. My RX 580 used to use Cyan, Light Cyan, Magenta, Light Magenta, Yellow and Black. The ET 8500 uses Cyan, Magenta, Yellow, Photo Grey, Photo Black and Black. That last one is used for text and is not used for photographs. The Photo Grey and Photo Black are not used on text. I only have my eyes, but in my judgement, the prints from the ET 8500 are superior to those from the old RX 580 in accuracy, detail and color. Text documents are crisp and clear. Image quality on plain paper is more than acceptable though I understand there are other brands that do it slightly better. If I had to do it all over, I would again buy the ET 8500. Ease-of-use, economy and beautiful output make it the ideal choice. And I will never again buy a printer that uses cartridges. Never.
A**Y
Original ink lasted me 3 years!
*Update in Dec 2024* Still going strong! Today for the first time in 3 years it finally forced me to refill the ink tanks. 3 YEARS! Still prints beautifully. So grateful for my Epson printer. *Original Review* I bought a Cricut for Christmas and needed a great 3 in 1 printer to print stickers, print docs front and back, print 4x6, 5x7, and 8x10 photos, as well as scan my ultrasound photos. (I did not use this for sublimation, but hear that it can be great for that too.) This thing exceeded my expectations. Iโve been using it almost every day for 5 months and it still is almost filled completely full with ink, which I can see on the front of the machine. Setup instructions were super easy and was a pleasure to get through. Before this printer I had returned 2 other printers that disappointed me. (I ended up tossing my old one years ago because the HP printer dried up so quickly.) This printer feels like it was built to last. The doors and cassettes click into place, feeling very satisfying and never leaving me wonder if I pushed it in all the way. Iโll probably never use ink cartridges again. Eco tank is the way to go. First of all, I had no idea when I bought it that you can scan and print photos using the app on your phone. Itโs made things so much simpler to manage and edit. One thing I wish it had was color sliders to tweak the images a bit before printing. The scan bed is AWESOME. Itโs very basic with a thin plastic lid, but Iโm comparing it to the scan job the scanners at Office Max did. Those were terrible, costly if you have multiple images needing scanned, and always came out blurry with noticeable glares. (The employees also wanted to argue about HIPPA with me with my own ultrasoundsโฆ) This printerโs scan does a phenomenal job. With 300 dpi it is crystal clear with no glare! And I love that it saves directly onto your phone. A USB or SD card is only optional. You can choose to scan in color, grayscale, or black and white. For ultrasounds, definitely use the grayscale. The photo print quality is very good as well. Not sure if itโs as good as WalMart prints when it comes to color, but the quality is pretty similar. Sometimes the photos appear slightly blue, but I think itโs the photo paper Iโm using. The white paper may have a slight blue hue to it. As a photographer, Iโm content with saving me the trip by using this printer instead for my own personal needs. The main con I can think of is that it does print slow if you choose higher quality prints. (May take 3 minutes to print a photo.) If you need speed, this may not be your guy. If you choose Normal quality prints it goes a lot faster, but documents appear very pixely. I had a paper jam once, but it was very quick and easy to open up the printer and pull it out. I have yet to try printing with the cardstock paper feed in the back. Iโve been printing thin cardstock from the top feed and that seems to work out just fine. Another con is sometimes when Iโm printing from the computer I have to turn the printer off and on again because for some reason it doesnโt always get the signal to print. Not sure what is going on there, but it doesnโt happen too often. Overall, I am still elated with my purchase 5 months later. Never had a printer that made me smile weekly before. This was worth every penny.
G**R
Great quality prints and ink longevity/savings over a cartridge printer but at times a bit finicky.
First, the print quality is outstanding and the money I saved on ink vs what I spent on ink cartridges from my old inkjet printer has been substantial. I printed over 8500 photos on my ET 8500 until it diedโฆunfortunately right after I filled all the tanks with ink. I did go through the gray (GY) ink faster than the others but not sure why. After approximately 5000 prints i began to get frequent paper jamb error messages when there wasnโt any paper jamb. I eventually found a clumsy time-consuming work-around but not ideal. On the plus side, I give Epson customer phone support a decent grade, but it depends on who in India you get for help. The other nice thing is that it has a two year warranty, so something to consider if youโre thinking about buying Amazonโs 3-year warranty because youโd basically be buying a one-year warranty. Still if you print as many pics as I do, it might be worth it. So, would I buy it again? Yes, and in fact I plan to do just that.
B**K
Epson ET-8500 versus Canon G620
I am an accomplished amateur photographer, not a professional or a techie. I take photos with an iPhone 12 and a Panasonic SLR. I do not make highly technical adjustments to the images. Both of these printers produce excellent results. I purchased them for two reasons: saving on ink, and printing photographs with accurate colors. I have used Canon Pixma printers for decades, so I first tried the G620. Although I do most of my shopping on Amazon I purchased it at Best Buy for ease of potential return. It cost $330 (rounded up by a penny). THE CANON G620: PROโs: It was easy to fill the six ink tanks. Canon cleverly designed the tops of each one so they can only be inserted into the correct tanks. No problem connecting to my wi-fi. Documents printed quickly and looked fine. The first 4x6 print I did was acceptable but not as good as I had expected. I corrected this quickly per the next bullet. By default my Windows laptop installed its own drivers for the printer. These are not as good as Canonโs. I went to the Canon website and downloaded and installed their drivers for the 6 series. Voila, very good photos, with accurate color and sharp edges! Thanks to other Amazon reviewers for calling this to my attention. Photos printed quickly enough. CONโS: The most significant one, and why I switched to the Epson, is the paper handling. There is only one input tray, at the rear of the printer, which takes all sizes and types: 8x11 plain paper, 4x6, 5x7 and 8x11 photo paper, etc. At first I didnโt think Iโd mind changing the paper, but after a while I did, per next bullet. The display on the top of the printer is small, dim and awkwardly placed. I thought I might not need to use it that much, but every time you change paper you have to. You need to pull the output tray out manually. No big deal if you are at your desk, but if you are in another room and want to print out an item on your phone you have to go the printer. A minor inconvenience but a nettlesome one at times. THE EPSON ET-8500:. PROโs: Equally easy to connect to wi-fi. Even easier to set up. The correct drivers were downloaded automatically. A terrific screen on the right front of the printer. Large, bright, easy to use. Two input trays at the front, one for 4x6 and 5x7 photo paper, the other for 8x11 paper of either type. Another input tray at the back! I use this on the relatively few occasions I print 8x11 photos, and I keep plain paper in the front tray. This is extremely convenient. When you send an item to the printer it wakes up even if itโs turned off. The G620 did not do that. The output tray comes out automatically; no need to pull it. There is a button on the screen for pushing the output tray back in and closing the front. That bright tilt-able front screen has every setting you need and is very intuitive. Everything I printed came out fine and quickly. The photos were equal to Canonโs in quality, plus there is an Epson app for making further adjustments to them. I downloaded it and found it easy to use. CONโs: The cost: $700. Thatโs more than double the Canon G620, which is a significant consideration. Two others that are not significant. The photo tray can be a little tricky to pull out and a tight fit when reinserting (it goes well toward the back). This can be relieved by first pulling out the 8x11 tray underneath it, giving your fingers more room. Not really a con but when the printer is finished the screen shows two items: a little Home icon on the left and a larger โTroubleshootingโ message next to that. Some users might think that means there was a problem, but itโs just in case there was. Touch Home and youโre set, then touch the Close Tray button on the bottom right. BOTTOM LINE: You may be wondering, Why spend that much more? And, why not buy a Canon Ink Tank printer of equivalent cost? Re the first, for the convenience of the paper handling and ease of use of the screen. I keep printers a long time and the cost spreads out over the years, especially not needing to buy cartridges. Re the second, I did research those, but prefer the size of the Epson, which is comparable to the G620. The higher priced Canons that I looked at were bulkier. I hope this helps others. If I omitted anything you think should be included, or if you have questions or a difference of opinion, leave a comment and Iโll respond to it.
G**N
Very happy! ALMOST perfect.
I have a home based small business - I print a lot of user guides, invoices, etc. Long time Epson user, most recently had a Epson Workforce Pro WF-4820 to compare this to. On the plus side, the ET-8500 is smaller, quieter, and even plain paper prints that combine text and photos look better. And of course, the ink tanks are a big advantage. I don't know how many thousands of dollars of ink I bought for that 4820. The marketing says the ET-8500 produces "lab quality color prints" and I do use my printer for photos on occasion. What they say is true. On premium glossy paper, the photo quality is absolutely outstanding! :) A couple of minor negatives - The biggest one is that the tray holds much less paper. Not a huge deal but worth knowing if you're a heavy user. The ET-8500 is a little slower for duplex printing but otherwise speed is good. I had one bit of confusion as I was trying out all the functions - I loaded a sheet of paper in the rear feeder to try it, and pressed "copy". Even though the printer recognized I had put paper in the rear feeder, instead it copied nothing and spat out a piece of paper from the main tray. I assumed the rear feeder didn't work. A call to Epson Support was very well handled though, and I learned a) this is NOT an automatic document feeder - a feature the WF-4820 did have (but that I hardly ever use) - it is only an alternate way of loading a sheet of paper (such as for loading a sheet of photo paper when you have plain paper in the main tray) AND it will not feed paper from the rear tray for copying - only for printing. I'm not upset about this, but the documentation was sorely lacking in pointing this out and there were no error messages. Lastly, the printer looks very nice when all closed up. When you print, it automatically opens and extends the output tray. Nice. But it doesn't put it away again - you have to do that manually from the front panel. Sure would be nice if there were an option to retract it automatically when the printer goes to sleep.
S**H
Doesnโt work
The product doesnโt work at all. Itโs very heart breaking as I waited for it desperately
D**E
In shock - this is a photo printer studio in my home
Wow. A friend recommended the Eco-tank when I mentioned my old HP gave out and I didn't know what to buy to avoid the new subscription dystopia we now fund ourselves in. This model was pricer, but I can't believe the quality of the photos we printed as tests. I don't think I could tell the difference between a professionally printed pic and the one in my review. The pic is a little over-exposed, but the printer also gives you the option to troubleshoot/calibrate after every print. The setup was super easy and ink seems to last. Replacement cost for ink is also very fair. If you're concerned filling the ink will be messy like I was, don't be. They've created an impressive mess-free filling process. Buy this printer! You won't regret it!
M**S
Connectivity Issues
The printer does not stay connected to my wi-fi network, cannot connect/detect my phone consistently. The printer disconnects from the network randomly during pictures being printed resulting in half printed images. The Epson Apps (Epson Smart Panel & Epson Creative Print) can never find the printer so therefore cannot use the Apps. The connectivity of this printer is not worth the hassle. I regret this purchase. The few photos I was able to print were great quality. But this printer only works when it wants to connect to your wifi network & devices, which is rarely.
K**X
Amazing quality prints
This has amazing quality, I just wish it were a bit cheaper. If this ever goes on sale, I would highly recommend it if you need high-quality photo or sticker prints.
G**6
Gorgeous photos; economical ink tanks. Worth the price.
Excellent printer for photos and text. Four paper feed options, The six ink tanks produce superb colours and detail. The ink view windows, though, are difficult to see through, not like the ones shown in the advertisements. There is, of course, a digital estimate in the usual printer popups. Having said that, this thing is rather expensive, but the photo resolution is as good as the expensive pro version photo printers. I spent hours researching all the Epson printers that do photos, and this one had the best reviews, both on the product page and YouTube. (Some of the YouTube videos show the 8550, which is exactly the same as the 8500 but handles wider paper. Same guts and capabilities as the 8500,) Stop looking around and spend the extra money โ you will like this printer and the things it prints.
Trustpilot
1 month ago
1 week ago