Showing posts with label Officejet. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Officejet. Show all posts

Saturday, August 23, 2014

HP Officejet Enterprise Color Flow X585z review: Fast pages, cheap pages, run lasers, run

Watching the pages fly into the HP Officejet Enterprise Color Flow X585z Multifunction Printer’s output tray at 26 pages per minute (text only) is impressive, being that we’re not used to such behavior from an inkjet, even an enterprise-class inkjet multifunction such as this. But in capacity, performance, and cost of operation, the $2799 X585z competes well with laser MFPs. It can’t quite match a laser printer’s text, but it out-duels the majority with its color graphics.

hp officejet pro x585 scanner lid Image: Michael Homnick

The HP Officejet Enterprise Color Flow X585z Multifunction Printer's scanner lid rises to reveal a legal-size platen.

The USB/ethernet-attachable X585z proved just a hair finicky with on our test network. We had to reset our router and the X585z’s IP address to eliminate some rather lengthy pauses. Once it was up to speed, pages scooted out in rapid succession—22.75 pages per minute (ppm) on the PC and just over 16 ppm on the Mac. Why the large disparity between the PCL and Postscript drivers, we can’t say. Color photos print to plain paper at just over 4 per minute and a full-page photo printed to glossy stock takes about 50 seconds. Copies are also quite fast, especially double-sided copies using the automatic document feeder, which has dual scanner elements to eliminate re-feeds.

The secret to the X585z’s fast output is the PageWide print mechanism (introduced last year with the OfficeJet Pro x576dw) that covers the entire width of an 8.5-inch page. It’s actually a set of ten staggered print heads and in addition to faster prints, it eliminates alignment issues caused by shuttling a printhead back and forth on a carriage.

hp officejet pro x585 input tray Image: Michael Homnick

The HP Officejet Enterprise Color Flow X585z Multifunction Printer's input drawer takes 500 sheets.

The X585z has plenty of paper capacity, starting with a 500-sheet bottom tray and ending with a whopping 300-sheet output tray. There’s also a 50-sheet multipurpose tray on the side of the unit for envelopes and the like. If 550 pages doesn’t cut it, you may purchase a 500-sheet auxiliary tray (B5L07A) for $300.

The overall quality of the X585z’s output is quite good. Aside from some slight striations that cleared up after a 15-minute first-, and 5-minute second-level deep-cleaning (HP’s terminology), photos looked quite nice. Color graphics on plain paper at default settings looked a tad light, but are fine for the average business document. Text is sharp and clear for an inkjet, though not quite at the level that Epson has taken things with its PrecisionCore printheads. All in all, it’s typical HP inkjet, with a slight pinkish cast to skin tones, and an otherwise elegant palette.

hp officejet pro x585 ink cartridges Image: Michael Homnick

Open a door on the front of the HP Officejet Enterprise Color Flow X585z Multifunction Printer, and the ink cartridges rise for easy access. 

The X585z’s large 980 series cartridges make for outstandingly low per-page ink costs. Using online pricing from Staples, the 10,000-page black costs $114, or 1.14 cents per page. The cyan, magenta and yellow cartridges cost $98 and last for 6600 pages, or 1.5 cents per color, per page. That makes a four-color page a mere 5.64 cents per page. Also, there are no drums, waste catches, or other laser consumables to worry about.

The X585z features a large 8-inch capacitive touch screen, and a slide-away keyboard (the z-model only) for controlling the unit locally. The whole deal is easy to use once you’re up to speed with the rather large array of functions. There’s a 320GB encrypted hard drive on board, so there are lots of things you can do with queues, previewing and storing scans, etc. Add secure printing, NFC, e-printing, multiple users, administrative tasks and the like, and a half-hour with the user guide will be time well spent. Me? I wing it, but that’s what I get paid for.

hp officejet pro x585 keyboard Image: Michael Homnick

A slideout keyboard makes data entry easy on the HP Officejet Enterprise Color Flow X585z Multifunction Printer.

Other models include the $1999 X585dn, which lacks the Z’s keyboard, fax, and ultrasonic double-feed detection. The $2299 X585f offers the faxing missing from the DN. All models are recommended for 2000 to 6000 pages a month. If you simply want the speed and low cost of operation, you can get in the game considerably cheaper with the $799 X555 printer.

The one area in which we weren’t particularly impressed with the X585z was one-year warranty. You can get up to five years, but you’ll pay over $1000 for it. As you’re already dropping a cool two-grand-plus, a one-year warranty, even if it includes onsite service, seems skimpy at best.

The X585z’s feature set, quality graphics output, capacity, and speed render it highly competitive with similarly-priced, enterprise-class laser printers. Said laser printers may offer slightly better text, but rarely compete on photos or the X585z’s price for four-color pages. Well worth a look. 


From PC World. Electronics product reviews and advice for best reference

Monday, June 18, 2012

HP Officejet 6600 e-All-in-One Printer Review: No Duplexing, No Dice

HP Officejet 6600 e-All-in-One Printer color inkjet multifunctionThe HP Officejet 6600 e-All-in-One Printer color inkjet multifunction (copy/scan/print/fax) is a puzzler, and a huge disappointment. Priced at $150 (as of June 11, 2012), it's handsome, it has an easy-to-use LCD control panel, and it offers excellent performance as well as decent output. However, for some bizarre reason HP has removed manual duplexing support--a simple software feature that allows relatively easy two-sided printing on printers that lack an automatic duplexer--from the printer driver.

HP has also removed multi-up (thumbnail pages) and every other kind of layout from the print driver. Such features are so commonplace that many consumers just assume that they are available. Put simply: $150 for a multifunction that won't help you print two-sided to save paper? I think not. For the same amount, you can buy a unit with automatic duplexing.

Still reading? The Officejet 6600 would be a nice midvolume office unit if not for the stunted driver. It has a 250-sheet input tray, a 75-sheet output tray, and a 35-sheet automatic document feeder for the A4/letter-size scanner. Despite the ADF, though, I found no option in the control panel to scan or copy in duplex.

The Officejet 6600's LCD is an odd duck, but ultimately it is satisfying. It's not a touchscreen, but a press-screen (resistive): You must depress the covering lightly, as you would with a membrane keyboard, to register selections. Once you get used to it, the tactile feedback is pleasing.

Other than the hobbled driver, the HP-provided software is quite good. It supports push-scanning (scanning from the control panel to a PC), as well as printing across the Internet via the company's ePrint service.

In our tests, text output from the Officejet 6600 was very nice--black and sharp. Photos printed to plain paper had a washed-out appearance. Glossy-paper photos exhibited a high level of contrast, which applied a slightly unrealistic cast to human faces; however, at least for nonhuman subjects, the high contrast evoked a sense of impact.

The Officejet 6600 is a good performer. In our tests, monochrome pages printed at 10 pages per minute on the PC and 9.6 ppm on the Mac. Snapshot-size (4-by-6-inch) photos printed to plain paper at 3.4 ppm and to glossy paper at about 1 ppm. Full page photos printed at 0.4 ppm, and copies exited quickly at 5.1 ppm.

As for consumables, the Officejet 6600 uses a four-cartridge ink system (cyan, magenta, yellow, black) that's basically average in cost with the regular-capacity supplies, but cheaper than most printers in this class when using the high-capacity cartridges. The regular, $20 black cartridge lasts for 400 pages, for a slightly below-average cost of 5 cents per page. The $11 cyan, magenta, and yellow cartridges each last for 330 pages, working out to 3.3 cents per page, per color. Add all of that up, and you get a slightly pricey 15 cents for a four-color page. The $32 XL black, on the other hand, lasts for 1000 pages (3.2 cents per page), and the $16 XL color cartridges each last for 825 pages (1.9 cents per page, per color). Nine cents for a four-color page is quite inexpensive. The unit ships with starter-size cartridges, which are the regular-size cartridges with some extra ink slated for use during the initialization process.

HP Officejet 6600: High-Yield Inks Are Very Economical

Despite good performance and cheap high-capacity supplies, a $150 multifunction without any sort of duplexing support should be avoided (unless you actually want to double your paper usage, mailing costs, storage space, and such). Instead, choose a like-priced competitor, such as the Canon Pixma MX512 or the Brother MFC-J825DW.


From PCWorld. Visit Amazon Computer and Notebook Center here

Thursday, March 29, 2012

HP Officejet 6700 Premium e-All-in-one Printer Review: Fast, Affordable Color

HP Officejet 6700 Premium e-All-in-One color inkjet multifunctionThe HP Officejet 6700 Premium e-All-in-One color inkjet multifunction (print/scan/copy/fax) offers many impressive capabilities, especially considering its affordable price of just $170 (as of March 28, 2012). Geared toward the needs of a midvolume home or small office (printing dozens, not hundreds, of pages per week), the Officejet 6700 Premium performs quickly and produces decent text and photos. Its inks, especially colors, are affordable in their high-yield versions.

The OfficeJet 6700 Premium is a triple treat, interface-wise: USB, ethernet, and Wi-Fi are all present. Setup is easy, and the software is the usual competent but easy-to-use HP suite, including optical character recognition.

The control panel is a 2.65-inch touchscreen color LCD with additional touch controls to each side. The only nontouch control is the power button. A USB port on the OfficeJet 6700 Premium's front allows you to offload scans or perform direct printing.

Highlights in paper handling include a roomy 250-sheet bottom-mounted paper tray (most of its competitors have 100- or 150-sheet trays) and a 75-sheet output tray, plus automatic duplexing. The flatbed scanner platen is your typical letter/A4-size offering, but the 35-sheet automatic document feeder above it can scan legal-size media and capture both sides of a two-sided document (one side at a time). Telescoping hinges for the scanner cover/ADF are the only things we missed.

The OfficeJet 6700 Premium's speed is peppy for the price range: In our tests the OfficeJet 6700 Premium reached a medium-fast rate of 10 pages per minute printing plain text on the PC and Mac platforms, and it posted average or faster speeds printing photos and color graphics. Only its scanning was significantly more sluggish than average.

Though the scans are slow, at least they look good: fairly accurate in color, not too choppy or dark. Print quality disappoints at default settings on plain paper, as text appears dark charcoal rather than black and slightly soft around the edges, while color images look orangey and fuzzy. Switching to a finer quality mode for text and photo paper for color improves matters considerably (and uses more ink). The draft mode is both faster and more readable than most.

The Officejet 6700 Premium uses a four-cartridge ink system that's costlier than average with the standard-capacity supplies, but considerably cheaper than average with the high-capacity cartridges. The normal $20 black that lasts for 400 pages works out to a rather pricey 5 cents per page. The $11 cyan, magenta, and yellow last for 330 pages, or 3.3 cents per page. That's a slightly above-average 15 cents per four-color page.

The high-yield cartridges include a 1000-page black for $32, or 3.2 cents per page, and 825–page colors for $16 each, which works out to 1.9 cents per page. That makes for a far more affordable, 9-cent four-color page. Text pages still cost about twice what you’ll pay with fancier models such as the HP Officejet Pro 8600 Plus.

Though the HP Officejet 6700 Premium falls a bit short in scanning capabilities and ink costs, it's otherwise a capable midpriced inkjet MFP. A similarly priced competitor, the Brother MFC-J825DW, offers CD/DVD printing and a two-year warranty (compared to the HP's one), but it also has a lower paper capacity and some higher ink prices.


From PCWorld. Visit Amazon Computer and Notebook Center here