Brother P-Touch Cube Plus PT-P710BT Versatile Label Maker with Bluetooth Wireless Technology
$102.98
From the manufacturer
Brother P-touch CUBE Plus Versatile Label Maker with Bluetooth Wireless Technology
The Brother P-touch CUBE Plus PT-P710BT featuring Bluetooth wireless technology allows you to easily design and print labels up to 24mm (~1 inch) wide from your Apple or Android smartphone, tablet, laptop or desktop. Design and print unique labels using the free Brother P-touch Design&Print(1) or Brother iPrint&Label(1) apps or select Brother P-touch Editor software from your desktop using the USB cable provided. Choose from pre-designed templates including new retail store and crafting business designs to help your products stand out or create your own unique designs. Enjoy smartphone features such as spell check and voice to text to simplify label creation. The sleek, stylish design makes the P-touch CUBE Plus an attractive addition to your retail store, crafting business, home or office.
Why Buy?
- Design and print labels from your smartphone, tablet, laptop or desktop
- Choose from pre-designed label templates or create your own design
- Uses P-touch TZe tapes up to 24mm (~1 inch) wide
- Easily portable with built-in Li-ion battery
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Flexible Software Compatibility
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Create Labels on the Go
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Use Pre-Designed Label Templates
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Includes Everything You Need To Get Started
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Create Labels for Every Need
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Performance and Reliability
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Brother TZe-PR254 |
Brother TZe-PR851 |
Brother TZe-PR955 |
Brother TZe-M355 |
Brother TZe-M51 |
Brother TZe-M851 |
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Add to Cart
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Add to Cart
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Customer Reviews |
4.8 out of 5 stars
17
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4.9 out of 5 stars
42
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4.4 out of 5 stars
23
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4.5 out of 5 stars
105
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4.5 out of 5 stars
80
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4.5 out of 5 stars
26
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Price |
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$22.99$22.99 | $22.99$22.99 |
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Color | Gold on Premium Glitter White | Black on Premium Glitter Gold | White on Premium Glitter Silver | White on Premium Matte Black | Black on Premium Matte Clear | Black on Premium Matte Gold |
Tape Width | 0.94″ (24mm) | 0.94″ (24mm) | 0.94″ (24mm) | 0.94″ (24mm) | 0.94″ (24mm) | 0.94″ (24mm) |
Tape Length | 26.2 ft. (8M) | 26.2 ft. (8M) | 26.2 ft. (8M) | 26.2 ft. (8M) | 26.2 ft. (8M) | 26.2 ft. (8M) |
Device Compatibility | PT2430PC, PT2730, PT2730VP, PT9600, PTD600, PTD600VP, PTD800W, PTH500LI, PTP700, PTP710BT, PTP750W and more | PT2430PC, PT2730, PT2730VP, PT9600, PTD600, PTD600VP, PTD800W, PTH500LI, PTP700, PTP710BT, PTP750W and more | PT2430PC, PT2730, PT2730VP, PT9600, PTD600, PTD600VP, PTD800W, PTH500LI, PTP700, PTP710BT, PTP750W and more | PT2430PC, PT2730, PT2730VP, PT9600, PTD600, PTD600VP, PTD800W, PTH500LI, PTP700, PTP710BT, PTP750W and more | PT2430PC, PT2730, PT2730VP, PT9600, PTD600, PTD600VP, PTD800W, PTH500LI, PTP700, PTP710BT, PTP750W and more | PT2430PC, PT2730, PT2730VP, PT9600, PTD600, PTD600VP, PTD800W, PTH500LI, PTP700, PTP710BT, PTP750W and more |
Specification: Brother P-Touch Cube Plus PT-P710BT Versatile Label Maker with Bluetooth Wireless Technology
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Photos: Brother P-Touch Cube Plus PT-P710BT Versatile Label Maker with Bluetooth Wireless Technology
10 reviews for Brother P-Touch Cube Plus PT-P710BT Versatile Label Maker with Bluetooth Wireless Technology
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$102.98
Gordon Haber –
Arrived on time and met all expectations, excellent software and a nice, solid product. It would be nice if it could be used without attaching it to a computer.
MoogleMan3 –
I had an old handheld brother label printer that was big, clunky and cumbersome to use. After using it for quite a few years, I got fed up and decided to buy a modern label printer. I bought, and still use occasionally, the PT-1230PC. That one is way ahead of the handheld label printers, but still has shortcomings; mainly the fact that a power adapter isn’t included, and that the cutter is manual rather than automatic. Print quality also isn’t as sharp as the P710BT. Like I said, I still use that one occasionally, mostly to print temporary/short term labels.I bought this one because it accepts a huge variety of label tapes, up to 24mm wide, and has an auto cutter. I use this one strictly connected to my PC; no bluetooth/app usage. I prefer the full-fledged p-touch editor software. My main usage of this amazing little printer is for making labels for power adapters, and for labeling my hardware bins with all the various sizes of the nuts, bolts, screws, etc., that I use.Connectivity is easy; just a micro usb cable from the printer to my PC. USB C would have been nice, considering the price of this printer, but that’s a minor quibble. I love the shape and aesthetic of the printer; I prefer simple designs with soft edges and clean lines, so with the printer being a simple cube shape with rounded corners and edges, works perfectly for me. No hard edges to grab when handling it to change label tapes, which I do often. I do wish it came in the blue color the previous p-touch cube is available in though.Print quality is great; nice and sharp. I make all my labels in the p-touch editor PC software, which is easy enough. No complaints there. Like all label printers, there’s about 1″ of waste at the beginning of each label. I minimize this by typing out my labels on a single, long label, then use scissors to cut each label individually. That way, I only lose that first inch instead of an inch with every label.I only buy genuine brother TZe label tapes; I know there’s a ton of aftermarket tapes, I just prefer to stick with genuine tapes. In case I have any issues, brother would be able to provide support/replacements. I mostly use the strong adhesive tapes; specifically TZe-S221 (3/8″ black print on white tape) and TZe-S135 (1/2″ white print on clear tape). I’ll be adding some other colors too. I absolutely love the auto cutter. That alone makes this printer worth the asking price.In short, I couldn’t be happier with this printer. Unless it was offered in blue, in which case I’d have another one on the way!
J.P. Larocque –
I bought this printer for basic product labeling: things like serial numbers for products I make. I chose it because it’s wireless and untethered (if you choose to use it that way), and the Bluetooth interface lets me programmatically generate, print, and even autocut labels. When I start doing small runs of products, each needing a unique label (due to changing serial numbers and MAC addresses), this is going to rock. The built-in rechargeable battery won’t chew through alkaline batteries or require swapping out NiMH rechargeable cells (and it prints while charging, too).Brother has some other printers which don’t require AA/AAA batteries, but this one comes with a battery, whereas the others that offer a rechargeable battery require that it be bought separately, and they’re overpriced. The real deal-breaker over the other Brother plug-powered printers was that the other options use 12 V DC jacks, apparently wired for center-negative, outer-positive connections. This is really bad, because it means that replacement third-party power supplies have to be this special kind, and if you accidentally plug a Brother power supply into something else that uses 12 V, but wired for the almost universally-adopted center-positive standard, you could blow that device up. I’ve let that happen once and now I won’t allow center-negative power supplies into my household. Micro USB bypasses all that; it’s very much standardized.I spent a day hacking on someone else’s open-source proof-of-concept Brother driver in Python. After sufficient tinkering, I can now print arbitrary monochrome PNGs (as long as they are the right height) on my Linux laptop via Bluetooth. It looks like it also supports USB communication, if you need to use it on a machine that doesn’t have Bluetooth. I haven’t tried the CUPS driver (but one exists) or the Windows utility.Brother publishes an excellent and detailed programmer’s manual that gives you nearly everything you need to know to do your own custom low-level printing, so I think this can be great for production or manufacturing environments on a budget.The convenience of being able to do one-off labels from my computer or my smartphone is a also huge win (you know, the intended application, lol). I had a project where I needed to print labels for hard disk serial numbers, so I used a barcode scanner app to read the serial number bar codes from the hard disk labels and then copied/pasted them into the Brother print app. This sounds clunky, but it’s way more convenient and error-proof than hand-keying all these numbers with a keyboard (whether on my phone or a label maker with a keyboard).In fact, lack of a keyboard on the label maker isn’t really a concern here. You’re probably a lot better entering text on a cell phone than you are on a clunky label maker keyboard anyway, and you get perks like autocomplete, copy/paste, drag-and-drop WYSIWYG font adjustment and positioning, etc.More great features: it has an automatic cutter, which is great for printing a batch of labels at once. And it’s possible to chain print labels to avoid the wastage you normally get at the beginning of a standalone label. You still do have to waste about an inch of tape for each batch job that you do, but that’s not really a big deal.The Brother app on Android is okay and somewhat easy to use once you get the printer to pair with your phone and get the app to recognize it. It’s got some quirks and annoyances, but no show-stoppers. For example, fine position adjustment of objects like text or images is tricky, because if you only move your finger a little bit, it’ll think you’re long-pressing the object and offer to delete the object or whatever. You have to move objects faster (and therefore further away than you want) so that it recognizes that this is a move command, and then you have to move it back to be closer to where you want. And it doesn’t show the object as it’s being moved, it only shows the bounding box, so it can be tricky to get objects to go exactly where you have them in mind.I decided to review it after I dropped it onto some concrete stairs I tripped on (I broke most of its fall–d’oh!), and it’s still working.Weaknesses of this printer: * While this is a Bluetooth printer, it has no security, and no way to disable Bluetooth that I’ve seen. It’s an open Bluetooth printer for anybody within range to pair with and print to. This will probably never be a real-world problem for me, but in theory some neighbor’s kid could eat through all my tape with dumb/offensive messages if I left this turned on. * It automatically powers off a little zealously when left inactive while running on battery power. If plugged into a USB port, I think it still auto-powers-off, but much less quickly. Bluetooth should be pretty light on current draw if done correctly, so it’d be nice if they didn’t turn it off so quickly. * It doesn’t support 1.5″ TZe tape, only up to 1″. That’s still pretty good, but I didn’t realize I was limiting my options when I bought it. * The TZe tape cartridge system and/or Brother’s standard print heads require a lot of top/bottom margin; the print area is smaller than I’d like. For example, for the 1″ nominal/24 mm actual tape, the print area is 128 dots vertically, or 18.06 mm high. That means you have a required margin of at least 3 mm on the top and bottom. This margin gets smaller with smaller tape widths, down to almost nothing on the 3.5 mm tape. Look up the Brother programmer’s manual for this printer to find the exact limitations if this matters to you. * The print resolution isn’t super great, but it does have a reasonable high-resolution mode. This prints at 360×180 dpi instead of the usual 180×180 DPI, presumably by running the tape a little bit slower through the print head. This does improve text and graphics legibility, in a similar way to how subpixel antialiasing improves text legibility on a computer LCD screen: the horizontal resolution matters more, so it’s good that it can boost that dimension of resolution.
Gizmo –
If you mostly have owned HP or Cannon printers in the past, you are not used to Brother. I have a laser printer that was 25% of the previous 10 HP printers I have (the whole ink cartridge game, cheaper for a printer than a cartridge) and has served me well for over 10 years now. Incredibly economical, runs out of INK like once every few years, and ink is available from 3rd parties for cheap.This device, like my printer. is equally as surprising, incredibly capable for the value. The price, though I would not have paid it at the outset, is worth 3x what I paid. The Printer prints labels, but I will bet that most people here dont realize just how good the software for this little printer is. It can go from very simple to use, to an advance mode that I now use to pull data from a database and print corresponding barcodes, and its simple enough I can figure it out. The quality is very surprising given what I paid. In the future I would definitely pick brother over any other brands. I have continually found new uses for this label maker, something I wouldnt have bothered with if it wasnt so easy to use.There is., for sure, a bit of a learning curve, my wife who rarely bothers with anything electronic has to be shown how to use it every time, but I have found it to be incredibly simple
Earl Ax –
I got this particular model because it got top reviews on Wirecutter and I had a project coming up that needed clear labeling. I was done with the old one which constantly ate batteries and no external power supply I could find would work with it. The internal rechargable battery is a game changer, and bluetooth connection is simply handy. It’s sleek and compact, it prints relatively fast, and it seems to work fine with “compatible” off-brand labels too.
Russ –
Bought this to replace an old P-Touch 1180 which I have had for years. Uses same cartridges + now can use 1in cartridge. A little tricky to setup – connected to Wireless net – and added app. App took a few minutes to get useful but now it is pretty simple to add a note and get a label. Fast and does not seem to waste as much tape as the 1180 which always had a 1/2in leader and manual cutter. Still testing the rechargeable capacity for longevity but so far, with intermittent use, seems to hold up after fully charging.
Beekeeper –
We have had this for about a month and it has been absolutely perfect. I love that I can change cartridges and make labels for anything. We are currently using it in our RV, it is compact and portable. I love that I can create my label using my phone. No messy ink. Easy software to use. can use premade designs or create your own.
Netta KNetta K –
I have been looking for a label maker that used my computer and was easy to use. I read many of the reviews and the talk about the waste when you print and cut as it always has a 1″ lead that cuts out first for each label. I experimented and in a short amount of time, I had the wasted tape figured out. I needed to create several labels for my craft room and did not want that 1″ lead cut unused at each label. When you click the print button, options pop up. I unchecked the “Auto Cut” and chose just the “Chain Print” until I got to the last label. You will get a long chain of labels so you only get the waste of the 1″ at the very beginning. At the last label, I uncheck the “chain print” and choose just “auto cut”. I use a pair of scissors and just cut the labels apart which takes literally seconds and no waste between each label. I get more bang for my buck with the label cartridge.I have bought a few different ones in the past but hands down this was the best. It was easy to set up. The cartridge just pops in. I wanted to use my macbook air so I downloaded the app through the apple store and just plugged it into my computer. I don’t mind the fact that I have to use the cord that comes with it. I can use wireless with my phone but the idea was to be able to use the keyboard. When I am done, I just unplug and set it off to the side. My husband uses his cell phone from his office (next room) and prints from his cell phone. I held off on buying extra cartridges until I knew I was going to like it. I was surprised at the amount of labels I was able to print with the sample cartridge it came with. I have since ordered 6 more cartridges and can’t wait for them to come in so I can keep going!I would highly recommend the Brother P-touch CUBE Plus PT-P710BT to anyone, especially to someone like me who is not the greatest on setting up equipment or getting apps to work!!
Mary Fish | Stampin’ Pretty, LLC –
Love the flexibility in fonts, sizes and borders.
Ahlam –
I bought this to label my daughter’s school supplies. I love the design app, it’s easy to navigate, and has plenty of templates/designs you can choose from. You can save your designs (I was able to create and save mine before the product was delivered).I did see people complaining about the tape that’s cut at the beginning, but you can avoid that but opting out of cutting the last label printed. Meaning it will stay in the machine until you print another label, or cut it by pressing the power button twice. By doing this you will only lose that inch once at the beginning.