HP’s Vivera inks and scaleable print technology have together improved the print quality and reduced the cost of the company’s ink-jet printers. The Photosmart D7160 is one of the latest beneficiaries and has a couple of other good features as well. Selling at around £80, it's surprising to see the range of facilities available.
This is a substantial printer, as large as some of HP’s entry-level, all-in-one machines. Coloured in white and two-tone grey, the printer has a fold-up, 61mm LCD display in its top, a series of well laid-out buttons for control of menus and print functions and a set of memory card readers below a curved, flip-up cover on the right.
HP’s Vivera inks and scaleable print technology have together improved the print quality and reduced the cost of the company’s ink-jet printers. The Photosmart D7160 is one of the latest beneficiaries and has a couple of other good features as well. Selling at around £80, it's surprising to see the range of facilities available.
This is a substantial printer, as large as some of HP’s entry-level, all-in-one machines. Coloured in white and two-tone grey, the printer has a fold-up, 61mm LCD display in its top, a series of well laid-out buttons for control of menus and print functions and a set of memory card readers below a curved, flip-up cover on the right.
The speed dropped to 3.3ppm when printing colour pages, though a 15 x 10cm print took just under a minute from a PC. The print time increased to two minutes when printing from an SD card or a PictBridge camera however, which is not so impressive. Despite HP's claim of a 12 second draft print mode, we could find no reference to this in any of the printer’s documentation.
Photo prints at best quality and on HPs Advanced Photo paper were very good, with exceptionally smooth transitions from shade to shade, high levels of detail and natural, well-reproduced colours. Prints on HPs Premium Plus glossy paper were a little grainy, though you have to look closely to see this.
Because of the permanent head arrangement in this printer, it takes more time to service its heads, including during longer print jobs, than earlier machines with cartridge-based heads. It's reminiscent of Epson printers in this respect. We also saw frequent ‘paper out’ messages, when there was plenty of paper in its tray. Pressing ‘OK’ continued the print, but it meant we couldn’t leave the machine unattended. We assume this was a fault with the specific review sample.
The cheapest way to buy ink for the Photosmart D7160 is in a six-pack, complete with 150 sheets of photo paper, for around £25. If you're going to be printing a lot of mono pages, there's a high-yield black cartridge, as well as the standard-yield one, and this works out cheaper per page. However, we managed to get over 1,000, 5 per cent A4 pages from the normal yield cartridge, giving a cost per page of just 1.33p, which is very good for an inkjet printer.
Colour ink cartridge costs give a 30 er cent A4 page cost of 53.7p, which is a lot less attractive. However, this is on A4 photo paper and an equivalent print on a 15 x 10cm blank would be a lot cheaper.
Verdict
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