Canon Office Products TS8120 Wireless All-In-One P
$356.55
Price: $159.99 - $356.55
(as of Apr 03, 2025 08:38:08 UTC – Details)
Powerful features, in a compact size introducing the PIXMA TS8120 wireless inkjet all-in-one home printer, designed to be fast, efficient and connected. Print everything from family photos and invitations to reports, documents and boarding passes fast and easy. With the photo Blue ink your photos never looked better, it reduces graininess and provides smooth color gradation in all your prints.
Quickly Print detailed documents with Sharp black text and stunning photographs with the 6-color individual ink system. With the PIXMA TS8120 never compromise on speed or quality.
Enjoy the simplicity of connecting your smartphone, tablet and all your favorite devices with ease. Print hassle free – whether from the Cloud5, through Bluetooth4, from social Media2 or on the go.
The PIXMA TS8120 Wireless printer is the all-in-one that fits perfectly anywhere in the home, is simple to use, and delivers outstanding quality results every time.
With intuitive features like the 4.3″ LCD touchscreen and Bluetooth printing4, it’s clear to see why the PIXMA TS8120 makes printing fast and easy.
WORKS WITH ALEXA: Ask Alexa to print your shopping list, to-do list, crosswords, coloring pages, and more. To set up, say “Alexa, discover my printer.” Alexa can also detect when ink or toner is running low and orders more when you need it. Save 10% on all ink or toner smart reorders. Restrictions may apply.
John –
Best printer ever
Wow. All you will ever need if you want to print letters and envelopes at the same time without having to switch trays. Top envelope feeder is the bomb! Ink usage is great since have different cartridges for photos!They really need to tout this product
S. L. Brown –
Full featured
I’m very pleased with the printer. After a few getting to know it issues, it has done most jobs very well. Printing on CDs is very problem-free once you figure out how to do it. Scanning and copying is also easy. The rear paper slot is very convenient for printing photos or on odd paper (e.g., bristol board). Price of printer itself was very reasonable. Time will tell whether they make it all back on the ink.
Phil Hoff –
This is a really crappy printer
The reader should consider that the one star in the rating is because installation instructions are excellent. But after that, it is all downhill. In the first place, the printing is not as crisp as it was with the Canon MG7700 series printer that I had before. More seriously, it often claims to be offline when the display is illuminated. Even rebooting the printer does not change this.Other times, after about 15-20 seconds it will say that the printer is not responding. Yet if you wait for two or three minutes it MAY respond. This is true even for the simplest print jobs like a single page monochrome print.This is the fourth Canon printer I’ve owned and the first three were excellent. I can’t understand why a new model is brought out when it is inferior to its predecessor.This printer has one negative in common with the MG7700. When it finally goes into sleep mode sending it a print job will NOT wake it up. This is particularly annoying if you are sending it a print job from a computer in another room.One more negative: When it claims to be offline and really isn’t, the only way I have found to make it admit that it is online is to scan something. Then, if you send a document it will print that document. But it will also say that there are x documents waiting to print and WILL NOT PRINT THEM. It would not seem to take too much “intelligence” to know that once you have sent something to the printer, you want it to print. Apparently, however, it takes more intelligence than this printer has.Yet another negative: Because this is a relatively new design those who second source ink haven’t figured out how to make cartridges for it yet. Thus you will pay through the nose for Canon ink.
Marc O’Polo –
Compact wireless printer for use with a Mac computer
I give this machine 4 stars for print quality; 2-1/2 stars for the CONs enumerated below; reliability is an unknown at this point in time. Hence, an average of 3 stars.I purchased the TS8120 for use with my Mac Mini. Canon customer support recommended this printer as a replacement for my PIXMA MG7120, which suddenly died after five years of relatively light-duty non-business use. (Mechanical failure – error msg B200.) Printers being so inexpensive these days, I figured it wasn’t economical to have my MG7120 repaired – assuming I could find someone who could handle the repair.PROs…The PIXMA TS8120 has a smaller footprint than my old MG7120. Like the MG7120, the TS8120 prints, scans and copies – i.e., it is an all-in-one wireless printer that supports Apple’s AirPrint. I see no difference in quality in the printed page between the two machines. The TS8120 is also capable of printing photographs. I have not yet tried this feature; I can only hope that the quality matches what I used to obtain with the MG7120.CONs…The TS8120 appears to be more cheaply made than the MG7120. It weighs less than the MG7120 and does not have as sleek an appearance. The aesthetics are just not there. The control panel is a hinged affair that tilts out from the front of the printer. Who knows what problems that may introduce as time goes by.Of more important consideration is paper handling. Standard letter size sheets can be loaded in a cassette from the front; however, photo paper and envelopes need to be fed via a rear tray. This rear tray pulls up from the back of the printer and appears flimsy – may have to be handled with kid gloves to avoid breakage.The software that comes in the package only supports a Windows machine. I had to go online to the Canon website to download and install software that supports my Mac. The meager printed instructions that came with the TS8120 led me down a couple of blind alleys until I finally stumbled onto the correct page of the Canon website and could download the appropriate software. Once in the right ballpark, the installation of the software was fairly intuitive. (I made the mistake of having a USB cable plugged into TS8120, anticipating that this might be necessary. This screwed up my attempt to set up a wireless connection between the printer and my network. Removing the cable resolved the problem.)And let’s not forget the ink cartridges. The MG7120 used a Canon 251 cartridge; the TS8120 uses a Canon 281 cartridge. Mechanically, the two cartridges appear to be identical. I suspect that it’s the ID chip in the cartridge that’s changed. (I will leave it to conspiracy theorists to speculate as to why Canon made this change.) When time permits, I plan to install one of the 251 cartridges in the TS8120 and see what happens; I will be surprised if it is recognized.MEH…The TS8120 can print directly on a CD/DVD that has a surface suitable for that purpose — i.e., a printable disk. Since CDs and DVDs are going the way of the dinosaur, I think this is a feature that is nothing more than a check box.UPDATE 27-FEB-2019A word of caution about the Canon scanner driver and portfolio of productivity tools that is bundled in Image Garden: They do not work reliably under Mac OS 10.14.3 (Mojave). Image Garden is bloatware, IMO; it is very slow to load when launched. I tried to use the scanner function within Image Garden and found it would not save the the PDF file (Dragging and dropping is a workaround.)I did find a standalone scanner driver by digging down into the Canon website: IJ Scan Utility Lite. It loads quickly but is unreliable. (A version of this driver is part of Image Garden.) The problem with the Canon scanner driver is that it does not wake the printer from sleep mode. Moreover, even if I manually wake the printer from its control panel before launching IJ Scan Utility Lite, the driver doesn’t always find the scanner. More frustrating still, I was in the middle of creating a multi-page PDF when IJ Scan Utility Lite lost the connection to the scanner, and I lost my work.It’s been my experience that Cannon does not roll the revisions of Image Garden or IJ Scan Utility promptly when Apple issues an update to its OS. (If memory serves, Image Garden did work reliably in a Windows environment. I suspect that is where Canon puts its effort.)As a result, I have gone back to using a product called VueScan for my scanning jobs. It behaves beautifully with the TS8120. It is a fairly intuitive (or as intuitive as any piece of software is these day). I can generate PDF (single or multi-page), JPG ad TIFF files. In my Mac environment, VueScan is superior to Image Garden.The TS8120 continues to operate satisfactorily as a printer. It promptly wakes from sleep command when a print job is sent to it. Ink consumption thus far is about what I expected; no surprises there.Because of the lack of adequate software support (at least under Mojave), I continue to retain an overall rating of 3 stars.Update 01-Apr-2019:I am retaining the 3-star rating because the print and scan functions of this TS8120 are still working. However, the automatic retraction of the output tray upon power down has failed. The tray gears appear to have become disengaged, and they grind when the tray attempts to retract. As a result, the tray will not fully retract. I went online to see if there is a fix, but there is no information available on the Canon website or in its online manual. Next step will be to contact Canon customer support.Update 9-Apr-2019:I contacted Canon customer support on April 1st. After being switched around a couple of times, I talked to a tech rep who knew what he was doing. He walked me through a couple of tests and determined that I had a hard mechanical failure. With no prompting on my part, he set up a warranty replacement and sent an email with the UPS tracking number so I could monitor its progress. I received the replacement yesterday and installed it today. Installation went very smoothly. So far as I can tell from its condition, the warranty unit is brand new, not a refurb. I packed the defective unit into the same box the warranty unit arrived in and affixed the return shipping label as instructed. Canon pays the shipping costs both ways. Because of the prompt and hassle free warranty replacement. I’ve bumped my rating up to 4 stars.
Linda –
YOU CAN TURN OFF THE ‘AUTO SHUT-OFF’!! YES!!!
So far, I am loving it, after truly hating the MG3600 series I had purchased. (User unfriendly, IMHO, and auto shut off, etc.) This one has “auto shut off” pre-configured. Disliked. What is the point of having a wi-fi printer if you have to keep coming into the room to turn it on? But I finally found the time to look up the answer. It is possible to turn off the auto shut off in the printer set up. On the home menu, “settings”, find “ECO’. I have only just done this, I am assuming it will now work perfectly. Except, of course, the cost of the printer ink, but that is the trade-off for a really nice printer.
Kindle Customer –
Excellent printer, user friendly
I saw all the poor reviews but for $55 I decided to try this printer as I have had Canon printers for a long time and I like them. After a couple of weeks of continuous use I am very pleased with my purchase. It prints with great clarity, good speed, and the wireless features work as they should. It is user friendly and a step up from my old Canon PIXMA MG7720.
Marie Wendell –
Dissatisfied with the Cannon printer.
The printer Isn’t user friendly when a problem happened. It indicated the paper was stuck but there was no paper in it.I realized it was the CD insert that was the problem. It was not going in easily and the printer thought it was a paper jam. Once that was resolved, paper was put in the tray but it didn’t want it there it wanted it in the back side. After fussing with it, while hoping the plastic parts weren’t going to break due to its flimsy construction, it finally worked.The whole experience was too confusing and frustrating to say the least.