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			Went through the same question about almost a year ago when I started getting back into collecting cards.  I had a monochrome laser printer as well as a color inkjet all-in-one, but the scanner was only a CIS and couldn't scan graded cards without being out-of-focus.  So I was looking for an "upgrade" to a CCD scanner while maintaining all the features I previously had (laser quality output for text, ability to print the occasional color, ADF, duplex printing, and fax).   I would have settled with keeping the monochrome laser and getting an inkjet all-in-one but found that all the models in the personal or even small home-office market used CIS scanner heads.  The one exception was the Canon Pixma that you mention, but it can't fax which was an absolute dealbreaker for me.  So I started looking at more expensive models, in the laser-class, and ultimately went with a HP CM2320fxi which is a color laserjet with a CCD scanner that has fax, ADF and duplex printing.  It's worked very well for me, produces fairly good quality scans and exceptional quality color and monochrome prints.
 I did also try out a Brother 9840cdw but found that its software implementation was very clunky, the quality of its color prints was quite washed out when compared side-by-side to the HP, and the hardware quality didn't have the same sturdy build and feel as the HP, so I returned it.  My one gripe with the HP is a software issue: although it can duplex print and duplex copy, it cannot duplex scan (ie take a two-sided document and scan both sides to output to the PC).  You need to scan the stack on one side, then flip and scan the other side, and use a third-party software to integrate the two outputs into one file (I use Microsoft Office Image Scanning, which does a nice job of it).  Dunno why HP hadn't addressed this software shortcoming, but it wasn't a dealbreaker for me.
 
 Hope that helps,
 --S
 
				__________________collecting primarily T206, 1940 Play Ball, 1947-66 Exhibits, 1952 Bowman, 1964 Topps Giants, Yankees HOFers.
 E-mails preferred over PM.
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