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The following 5 products are guaranteed to work in your Sharp MX-4070N printer:
5 products
FREE delivery
FREE delivery
FREE delivery
FREE delivery
FREE delivery
The Sharp MX-4070N uses Sharp MX-61GTB toner cartridges. Sharp MX-61GTB toner comes in black; the black cartridge prints 40,000 pages.
The Sharp MX-4070N is a versatile all-rounder that copies, scans and prints to a very high quality and is fully internet-enabled for cloud sharing and social media. Its impressive functionality is packed neatly into a robust frame that will fit most office environments and complement them with its clean lines. For the modern networked office, the machine’s ability to print from remote devices like a smartphone and to integrate with web-based services is particularly attractive.
With dimensions of 615 x 660 x 838mm and a weight of just 87kg, the Sharp MX-4070N offers some improvements in terms of size and retains all the functionality of its predecessors in this range. The copy speed is an impressive 40ppm, both for colour and monochrome prints, and the excellent print resolution of 1200 x 1200dpi compares favourably with similar products. With a scan speed of 200ipm and the ability to process a batch of 6,300 sheets of all standard sizes and types, this is a machine capable of managing the most demanding jobs with ease and grace. Operations are controlled from the 10.1” colour LCD screen using a system of icons, and the unit is Energy Star-certified for efficiency.
The Sharp MX4070N scans, prints and copies to a high quality and is compact and versatile enough to fit into any office space. Its LCD screen is fully customisable, and public cloud storage can be accessed with a single sign-on click. The OCR will convert scanned documents to a range of formats, and a Print Release function sends any document to a central MFP for storage and further processing.
The slightly bulky design of the Sharp MX4070N - rectangular base and reflective touchscreen may not be to everyone’s taste, but the shape at least is largely limited by functionality, so users must decide for themselves whether this is worth sacrificing to aesthetics.