Canon imageCLASS LBP6230dw – Compact, Wirele
$304.45
Price: $229.99 - $304.45
(as of Mar 02, 2025 11:03:26 UTC – Details)
Compact laser printer delivers professional quality output at blazing fast speeds with an impressive range of features including automatic 2‐sided printing and wireless connectivity. Refer to the user guide for troubleshooting steps.
Wireless, Monochrome Laser Printer.
Print up to 26ppm.
Space-saving, compact design fits almost anywhere in your workspace.
Print up to 8.5″ x 14″.
250-sheet maximum paper capacity.
Print from your compatible mobile device.
Paper size: 8.5 inch x 14.
1 year standard warranty.
SPYKER –
Not Plug and Play, but good value if you are somewhat technical
TL;DR: Requires a bit of setup but works great, I’m shocked at the value. This is probably best budget but feature packed laser printer you can get right now (wireless laser printer with auto duplex printing).This printer cost about $80–in contrast to the Brother HL-L2370 printer which has the same feature set but is double the cost at $160 (though that one has Airprint so you’d probably have an easier time setting up). The Brother HL-L2320D at $120 only has auto duplexing (no wireless connectivity) and the Brother HL-L2305 at $120 has wifi connectivity but no auto duplexing.Note that for the initial wireless setup, you will need to use the included USB A cable (yes, you need to plug it into a computer that can use the tool–Windows or Mac), so if you only have a laptop with only USB C ports, you’ll need an adapter (female USB A to male USB C)!From a high level:- You need to connect the printer via USB A to a computer that can run the wireless configuration tool- Run the wireless configuration tool with your computer and use the tool to connect your printer wirelessly to your router- Unplug the USB A cable connecting your computer to the printer- Install the printer drivers, and configure your computer to connect to your printer wirelesslyIf you’ve been frustrated with the setup for this printer, I don’t blame you–the setup is comically bad.To setup wireless printing you first need to connect your printer to power—but before that, make sure you remove ALL the bits on the inside. There’s a styrofoam piece and several orange plastic bits. Pulling out one of the small orange plastic bits on the toner cartridge will also pull out a long plastic sticker (I’m assuming for sealing the toner).Note that these instructions for are the Mac setup, I’d imagine the Windows setup will be easier.Once its ready to go and powered on, go navigate to the canon website and look up Canon LBP6230dw:- Click the ‘Support’ button- Click ‘Software & Drivers’- Select your OS (I have Ventura which is v13)- Download MF/LBP Network Setup Tool Ver.2.33 (OS X 10.9.5 – macOS 13.3.1)- Plugin in the USB cable from the printer to your device- Run the tool, follow the instructions- Select “Wireless LAN Connection”- Select “Yes, I want to configure network settings”- Select “Easy setup”- Select “My wireless LAN access point doesn’t have a WPS button”. (Even if your router *does* have WPS functionality, you should turn that off because its junk and a security risk :P)- It will have instructions to plugin the cable, read them if needed but this should be straight forward or already done- Click continue, it should return a list of wireless networks; including your own. If it is hanging (stuck) on a loading animation, right click the printer icon on your bottom dock and click quit and the list should show up if its stuck–(this did the trick for me, I don’t know why).- Select your wireless network, type in the WiFi password and continue- It will try to connect and when it does, the prompt will update and a blue light will shine on your printer- If you have a smart router such as an EERO like myself, you will get an alert saying a new device “AzureWave Technology” connected to your router. This is important–use the EERO app on your phone to get the IP Address of your printer since we will use this to connect to it. I also renamed the device to Canon Printer for sanity purposes.- If you don’t have a smart router, navigate to your router gateway page and determine the IP Address (the host name should start with Canon). I can’t provide specific instructions about this because each router is different.Next step, install the printer drivers on your computer- Use the same page you used to install the wireless configuration tool- UFRII LT Printer Driver Ver.1.5.11 (macOS 10.12.6 – macOS 13.3.1)- Run and follow instructions of the installerAfter installing the drivers:- Open System Settings- Scroll on the left side menu to ‘Printers & Scanners’- Select Add Printer, Scanner blahblah- If you see a ‘Canon LBP6230dw’ with kind ‘Bonjour’, you’re in luck, you can select that, hit “Add” and you’re good to go–no other work needed.- If not, its okay, select the ‘Globe’ icon up top of the add printer menu- In the Address Box: Add your IP Address of your printer (discussed in earlier instructions)- In the Protocol Box: Select Line Printer Daemon – LPD (this is the only option that works with Mac–I tried them all for you)- In the Queue box: this is just the name of your print queue; I just called mine “Canon Laser Printer”- In the Name box: this is the name of your printer; I just called mine “Canon Laser Printer”–this is the name you see in a printer list- Location: Just for your info (mine’s on the top of my dresser).- Use: these are the drivers used with the printer, select ‘Canon LBP6230/6240’- Select ‘Add’ and you should be good to goIf it doesn’t work:- Either the IP address provided is incorrect- Printer and computer aren’t on the same network- Didn’t install the drivers.Big props to Cannon for updating the drivers in 2023–I saw some reviews from 2015!
Omar Siddique –
good value, works with MacOS
A fast, cheap monochrome laser. It works well with MacOS and was a breeze to set up with a wired connection.And there’s a major bonus considering the price range: the “starter” toner kit has a page-rating comparable to their regular toner purchase.Canon supports a number of MacOS versions for this printer (included some EOL ones like “Mountain Lion”). I downloaded drivers from the Canon website– the recent date on them indicates they’re still actively maintained. This was for my older system running MacOS Sierra; it’s quite possible newer MacOS already bundles the drivers. Once you have the drivers and the printer is on the network, it’s literally 3-4 clicks to add the printer, select the type, and set it as the default. No other software needed.This model has a “alternate” feed right above the main tray, for printing envelopes, labels, etc. Note the slightly cheaper monochrome ImageCLASS does not have this feature.The printer is really fast coming out of sleep mode and generating that first print. Faster than the massive office-style HP Pagewide it replaces.In fact, my only quibbles are very minor:* it’s a little loud when powered on / plugged in* the paper tray doesn’t hold a full ream* it looks sort of cheapBut considering how inexpensive it is, all of these things are completely acceptable.I’ll also note, for most printing, B&W is just fine, and color is much much more expensive (whether laser toner or ink). If you don’t specifically need to print color, I highly recommend sticking to monochrome. If you’ve ever bought a set of color cartridges (or toners) when all you usually do is print black&white, you’ll know exactly what I mean.I first came to know Canon as a camera company, but have since come to appreciate their printers, of which I’ve owned several. This is my first Canon laser, and I’m pleased with it. Highly Recommended.