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| Brother FAX-575 Personal Fax, Phone and Copier | 
enlarge | Brand: Brother Category: CE
List Price: $69.99 Buy New: $21.99 You Save: $48.00 (69%)
Buy New/Used from $18.69
Avg. Customer Rating:   (84 reviews)
Format: Cd Language: English (Original Language) Color: GRAY Media: Electronics Autographed: No Memorabilia: No Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 9 Dimensions (in): 13.4 x 11.9 x 10.5
MPN: FAX575 Model: FAX575 UPC: 012502612278 EAN: 0012502612278 ASIN: B0007KI6PE
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Features:
| | Convenient, easy-to-operate faxing | | | Black-and-white copying with up to 400 x 400 dpi resolution | | | 9,600 bps fax modem transmits at about 15 seconds per page | | | 512 KB memory stores up to 25 pages | | | 50-sheet paper capacity |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description The Fax-575 Personal Plain Paper Fax, Phone & Copier is an all-in-one communications tool for your personal needs or a small home office. Do all your scanning, faxing and calling from a single place, using a single line. This compact, stylish, plain-paper fax works well in any typical home or home office environment. 10-Page ADF automatic document feeder capacity Telephone handset with fax/phone switch 104 Auto Dial locations Supports Call Waiting, Caller ID and Distinctive Rings Dimensions(WxDxH) - 11.9 x 10.5 x 13.4 Weight - 5.5 lbs. Manufacturer's One Year Limited Warranty
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| Customer Reviews: Read 79 more reviews...
  Brother Fax 575 January 9, 2009 Great value. Performs all functions of more expensive machines at a bargain price. Easy to use, load, and replace film cartridges. Also, film cartridges cost only about $6.00
  Perfect for My Purposes January 5, 2009 If you are planning on using it primarily to send faxes, this machine is an absolute, hands-down best buy. However, due to the limited capacity and high cost of replacing the cartridge, it is not cost-effective to receive faxes or make copies. The owner's manual is a thick a booklet, because the unit has a bewildering array of special features one would expect of a much more expensive device. Some previous reviewers complained of poor quality faxes and copies. That problem can be overcome, however, by setting the "Resolution" adjustment on maximum (i.e., photo-quality) definition.
  THANK YOU January 4, 2009 Thanks a lot that's just what I needed! And it even was here way before the ETA! NO PROBLEMS FABULOUS SERVICE! Thanks
  Brother Answering Machine & Fax Machine in One December 29, 2008 This is a good product, and has also been recommended to me by someone else who had one, he tried other brands of the same product and had constant problems with them. Brother puts out very good products, it is not the first Brother product I have had. You can trust the Brother name on a printer, fax, etc. Laurie Dughi
  "Carbon Paper" results, becaue it uses "carbon paper". December 4, 2008 I purchased this item through a "special deal" very cheap. I've read several of the comments about the machine, but there's one thing that I don't see explained, and I wish I had known about it before I had made my purchase.
This is indeed a "plain paper" fax machine. But it does NOT use "toner" or an "ink cartridge". It uses a "ribbon". What they call the "ribbon" is actually a looooong sheet (spool) of carbon paper (or something like it) on a roll. The number of pages you receive equals the length of "carbon paper" which will be used, no matter if the entire page is filled with print, or only two lines. I've also seen people complain about the quality. Again, I remind you that the machine uses "carbon paper" and you should expect "carbon paper" type results. Personally, I'm not looking for great detail in the faxes I'm receiving anyway, so it's fine. Though I rarely receive faxes, and mostly just send them, it's still going to use-up the roll of "carbon paper" when the machine is unsure if the fax you were sending to received the fax you were sending. . . because it prints-out a notice. Printing-out a notice takes-up one page on your "carbon paper". I have read where some people have said that they rolled the carbon paper back onto the spool, so that they could get more use out of it. Well, the risk with that is that if you're receiving an important fax, and it happens to be at the place on the spool where another fax came through. . . then you're probably not going to be able to read your important fax because the "carbon paper" spools were meant to be used once, and there's not going to be any "ink" left for the machine to print. The reason that this machine is so cheap is not because it's a bad machine. . . but because you're going to have to keep purchasing the rolls of "carbon paper".
I think, in the end, you have to look at the overall cost. Compare the cost of this machine, along with having to purchase the rolls of "carbon paper", and then compare it to a fax machine which uses toner or an ink cartridge and see. . . price wise. . .which is going to work best for you. If you're only sending faxes, and never receive, then you and re-roll the "carbon paper" after it runs out from printing notices, and you should be fine.
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