HP OfficeJet 6310 All-in-One
Manufacturer: HP Part number: Q8061A
- More product information:
- Editors' review
- User reviews
- Specifications
- Accessories
- Manufacturer info
- Bottom Line:
- The HP OfficeJet 6310 offers lots of features to home users but falls short in the face of its competition. There are better all-in-ones for your home office.
Read more
Where to buy
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|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amazon.com Marketplace | ![]() | In stock | Enter zip code to get total price: Price +Tax +Shipping =Total price | as of 12/08/2009 |
CNET editors' review
HP OfficeJet 6310 All-in-One price range: $249.95
- Reviewed by: Felisa Yang
- Edited by: Matthew Elliott
- Reviewed on: 10/13/2006
The good: Automatic document feeder; built-in media slots and PictBridge port; low profile; network ready; great color scans.
The bad: Slow text prints and scans; mediocre print quality; limited feature options.
The bottom line: The HP OfficeJet 6310 offers lots of features to home users but falls short in the face of its competition. There are better all-in-ones for your home office.
Design
The OfficeJet 6310's small form factor is a perfect fit for space-challenged homes and small offices. It measures just 18 inches wide, 15.3 inches deep, and 9.3 inches tall, and it weighs a mere 12 pounds. The flatbed scanner is big enough for originals up to A4 in size, but the built-in automatic document feeder lets you scan legal-size originals. The ADF can hold up to 35 pages, great for batch scanning, copying, or faxing.
Despite the office-oriented nature of this printer, it comes with media card slots and a USB port for PictBridge cameras, camera phones, or USB flash drives for PC-free photo printing. You can even transfer pictures between a media card and a flash drive without touching your computer. Accepted media cards include xD, CompactFlash, Memory Stick, and Secure Digital, among others. Some may require an adapter, which HP does not provide. You can also use the USB port with a Bluetooth adapter for printing wireless from a PDA or a cell phone, but you'll have to buy a separate adapter offered by HP.
The OfficeJet 6310's paper-handling options are limited. The input/output tray juts out of the front of the machine's body, with the output tray sitting atop the input tray. The input tray can hold up to 100 sheets of regular paper, and although there's no reason you can't use legal-size paper, the input tray lacks a paper support. Long sheets of paper will hang over the edge of the tray. On the other hand, the output tray has an extension flap and an extra flap that folds out to corral long prints. We'd like to see a second input tray for the occasional one-off print.
The control panel is very similar to other HP control panels we've looked at recently. Each function--scan, copy, fax, photo--has its own set of buttons, including start and menu. The fax section includes an alphanumeric keypad, five one-touch dial buttons, a speed-dial button, a junk-fax blocker, and an auto-answer button. The copy area includes a reduce/enlarge button and another that lets you toggle copy quality (best, normal, fast). Although HP's site says that the reduce/enlarge feature gives you a range of 25 to 400 percent, we found only a range of preset resizings, such as full page, legal to letter, actual size, fit to page, and fill entire page. The photo section has only a print photos button and a proof sheet button (in addition to the menu button), and the scan area, likewise, has only a scan-to button. In addition to all the task areas, the control panel includes a two-line, backlit text LCD and forward, back, OK, and cancel buttons. One oddity that we found is that in order to scroll through the main options in each menu, you have to press the menu button repeatedly, then use the forward and back keys to see the options for each submenu. It's more intuitive to press the menu button once to access the menu and use the forward and back keys to scroll through each menu and submenu. It's not a difficult thing to figure out, but it's not entirely intuitive either.
The OfficeJet 6310 employs a two-ink-tank design: one is a tricolor tank and the other is a black only. For printing six-color photographs, you can swap out the black tank for an additional tricolor photo ink tank. Changing ink tanks is simple: just lift up on the control panel and the printhead will slide into view. Pop out each tank and insert the replacement tanks into the labeled slots. The regular-capacity black tank (5mL) costs $15, while the high-capacity black tank (11mL) costs $20 to replace; the tricolor tank costs $25 and comes in only one size. (The high-capacity tanks are usually a better deal than the regular capacity ones.)
Features
The HP OfficeJet 6310 can be used as a stand-alone printer via USB or a networked printer via Ethernet, and it works with both Macs and PCs. Installing the printer is a straightforward, if time-consuming, task. (HP printers tend to take a long time to set up because they install a huge amount of software.) This model lacks a duplexer, so double-sided printing is a manual operation.
Like most office all-in-ones, the OfficeJet 6310 includes a fax function. The faxes are scanned on the flatbed scanner or via the ADF. The included hard-copy user guide walks you through all the setup variations, depending on what type of line you have, what components (answering machine, for example), and how you want to handle incoming calls and faxes. The fax options are limited for an office-oriented device; while you can fax multipage documents using the ADF, you don't have the option of setting up a delayed fax or doing a fax blast on the fly. You can, using HP's Solution Center, program individual or group speed-dial numbers, but if you want to do a one-off blast, you can't just key in multiple numbers on the printer; you'll have to set up a speed dial group. When receiving faxes, you have the option of holding incoming faxes in memory and printing them later, but you can't password-protect this task, thereby negating any security you might gain from holding the faxes. If you subscribe to caller ID, you can add phone numbers to a junk-fax list stored in the OfficeJet 6310. Incoming faxes from those numbers won't be printed. Finally, you can forward faxes coming into your machine to another fax machine, convenient if you're away from your office for a while. The Brother MFC-440cn offers better fax options, including delayed fax and broadcast fax.
When making copies, you can make up to 100 copies at once, reduce/enlarge the originals, adjust print quality, select paper size and type, and enhance the copy by indicating the type of original (text, photo, mixed). Unlike the aforementioned Canon models and the Brother MFC-440cn, this model doesn't have advanced options, such as 4-on-1 or 2-on-1 copies, poster copies, or image restore. The scan function has a few more options. When initiating a scan from the printer, you can scan to a number of programs, such as Word, PowerPoint, and Paint; scan to e-mail; or scan and view the document in a number of HP programs, such as Photosmart Share or Document Viewer. You can also save the scan as a file, but it always defaults to JPEG format. If you initiate the scan from HP's Solution Center, you have more options, such as changing settings, such as resolution; scanning to a number of different formats (TIFF, PDF, bitmap); and turning on optical character recognition, which will scan your original as an editable document.
When printing photos directly from a media card, you can opt to print one or multiple copies of all your photos. Alternately, you can key in the number of just a single photo, though you'll have to print a photo index first to figure out the photo number, as the OfficeJet 6310 doesn't have a preview LCD. If you're printing a photo index anyway, the other option is to bubble in the photos you want printed, choose your layout (4x6 or multiple photos on a single page--up to six), and scan the index sheet. One drawback to HP's implementation of the index sheet (as opposed to Canon's) is that you can't print multiple copies of a photo via the index sheet. Using the photo print menu, you can designate the type and size of your paper, add a date stamp, and print multiple photos (up to 9) on a single page.
Performance
The HP OfficeJet 6310 was a middle-of-the-road performer in CNET Labs' tests. It printed text at a sluggish 2.86 pages per minute, on a par with the Brother MFC-440cn but far behind the Canon MP530 and MP830 office all-in-ones. On the graphics print test, it did better, scoring 2.16ppm, just behind both Canons and ahead of the Brother unit. Photo printing was its forte: it printed a 4x6 photo at a rate of 0.85ppm; only the Canon MP830 was faster. Unfortunately, the OfficeJet really stumbled when it came to the scan and copy speed tests. It scanned grayscale and color documents at 3.86ppm and 1.61ppm, respectively, and made only 1.43 copies per minute.
(Longer bars indicate better performance)
| Copy speed | Color scan speed | Grayscale scan speed | Photo speed | Text speed |
The OfficeJet 6310 also displayed middling quality. The text, though nicely dark, suffered from rough edges and some inconsistencies in letter formation. We saw similar problems in the color graphics print: fuzzy edges and slightly blurry quality. It did a pretty good job with color reproduction, and color blocks were nicely saturated but showed some graininess we didn't like. It handled grayscale and color gradients pretty well, too. The photo elements showed noticeable graininess, though the color, again, was fairly accurate. The printer ran into its worst problem with white text on a colored background; the text quickly became blurry and unreadable at small type sizes. The 4x6 photo print again showed noticeable graininess and slightly washed-out colors. We'd prefer better quality, even for simple snapshots, but the photo quality should be fine for casual business use for fields such as insurance or real estate.
The OfficeJet 6310 fared a bit better in scans, especially the color scan. Colors were true and details were sharply rendered. In the grayscale scans, it handled patterns well but showed some compression at both ends of the grayscale, especially the dark end. This resulted in lost details in shadow areas. The Canon Pixma MP530 demonstrated better quality across the board.
(Longer bars indicate better performance)
| Color scan | Grayscale scan | Photo | Graphics on inkjet paper | Text on inkjet paper |
Service and support
HP backs the OfficeJet 6310 All-in-One with an industry-standard one-year warranty. While it's under warranty, you can get free, toll-free phone support 24/7, which is generous. HP's Web site has downloadable drivers, software, and manuals; e-mail tech support; online chat with tech support; FAQs; and a troubleshooting guide.
User reviews
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Sleak design; easy to use; great value;
by HRNL on May 26, 2006
Pros: Sleak design; easy to set up and operate; network capable
Cons: Noisy operation; paper tray could hold more paper and be easier to access
Summary: Great value for home or small office! Very simple integration into wired or wireless network. Up and running in 5 minutes. Looks good and is a real space saver.
Summary: Great value for home or small office! Very simple integration into wired or wireless network. Up and running in 5 minutes. Looks good and is a real space saver.
6 out of 7 users found this user opinion helpful.
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Simply Superb
by ChinuSFO on April 30, 2006
Pros: Great value for a networked printer
Cons: None so far
Summary: Went to the store and bought one. Installed like a charm on a Win 2000 Professional OS. Followed the on screen installation instructions to the letter and it installed like ...
Summary: Went to the store and bought one. Installed like a charm on a Win 2000 Professional OS. Followed the on screen installation instructions to the letter and it installed like a charm. The best value printer for home applications in the market today.
3 out of 5 users found this user opinion helpful.
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2008-09 DO NOT BUY THIS PRINTER!!!!!
by sheba94601 on January 3, 2009
Pros: Got it in Nov 2008. I installed this on my brand new laptop. I was only able to make copies. Someone bought this printer for me brand new so I didnt get to research b4 getting it.Well I've researched alright & found....(read below)
Cons: ..alot of ppl w/ the updates service pack 3 'or/and' IE 7 & 8 are having alot of problems w/ this printer after the update, such as me. Also after googling I found that many had issues in 06 & 07 also. They say were not allowed to include links
Summary: I've read many complaints from ppl who have spent 3,4 hrs on the ph w/ HP techs that could barely speak english only to end up w/out ...
Summary: I've read many complaints from ppl who have spent 3,4 hrs on the ph w/ HP techs that could barely speak english only to end up w/out a resolution at all. One person in NY Times Reviews said the techs dont even know how to resolve problems w/ this printer & eventually was told by the super that this printer can't fax from the computer. Also many can't get it to scan & most all said they're returning it which is what I will have to do.
2 out of 3 users found this user opinion helpful.
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Major Disappointment
by genesis51 on November 5, 2007
Pros: When it works it's good
Cons: It usually doesn't work
Summary: I've owned HP for years. This unit is going back.
After hogging almost an absurd 800MB of hard drive space, the scanning feature keeps crashing and hanging up the ...Summary: I've owned HP for years. This unit is going back.
After hogging almost an absurd 800MB of hard drive space, the scanning feature keeps crashing and hanging up the entire machine. The feeder stalls half way. It's useless.
I spent over three hours and six restarts of my system trying to scan in important legal documents that will need to be delayed now.
I've used HP for over 12 years but this one needs to go back to the techs, recalled with apologies or trashed.
Sorry HP. You lost me on this one.Updated
Part I
I've owned HP for years. This unit is going back.
After hogging almost an absurd 800MB of hard drive space, the scanning feature keeps crashing and hanging up the entire machine. The feeder stalls half way. It's useless.
I spent over three hours and six restarts of my system trying to scan in important legal documents that will need to be delayed now.
I've used HP for over 12 years but this one needs to go back to the techs, recalled with apologies or trashed.
Sorry HP. You lost me on this one.
Part II
I don't like giving up and I wanted to give this unit one more try ? especially after owning HP products back to the 550 series. I really wanted this printer to work.
However, I give up. I unloaded and loaded the software again and then again. Same problems only worse. I even called tech support and got some guy whose Indian accent was so bloody strong I couldn't understand him. He kept asking me for extraneous personal contact information and put me on hold THREE times before I even got to my question. I just hung up. Another 2.5 hours burned. The 6310xi unit still won't scan and keeps hanging up at the main screen for all functions.
I'm returning the unit tonight.
To add insult, HP deems it necessary to leave software traces on your hard drive even after you uninstall their two tons of "promoware."
Looking over the Cnet reviews of the other HP products shows a sad pattern of unhappy owners.
Dave Hewlett and Dave Packard. Your baby has lost it's charm and is in obvious need of discipline.2 out of 3 users found this user opinion helpful.
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Not sure is worse: The speed, support, or software
by elmorutt on April 11, 2008
Pros: Good print quality, cheap enough
Cons: Software is the worst, has never scanned correctly
Summary: 1. The software is the biggest kludge I've seen in a long time. It has never worked, and that means the scanning is almost useless. When you scan a ...
Summary: 1. The software is the biggest kludge I've seen in a long time. It has never worked, and that means the scanning is almost useless. When you scan a document it gobbles up 120+ MB of memory and generates weird Windows messages.
2. Once support had me disable my firewall, anti-spam, anti-virus, startup items, and clicked on an obscure .exe file, they INSISTED that the problem was "fixed." One reboot and the problem came back.
3. This thing is slow as can be when copying or scanning. Really beyond anything you might expect.1 out of 1 users found this user opinion helpful.
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By far the best printer I've owned
by SiliconValleyDude on February 18, 2008
Pros: Easy, quick setup. Plays well with Vista. Network printing a snap
Cons: Zero from me.
Summary: This is my sixth printer -- my third all-in-one -- and it is by far the best of any printer I've owned. I'm surprised to see so many ...
Summary: This is my sixth printer -- my third all-in-one -- and it is by far the best of any printer I've owned. I'm surprised to see so many poor reviews here on the HP 6310. In my case, you can read my own review through the eyes of someone with a small home-network, who values dependability (#1), ease-of-use and quick setups as the primary factors behind my ratings. I am less concerned with picture-perfect print quality and a few extra pages-per-minute print speed. As I type this, I have owned my HP Officejet 6310 for six months.
Having put my review into proper context, I could not ask for a better, more dependable and easy-to-use all-in-one printer than the HP 6310. Everything just works. We PC users know of the maddening world of crossing our fingers when working with Microsoft operating systems and other PC software, whereas the informed minority Apple Faithful have for years loved the simplicity and works-right-out-of-the-box comfort that comes with Apple products.
That is the feeling I've had with the HP printer. I had feared that the 6310 would not play well with my new notebook, which runs on Vista. Everything has worked flawlessly, including my notebook right away finding the new printer on the wireless network and the fax easy to set up and such a great luxury to have, even if I've only used it three times in six months. The copier is great for light office use, although obviously it would NOT be an efficient, let alone cost-effective, all-in-one printer to use in a busy office setting.
I went with this printer as an upgrade to my previous printer, the HP 5610. I was so impressed with the 5610 but wanted wireless printing, so I went with its big brother -- the HP Officejet 6310. The fact that HP has kept this product on the shelf for so long in this age of always putting out new models has me thinking it (and the 5610) have been very successful and popular printers for the company. This is one tech purchase that has had nothing but great results and zero complaints from this home-office user.1 out of 1 users found this user opinion helpful.
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Do not buy this printer! I have had it for 6 months.. read on
by Stellyx` on January 10, 2008
Pros: cheap, cheap.. bah who am i kidding its horrible!
Cons: software, setup, multiple errors
Summary: Ok so i bought this printer 6 months ago and the setup is (please trust me please) HORRIBLE.
It is so bad i forwent the setup entirely, hooked it up ...Summary: Ok so i bought this printer 6 months ago and the setup is (please trust me please) HORRIBLE.
It is so bad i forwent the setup entirely, hooked it up to the network and i have to use internet explorer to conntect (for scans and interface) by the way if you have bought this piece of total crap that is how you setup.
Just connect an ethernet wire to your router and to the printer and look under settings (on the printer) to print out network seetings and use the ip address to connect to the junk you have purchased.
But none of this matters cause in a month or so its gonna start giving you major errors (paper jam, cartridge jam, etc) WHEN THERE ARE NONE.
typing may make this sound as if im angry, i am not i just need to get my point across as to how completely usless it is to spend your money on this printer. BTW i bought four two for my office and two for upstairs and downstairs of my home. They all died of the same symptoms.
If just one of you does not buy this printer i will feel better about myself.1 out of 1 users found this user opinion helpful.
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Fax from PC will NOT work, directly from HP support
by dsimpson84 on September 6, 2007
Pros: prints black fast, ADF, price, network
Cons: software, functionality, reliability
Summary: I have owned nothing but HP for more than twenty years. I am a computer consultant and have over twenty years experience. The 6310 itself seems to be a good ...
Summary: I have owned nothing but HP for more than twenty years. I am a computer consultant and have over twenty years experience. The 6310 itself seems to be a good unit for the price, but once you try to begin working with the software the bottom falls out. I spent over four hours getting the software installed, much of this time I was on the phone with HP support. Functions as a printer ok, can scan multi-page documents to PC ok, but don't try to fax from your PC. Installation will create a 6310 printer fax icon and will allow to you to print to it. Nevertheless, the fax will never go through, took HP support three hours to finally tell me this. After we had been on the phone all this time, sent and received several other types of test faxes. The guy simply said, "We do not support faxing from a PC, other than the cover page."!!! I spoke with a manager, he said faxing the cover page is considered faxing. It makes no difference if you connect the 6310 to a network or use USB you cannot fax from your PC. A primary reason for buying the 6310 is to fax from a PC on the network. The last HP all-in-one I bought had mega software bugs, luckily, Windows XP came along and I did not have to use the HP software to make it work. However, this time I will not wait. HP has known of this problem for over two years, and not done anything to resolve it. I do not think they have the quality of people to produce good software and the hardware is getting weaker and suffering because of it. I am looking for something other than HP at this point, and this junk HP 6310 is going back to the store!
1 out of 1 users found this user opinion helpful.
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Network Installation is Tough!
by OneofFour on June 24, 2007
Pros: Nice looking, compact unit, all the usual features. Price.
Cons: Set-up took over 4 hours; broke the wireless keyboard
Summary: I'm an HP fan, and I still am--but this is a difficult (network) installation. I replaced a beloved HP 6110 and chose between the HP 6180 and this one. ...
Summary: I'm an HP fan, and I still am--but this is a difficult (network) installation. I replaced a beloved HP 6110 and chose between the HP 6180 and this one. This won because of size, color, and price. The 6180 was higher rated, but it's just too ugly for my office. If you buy this one and connect it to your network connection, do the following: turn off the firewall, screen saver, and have a standard (non-wireless keyboard and mouse) available. It took over 4 hours to finally get the unit installed, and only after it had wasted my wireless set-up. Having said that, the unit is up and operating well. It does not have the "presence" of the 6110. But, in the fast draft mode, it is very quick as a printer--faster than the 6110. The scan is slow as noted elsewhere. All in all, it boils down to what you want, but given the dichotomy in ratings for this device I'd suggest you start with the USB install; the network install is grim. (My wireless keyboard is still out; hours to go!)
1 out of 1 users found this user opinion helpful.
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No longer an HP customer
by jk55337 on April 17, 2007
Pros: Hardware appears new; no missing pieces; scanner sort of does something
Cons: Software makes this unusable, even after upgrade
Summary: First of all, let me say that I have owned nothing but HP printers/all-in-one's in the past. I've considered them to be pretty decent/reliable.
With that ...Summary: First of all, let me say that I have owned nothing but HP printers/all-in-one's in the past. I've considered them to be pretty decent/reliable.
With that being said I was excited to get the 6310 after my 6110 finally died on me. I remember it having some software problems too...but the 6310 takes the cake!
I installed it 2 days ago and have had nothing but problems with it. I've had the following problems:
1. Software causes Windows system errors- every time windows boots up, I get DEP execution prevention errors, system32 svchost errors, and my system bogs waaaaay down. I even updated it to the "latest" software- nope. No effect.
2. Software bugs too numerous to count. Did they even TRY to test this software out in the real world? I mean, it's terrible. I'll just give a taste. For instance, when I try to scan using Adobe Acrobat 7 with the original on the glass, HP pops up an error telling me that originals have been removed from glass. Hard to say why this is as nothing is stuck in the feeder, nor has anything ever been in the feeder. Very annoying.
3. I tried repairing Windows- BIG NO NO for this software. I lost all the settings for it. It no longer was recognized on the network. I had to uninstall it/reinstall every time I wanted to change something. FYI this takes about 60 minutes to install on a pentium core duo. Windows only takes a couple minutes more.
4. tech support is worthless. I know a bit about computers and diagnosing hardware problems. There are too many problems here to even know where to begin.
My HP days are over.1 out of 1 users found this user opinion helpful.
Specifications
- Manufacturer: HP
- Part number: Q8061A
- Description: The HP OfficeJet 6310 All-in-One is primed for meeting all your home document and photo printing needs. The OfficeJet 6310 All-in-One offers printing and copying at up to 30 pages per minute in black and 24 pages in color, built-in Ethernet networking, a 35-page automatic document feeder, and a junk fax barrier.
General
- Copier Type Digital
- Fax Type Plain paper
- Printing Technology Ink-jet - Color
- Monthly Duty Cycle (max) 3000 impressions
- Display 2 lines
- Width 18 in
- Depth 12.8 in
- Height 9.3 in
- Weight 17 lbs
- Localization French / Canada, English / United States
Memory
- Standard Memory 64 MB
- Max Supported Memory 64 MB
- Supported Flash Memory miniSD, CompactFlash, Memory Stick, MultiMediaCard, SD Memory Card, xD-Picture Card, Memory Stick Duo, Memory Stick Pro
Copying
- Max Copying Speed up to 30 pages/min (mono) / up to 24 pages/min (color)
- Max Copying Resolution up to 600 x 1200 dpi (mono) / up to 4800 x 1200 dpi (color)
- Max Document Enlargement 400 %
- Max Document Reduction 25 %
- Maximum Copies 100
Printing
- Inkjet Technology HP Thermal Inkjet
- Max Printing Resolution up to 1200 x 1200 dpi (mono) / up to 4800 x 1200 dpi (color)
- Max Printing Speed up to 30 pages/min (mono) / up to 24 pages/min (color)
- Color 4 or 6-ink
- Printer Drivers / Emulations LIDIL, PCL 3
Scanning
- Optical Resolution 2400 x 4800 dpi
- Interpolated Resolution 19200 x 19200 dpi
- Gray Scale Depth 8 bit
- Color Depth 48 bit
Fax Machine
- Compatibility Super G3
- Max Transmission Speed 33.6 Kbps
- Fax Resolutions 200 x 200 dpi, 203 x 196 dpi, 300 x 300 dpi
- Total Memory Capacity 100 pages
- PC Faxing Yes (send only)
Fax Machine Features
- Error Correction Mode (ECM) Yes
- Telephone / Fax Switch Yes
- Features Fax forwarding, Automatic redialing, Distinctive Ring Pattern Detection (DRPD)
Document & Media Handling
- Max Original Size Legal (8.5 in x 14 in)
- Original Type Sheets
- Document Feeder Capacity 35 sheets
- Max Copy Size 8.5 in x 24 in
- Supported Media Type Cards, Banner, Labels, Envelopes, Photo paper, Plain paper, Transparencies, Iron-on transfers
- Borderless Photo Sizes 4 in x 6 in, 5 in x 7 in, 4 in x 10 in, 4 in x 11 in, 4 in x 12 in, 8 in x 10 in
- Standard Media Capacity 100 sheets
- Output Trays Capacity 50 sheets
- Document & Media Handling Details Input tray - 100 sheets - Legal (8.5 in x 14 in), Output tray - 50 sheets - Legal (8.5 in x 14 in), ADF - 35 sheets - Legal (8.5 in x 14 in)
- Speed Details Copying : up to 30 pages/min - B/W fast, Copying : up to 24 pages/min - Color fast, Printing : up to 30 pages/min - B/W draft, Printing : up to 24 pages/min - Color draft, Printing : up to 11 pages/min - B/W fast normal, Printing : up to 8 pages/min - Color fast normal, Printing : up to 8.5 pages/min - B/W normal, Printing : up to 5.3 pages/min - Color normal, Printing : up to 2.3 pages/min - B/W best, Printing : up to 2.3 pages/min - Color best, Printing : up to 2 pages/min ( 4 in x 6 in ) - Photo draft, Printing : up to 2 pages/min ( 4 in x 6 in ) - Photo fast normal, Printing : up to 1.1 pages/min ( 4 in x 6 in ) - Photo normal, Printing : up to 0.8 pages/min ( 4 in x 6 in ) - Photo best, Copying : up to 8.5 pages/min - B/W normal, Copying : up to 5.1 pages/min - Color normal, Copying : up to 0.8 pages/min - B/W best, Copying : up to 0.8 pages/min - Color best
PC Connectivity
- PC Connection Availability Yes
- PC Connection Hi-Speed USB, Ethernet 10 Base-T/100 Base-TX
- Operating System Support MS Windows XP, Apple Mac OS X 10.3, Apple Mac OS X 10.4, Apple Mac OS X 10.2.8, MS Windows 2000 SP3 or later, MS Windows XP Professional x64 Edition
Power
- Power AC 110/230 V ( 50/60 Hz )
- Power Consumption Operational 60 Watt
Miscellaneous
- Direct Printing Specifications PictBridge
- Consumables Included Cartridge ( Black ), Cartridge ( Color )
- Microsoft Certifications Certified for Windows Vista
- Compliant Standards FCC Part 68
Manufacturer Warranty
- Service & Support 1 year warranty
- Service & Support Details Limited warranty - 1 year
Environmental Parameters
- Min Operating Temperature 41 °F
- Max Operating Temperature 104 °F
- Humidity Range Operating 15 - 85%
CNET Labs' Benchmarks
- CNET Labs Color Scanning Speed Test (pages per minute) 1.61
- CNET Labs Gray Scale Scanning Speed Test (pages per minute) 3.86
- CNET Labs Photo Speed Test (pages per minute) 0.85
- CNET Labs Presentation Speed Test (pages per minute) 2.44
- CNET Labs Printer Graphics Speed Test (pages per minute) 2.16
- CNET Labs Text Speed Test (pages per minute) 2.86
Accessories
- HP Wireless G Print Server - print server (33089287)79.45 - 173.36
- IRON ON T SHIRT TRANSFERS 10 SHT PK (357416)10.99 - 17.02
- HP bt500 Network Adapter (32815407)19.99
- HP Premium Plus Photo Paper - matte photo paper - 50 sheet(s) (30643498)24.99 - 36.52
- HP Brochure and Flyer Paper - matte photo paper - 100 sheet(s) (30568556)12.96 - 24.32
Manufacturer info
- HP
- Manufacturer profile
- Browse HP products on Shopper.com
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- Website: http://www.hp.com
- Address:
3000 Hanover Street, Palo Alto, CA 94304-1185



