Wacom Intuos3 4×5 Pen Tablet, PTZ430
- Pen tablet with USB connection
- 1024 levels of pressure-sensitivity
- Customizable menu shortcut buttons
- Thick, durable overlay
- Limited Lifetime warranty

Wacom Intuos3 4×5 Pen Tablet, PTZ430
DescriptionIntuos3 product gives you the power to quickly and professionally edit photos and create digital artwork by turning the full power of Adobe Photoshop, Corel Painter, and over 100 other leading software applications. Intuos pen tablets use Wacom Penabled technology is to give a natural feel and superior performance of Wacom’s patented wireless technology Tablet battery free. You will find that using an Intuos pen, mouse, and tablet gives you more control, comfort. . . More>>
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Tags: Intuos3, PTZ430, Tablet, Wacom
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Rating: 1 / 5
I received this tablet and it looked real good I loved it –I pluged it in to the computer and put CD’s in and nothing–the CD’s did nothing the WACOM tablet doesn’t work so here I am with the tablet the mouse and the pen sitting by my computer and out the money wondering why I even bothered buying this thing in the first place -don’t try it because you might just get I did –a WACOM tablet that doesn’t work and then you are out the money plus figuring out how to get your money back or how to get in touch with the sellers!! I have tried and there are no answers anywhere there are no phone numbers to call for help—no numbers for trouble shooting you are on your own no return numbers or adresses you are left with this so think again before you waste your money
Rating: 1 / 5
I got a deal on it but it is to hard to use and to small. Get a larger one!
Rating: 5 / 5
I bought a wide aspect ratio LCD monitor so that I could have more room to work when doing digital painting, and getting the 4:3 aspect ratio of the tablet to map to the screen makes the vertical tracking seem like it’s dragging. I had to resize the tablet mapping area to something around 3×5 inches to make it feel more natural. The obvious drawback is that there is a much smaller workable area on the tablet surface.
Rating: 5 / 5
pen and mouse work well. Tablet keys add ease of use to graphics programs.
Rating: 5 / 5
- REVIEW
For a company that has such a silly, lewd-suggestive name, they probably manufactured the best of graphics tablets. I say “probably” only that “Wacom Intuos3″ is my first trip into the world of interactive pen writing. Quite frankly, no one should spend over 200 dollars on a product that may or may not be useable, but the ergonomics and design of this Wacom tablet proves that it’s worth the price.
I would’ve recommended the 6×8 tablet because of the expanded platform for more open-ended writing or drawing, but I’m sure no low-class worker or college student dependent on student loans would fork over 100 dollars on already expensive product line just for extra dimensional inches, and neither would I. Besides, the 4×5 tablet looks big enough already.
Speaking of looks, no matter which size tablet you get, you’ll notice how good it looks. “Intuos3″ has this simple yet sleek design that’s almost similar to the iPod, only in grey, and the bottom part of the tablet makes it comfortable to place on my wrist. It’s also durable, but it does makes this squeaky sound whenever I press the tablet; it’s annoying, but only for a while. Function-wise, for the 4×5 tablet I have, there are keys place on the left side of the table which works as mouse buttons and a scroller. I read that these button placements are a problem for people who are left-handed, but personally, I don’t find them convenient.
[UPDATE 8/26: While I was using Macromedia Flash, I tried the tablet keys along with my pen, just out of habit. I realized that these keys are actually helpful when I cliced certain buttons to perform tasks. I especially fond the scroller, since it scrolls a zoomed page without the hassel of manually adjusting the screen; it makes things easier to draw on the tablet. Now I understood how the left-handed people feel about the 4x5 tablet, and I do recommended the 6x8 tablet for those people. It's too bad they are expensive.]
I don’t know if it’s the ultimate instrument of power or the best accessory included, but the grip pen is wonderful. Battery-free, pressure-and-tilt sensitive, and comfortable to hold, it works and acts like a pen (or a pencil since it erases as well). The only complication with the pen is that it acts TOO well like the real thing. The pentip works like a clicker, and when it touches the tablet, it interacts; it took me quite some time to get use to way the pen works, only to realize the pen should never be used as a mouse. The pen is indeed mightier than the sword, or any other pen for that matter.
“Intuos3″ also includes a five-button mouse with a fingerwheel, which practically needs no description. Like the buttons on the tablet, the mouse doesn’t need to be used, especially when there are more quality mouses availible, but until I can purchase one, this mouse has the necessities to get the job done. Much like the pen, the mouse only works when you use it on a tablet platform, but hey, at least it doesn’t need batteries. Performance-wise, it works, but I agree that at times, the mouse doesn’t seem to respond when I try clicking at the buttons, or moving the arrow for that matter (could a problem with the computer of the tablet itself).
Thanks to the Wacom software CD, it installs a properties program so I could adjust the pressure setting on the pen, replace the settings of the mouse buttons, whatever makes the tools work for me. It’s the fact that “Wacom Intuos3″ has this abundance of customization, along with its handy-dandy supplies (the pen most of all), makes this product worth searching. “Intuos3″ is a professional tool, which by no means is it user friendly, but once you understand the tools, it has its benefits. If you’re the kind of person who like the hands-on approach, whether you are a serious graphic designer or a 17-year-old Flash animator who spends five months making a three-minute piece of junk, don’t hesitate to invest.
This is Del Keyes, saying “The product is great, but my penmanship stinks.”