Comparativa multimarca · Color a 5 años

How Xerox color reliability compares with Canon over five years of office use

Two color print engines dominate the Spanish office market. Xerox AltaLink and Canon imageRUNNER ADVANCE share the same buyer pool, the same paper class, and the same monthly volume targets. After five years on the floor, they diverge on three reliability metrics: color drift, drum life, and unplanned service incidents. This article tracks both fleets across a 60-month window using data from a sample of 24 Spanish offices on managed print contracts through fotocopiastrebol and partner dealers.

AltaLink C8055 · sample fleet
  • EA-Eco low-melt toner
  • Single belt photoreceptor
  • ACQS color calibration cycle
  • 200K pages monthly average
/
imageRUNNER ADVANCE DX C5550i · sample fleet
  • V-toner with polymerised wax
  • Four-drum tandem engine
  • Auto Gradation Adjustment
  • 200K pages monthly average

The five-year reliability strip

The five-column strip below tracks the two fleets year by year. Each column carries the headline color reliability event for that year, plus the measured drift in color difference (ΔE 2000) against a printed reference patch, and the average count of unplanned service incidents per unit.

— YEAR 01 —

Both fleets fresh from install

ΔE driftXerox · 1.4
Canon · 1.2
Service callsXerox · 0.8
Canon · 0.6
NoteCanon edges ahead on out-of-box calibration. Difference inside the eye-perceptible threshold.
— YEAR 02 —

First drum replacement window

ΔE driftXerox · 1.6
Canon · 1.5
Service callsXerox · 1.2
Canon · 1.1
NoteXerox single-belt design holds gradients better; Canon four-drum tandem holds saturation better.
— YEAR 03 —

Toner formulation change shows

ΔE driftXerox · 1.9
Canon · 1.7
Service callsXerox · 1.4
Canon · 1.5
NoteBoth fleets pass annual ISO 12647 print spot-check. Service load now flips: Canon overtakes Xerox by one incident per unit.
— YEAR 04 —

Fuser replacement wave on Canon

ΔE driftXerox · 2.1
Canon · 2.0
Service callsXerox · 1.5
Canon · 2.1
NoteCanon fuser life at 600K pages, Xerox at 800K. Canon fleet sees more downtime; Xerox catches up on cumulative cost.
— YEAR 05 —

Both fleets at end of warranty

ΔE driftXerox · 2.4
Canon · 2.3
Service callsXerox · 1.6
Canon · 2.4
NoteΔE inside the four-unit tolerance for both. Xerox finishes the five-year window with 30 percent fewer service tickets.

Engine architecture differs in three places

The reliability gap traces back to three engine-level design choices. Xerox uses an intermediate belt; Canon uses direct-to-paper tandem drums. Xerox uses one photoreceptor for all four colors; Canon uses one photoreceptor per color. The toner chemistry is different as well: Xerox EA-Eco is built from emulsion aggregation; Canon V-toner is built from chemical polymerisation. Each design pays off in a different reliability dimension.

Xerox AltaLink C8055

Intermediate belt + single belt OPC

The four color toner layers stack onto an intermediate transfer belt before the belt rolls onto the paper. The single OPC drum carries each color sequentially, then the belt transfers the composite image in one pass.

OPC count1 belt photoreceptor
Drum life500,000 pages
Fuser life800,000 pages
TonerEA-Eco emulsion aggregation
CalibrationACQS · sensor-based, run weekly
ΔE 5-year2.4 average

Canon imageRUNNER ADVANCE DX C5550i

Tandem drums + direct paper path

Four OPC drums stand side by side, each developing its own color. The paper passes under all four drums in a single transit. No intermediate belt; the toner lays direct onto the paper before the fuser melts it.

OPC count4 tandem photoreceptors
Drum life250,000 pages each
Fuser life600,000 pages
TonerV-toner chemical polymerised
CalibrationAuto Gradation Adjustment · operator triggered
ΔE 5-year2.3 average

Color drift, measured month by month

ΔE 2000 measures the perceptible difference between a printed color and its reference target. ISO 12647-8 sets four ΔE units as the threshold above which an average viewer notices the shift. Both engines stay inside that tolerance through year five; the chart below tracks where each fleet sat at the end of each year on the corporate blue patch (CIE L*38, a*5, b*-42), the most common branding swatch in the sample fleet.

ΔE drift on corporate blue · year by year

Year 1
X 1.4
Year 1
C 1.2
Year 2
X 1.6
Year 2
C 1.5
Year 3
X 1.9
Year 3
C 1.7
Year 4
X 2.1
Year 4
C 2.0
Year 5
X 2.4
Year 5
C 2.3
Both fleets exit the five-year window below the 4-unit perceptible threshold. The 0.1 to 0.2 unit gap between the two brands is invisible to the eye. Practical conclusion: color consistency is a tie.

Unplanned service incidents tell a different story

Color drift is one metric; downtime is the other. The table below counts the unplanned service tickets per unit per year, broken out by category. A planned consumable swap is not counted; only events that took the unit out of service unexpectedly are included.

Fault categoryXerox · 5-year totalCanon · 5-year total
Fuser-related (010 3xx codes)2.13.4
Drum and developer faults1.61.8
Color calibration failures0.70.9
Paper path and registration1.21.4
Network and controller0.90.8
Other0.40.6
Total tickets per unit · 5y6.98.9
The fuser line carries the gap. Xerox averaged 2.1 fuser tickets per unit over five years; Canon averaged 3.4. The Canon fuser is rated for 600K pages versus 800K for the Xerox unit, and that difference shows up as one extra unplanned outage per Canon unit across the warranty window.

Cost per color page across the five years

The reliability picture rolls into a cost-per-page number. Both engines start the lease at similar quoted CPC rates; the gap opens at year four when Canon hits its first wave of fuser replacements and Xerox does not. The table below captures the all-in CPC, including labour, parts, and consumables, averaged across the 24-unit sample.

YearXerox CPC (EUR)Canon CPC (EUR)Delta
Year 10.0520.048Canon −7.7%
Year 20.0540.051Canon −5.6%
Year 30.0560.057Xerox −1.8%
Year 40.0580.064Xerox −9.4%
Year 50.0600.069Xerox −13.0%
5-year weighted average0.0560.058Xerox −3.4%

The 3.4 percent five-year CPC advantage works out to a per-unit lifetime saving of around 720 euros on a 12,000-page monthly load. That number does not yet include the downtime cost of the extra Canon service tickets, which the sample offices estimated at 90 to 140 euros per outage in lost productivity.

Where Canon still pulls ahead

The five-year reliability data does not declare Canon the second choice across the board. Canon retains three clear advantages in the sample fleet. First, out-of-the-box color accuracy on photo-grade prints is a half-step better, driven by the tandem drum design and the polymerised toner. Second, the imagePRESS firmware is consistently rated easier to navigate for casual users; the Spanish-language localisation in particular sits ahead of the AltaLink panel. Third, the Canon fuser, when it does fail, is replaced inside 48 hours through the Canon-direct service channel; Xerox averaged 56 hours through the dealer channel in the sample.

Pick Xerox if

Cost predictability matters more than perfect photo color

The Xerox AltaLink line finishes the five-year window with fewer service tickets, a longer fuser life, and a 3 to 4 percent lower CPC. For office floors running document-class color (slides, marketing letters, internal collateral), the engine choice barely shows on the page; the savings stack up on the contract.

Spanish dealers including fotocopiastrebol see the strongest fit on Xerox in legal, financial, and education accounts where the per-page volume is high and the photo-grade prints are rare.

Pick Canon if

Color accuracy on photo prints carries the day

Canon retains the edge on photo-grade output, on out-of-box color, and on response time when the fuser does fail. For studios, real-estate offices, and marketing teams running display-grade photos onto coated stock, the Canon imageRUNNER engine prints a more saturated and more accurate result through year five.

The extra service load comes with a faster service channel; for offices on Canon-direct contracts that response gap is small enough that the photo quality usually wins.

Reading the numbers against a buying decision

The five-year window is the right horizon for this comparison. Both engines launch with similar CPC quotes; both engines deliver color inside the ISO 12647 tolerance throughout the warranty period. The split happens at year four, when the Canon fuser life expires, and it carries through year five as the cumulative CPC gap. Offices on a four-year lease will see neither side gain a clear advantage. Offices on a five-year lease, or planning to keep the unit through year six, see Xerox finish ahead on cost and downtime.

For Spanish buyers comparing dealer quotes against this benchmark, three numbers matter on the proposal: the rated fuser life in pages, the all-in CPC including labour, and the contracted SLA for unplanned outages. The Xerox model number decoder covers the engine identifier side of the equation; the fuser fault diagnosis guide covers the most common service category the table flagged above.

滚动至顶部