Brother DCP-110C Manual (User Guide & Setup Guide)

The DCP-110C’s tiny design is ideal for the home user looking for a low-key device for printing, copying, and scanning. Its internal workings differ from those of most other multifunction devices. Unlike most other devices, which have their ink cartridges attached to a moving print head, it has its ink tanks attached to the machine’s real body. A tube system transports ink from the ink tanks to the moving print head. This is referred to as Capillary Tube Technology by Brother. The major purpose for applying it is to reduce the weight of the print head, which in turn minimizes noise and vibration caused by the print head’s side-to-side motion. The vibration from this printer was slightly lower than that of some of the other devices in its price range, but the paper feed mechanisms, rollers, and even the print head were all audible throughout testing, and certainly not as quiet as we had hoped. The front of the printer’s input tray can contain up to 100 sheets of paper, which is then pushed down a curved paper route and pushed out to rest in the output tray, which is placed above the input tray. Both of these trays are contained within the footprint of the machine, with only a small flap extending towards the front of the device to store the output paper. This limits the number of sheets that can be held in the printer’s output area to 25. The DCP-110C has four document printing modes: fast, fast normal, normal, and fine. Fast mode produces light grey text suited for proofreading, while fast normal mode produces darker, somewhat sharp writing that is easy on the eyes. Fine mode is the sharpest and darkest of all levels, as well as the slowest. A full page of text took 1 minute 14 seconds to complete in fine mode, 30 seconds in normal mode, 22 seconds in fast normal mode, and 17 seconds in fast mode during our testing. During photo printing, the Brother displayed fairly good sharpness and color tones for a printer in this price range, despite very tiny color banding in gradation zones. Our test photo-quality printouts took 5 minutes and 20 seconds to complete. We did observe that all of our photo printouts were afflicted by constant roller patterns at the right border of the images, which could be related to a paper output mechanism feature. The DCP-110C includes a rudimentary TWAIN driver for scanning that allows for few custom settings (resolution and brightness/contrast) and lacks the ability to descreen images, which removes patterns that can be visible when scanning in magazine or book photos, for example. However, the absence of functionality makes it relatively simple to operate. Those searching for basic scanning may appreciate its color capabilities, though we found greyscale scans to be blotchy and lacking in depth.

Download Brother DCP-110C Manual (User Guide & Setup Guide)

Brother DCP-110C Manual

Download Brother DCP-110C Manual PDF (Online User’s Guide And Quick Setup Guide)

The following manuals contain all the instruction and tutorials on using your printer, from the beginning to the advanced.

*Match the Brother DCP-110C manual based on the operating system you are using, because each installation on a different OS also has a different manual.

Brother DCP-110C Online User’s Guide

Brother DCP-110C Quick Setup Guide

User Guide is usually used for learning the operations, maintenance, troubleshooting tips, and some useful tutorial on how to use the features of your Brother DCP-110C printer. While Setup Guide is made for the installation of the printer before using it.

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All Brother DCP-110C manuals, which can be downloaded from this website owned and operated by the official printer manufacturer or one of the third parties of Official vendor.

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