Oki MC363dn review: Remember the early 90s? This printer does

Ugly as sin it may be, but Oki’s MC363dn offers a lot for the money

IT Pro Verdict

The Oki MC363dn doesn’t produce the best results, but it’s good value, and no more expensive to run than most other colour lasers in this bracket. It’s far better than it looks, but it wouldn’t be our first choice.

Pros

  • +

    Speedy scans; Decent print speeds; Good value

Cons

  • -

    Hideous-looking; Power saving mode doesn't save any power; Very noisy

Oki's MC363dn looks like it's fallen through a wormhole from the 1990s: big, heavy and unapologetically strewn with buttons. While it misses out on snazzy touchscreen controls, however, its specifications are impressive for this price. There's a fax modem, duplex prints, scans and copies, a front panel USB port for walk-up prints and scans, and a gigabit Ethernet connection at the back. The only significant omission is wireless networking - if you need it, you'll need to spend another 70 or so on the MC363dnw.

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This MFP's looks aren't the only reason you wouldn't want to share a small office with it - it's particularly noisy, clattering away whether printing or scanning, and spinning up its shouty cooling fans momentarily even when simply scanning from the plate. It's not especially intuitive to use compared to touchscreen rivals, and according to our measurements its power saving mode didn't actually save any power.

Whinging aside, this is a very capable and quick MFP for the money. While it took around 37 seconds to warm up and deliver a first page, or 17 seconds from standby, it went on to deliver text at 20.8ppm and colour graphics at 16.6ppm. Scans were extremely fast, ranging from six seconds for a preview up to just 21 seconds for a 1,200dpi photo, and photocopies shot out at 34 seconds for 10 black pages, or 38 seconds in colour. With a single-pass duplex scanner, double-sided copying is fast and fuss-free.

While black text quality was superb, our other results were less impressive. At the default setting, graphics, photos and photocopies had a dark, under-saturated look. Switching to the Office Colour profile improved the former two, but they still weren't entirely to our tastes. On the plus side, Oki's toner produced a lovely gloss finish across text and mid to dark graphics. Scans were good enough for most office uses, but the driver's Auto Adjust feature seemed inconsistent, sometimes returning images with a warm brown colour bias.

The MC363dn doesn't produce the best results, but it's good value, and no more expensive to run than most other colour lasers in this bracket. It's far better than it looks, but it wouldn't be our first choice.

Verdict

The Oki MC363dn doesn’t produce the best results, but it’s good value, and no more expensive to run than most other colour lasers in this bracket. It’s far better than it looks, but it wouldn’t be our first choice.

Simon Handby

After a brief career in corporate IT, Simon Handby combined his love of technology and writing when he made the move to Computer Shopper magazine. As a technology reviewer he's since tested everything from routers and switches, to smart air fryers and doorbells, and covered technology such as EVs, TVs, solar power and the singularity.

During more than 15 years as Shopper's long-time printer reviewer, Simon tried, tested and wrote up literally hundreds of home, small office and workgroup printers. He continues reviewing smart products and printers for a variety of publications, and has been an IT Pro contributor since 2010. Simon is almost never happier than when surrounded by printers and paper, applying his stopwatch and a seasoned eye to find the best performing, best value products for business users.