Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta psc. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta psc. Mostrar todas las entradas

viernes, 31 de agosto de 2007

HP PSC 1610 All-in-One

The good: Easy-to-use walk-up or computer-controlled printing, scanning, and copying; slick look; low price, digital memory cards and PictBridge port.

The bad: Slow; no photo preview LCD, automatic document feeder, or two-sided printing; fair scans; requires ink swapping.

The bottom line: The HP 1610 all-in-one is well suited for an individual or a family that will use color scanning and copying only occasionally.

The shiny, silvery HP PSC 1610 all-in-one printer, scanner, and copier looks good enough to sit in a Tiffany shop, but some of its other attributes are less than stellar. Designed for use in the home, the 1610 all-in-one lacks a fax machine but features a full set of built-in media slots to keep the family photographer happy. Other members of your tribe who need good scans or quick photocopies might be impatient and less satisfied. Still, patience has its rewards, and though not fast, the 1610 is a perfectly capable text printer that excels at color graphics and makes photo printing easy. Anyone looking for a personal photo inkjet with a few extra skills should consider the HP 1610, but try the Brother MFC-420CN if you demand networking and an automatic document feeder (ADF). If you have a bigger budget, the Dell 962 gives you faxing and an ADF without built-in camera card slots, and the HP Photosmart 2710 has all that with photo card slots, too.

Design of HP PSC 1610 All-in-One

Just when you expect every computer peripheral to be black and gray, the HP PSC 1610 all-in-one enters the market with an all-silver, gleaming suit of plastic armor. The light, polished exterior well suits this device's 12-pound daintiness and slim, 17.2-by-14.3-by-8.1-inch (W,D,H) size. The top slopes forward like the hood of a car, so you can easily open the scanner lid or inspect the control panel from your desk chair. The 1610's control panel has a pop-up, two-line, 32-character backlit LCD, so if you must preview and print photos without bothering with your computer, you'll want a different multifunction; check out the color LCD on the HP PSC 2355 all-in-one or the Lexmark P6250 instead.

Four tiers of buttons on the HP PSC 1610 cover standalone tasks, so you can print photos or proofs from your digital camera or media cards, scan, and make reductions or enlargements to color or black-and-white copies. In front of the machine, the media card slots and the PictBridge port, which plug into enabled digital cameras, are helpfully labeled.

The flatbed scanner lid easily disengages from its hinges in case you want to scan books, photo albums, or thick magazines. Pull it up below the front of the lid to reach the ink cartridges. The 1610 holds two cartridges at a time, and though they slide in and out of the machine stiffly, you don't have to open levers or push buttons to access them. You'll have to buy your own photo ink and swap it out with the black tank when you print photos, an annoying yet common hassle on all-in-ones lately.

At its base, the 1610's paper tray holds 100 sheets of incoming paper and 50 sheets of completed prints. However, as the two trays are really just one tray divided by two plastic separators and an extender, you should empty the output frequently to avoid paper jams. You can adjust the input tray to fit 10 envelopes, postcards, or label sheets or 15 transparencies or sheets of photo paper, but all media travels through the same curved paper path. The rear clean-out cover in the back opens for paper jams only, so as with other cheap inkjets, you'll have to live without the straight exit path that would prevent unusual media from bending.

Features of HP PSC 1610 All-in-One

The HP PSC 1610 all-in-one comes with most features that home users desire in a do-it-all photo machine, minus one: you can't preview images on its text LCD. Still, you can use this printer without a computer for some functions: just lift the lid and drop a document onto the 8.5-by-11.7-inch glass bed to make photocopies or to scan images at 1,200x4,800dpi to a memory card. Sans your PC, you can also print from PictBridge or HP digital cameras or straight from digital cards, including CompactFlash, SmartMedia, Memory Stick, Secure Digital, and xD.

The HP 1610 hooks up to Mac OS 9.1 and up and works with Windows 98 through XP. It took us less than 10 minutes, using Windows XP, to load the drivers and the software. You can choose between two installation types: Full, which loads 780MB worth of programs on your hard drive, and Express, which demands 365MB. If you already have photo organizing or editing software and don't want to load the 266MB ImageZone, you can't reject this program without also giving up the OCR (optical character recognition) scanning software--though you can uninstall ImageZone later.

If you're using a computer with the 1610, just plug in your camera card or cable to summon ImageZone to enhance the powers of the 1610: you can even use it to transform your images into stickers, posters, calendars, iron-on transfers, and more once you buy the creative materials. If you're online, you can send photos to friends through HP's Instant Share e-mail program--but you might prefer to use a personal e-mail program than to bother with HP's cluttered, self-promotional template.

For printing and copying, the HP 1610 comes with one black and one three-color ink cartridge, but you'll have to buy your own photo tank for $24.99. Color ink estimated to last 260 pages costs the same, and a black cartridge for 450 text pages runs $19.99. According to these numbers, the price of an 8x10 page is 4 cents for black and nearly 10 cents for color, more than the vendor estimates for, say, the penny-per-page black and 2-cents-per-page color of the Canon MP780, which uses individual inks. You can also buy a pair of tricolor HP cartridges for $79.99 with 280 sheets of 4x6 photo paper, which the company estimates will average about 29 cents per snapshot.

Performance of HP PSC 1610 All-in-One

For its affordable price, no one should expect the HP PSC 1610 all-in-one to be a speed demon, and it's not. On text, the HP 1610 printed a below-average 4.79 pages per minute (ppm), quite behind the Dell 962's nimble 7.46ppm. The 1610 printed out an 8x10 photo at the rate of 0.29ppm, or one every 3.45 minutes, faster than the Dell 962, but by no means quick. The HP 1610's scanning speed was lethargic, ditto for its copying pace.

Quality
The HP PSC 1610 all-in-one turned in a decent performance in CNET Labs' tests. With inkjet paper, the HP 1610 created good-quality, dark black bold text that was easy to read, though less than crisp around the edges up close--typical for an inkjet. Color graphics on inkjet paper were good, with smooth gradients, well-detailed graphical elements, and pale but otherwise accurate colors.

Printed on HP's glossy photo paper, the 1610 re-created our test photo well, though skin tones were slightly cool due to an overdose of cyan. An overall pale and fuzzy appearance detracted from its score. Upon close inspection, a faint area of horizontal banding could be seen at the very bottom of the 8x10-inch photo. None of the suggestions on HP's Web site remedied this for us, but you can avoid this potential glitch by printing photos with a 0.75-inch border. Scans were only fair; both color and black-and-white test files suffered from paleness, a dearth of crisp details, and incompletely rendered gradients.

CNET Labs' all-in-one speed tests
(Longer bars indicate better performance)
Copy
Color scan
Grayscale scan
Photo
Text
Dell 962
1.42
6.09
6.55
0.19
7.46
HP Photosmart 2710
3.27
4.63
4.79
0.26
7
Canon Pixma MP780
3.39
7.04
7.04
0.57
5.96
HP PSC 1610 all-in-one
1.15
3.12
3.11
0.29
4.79
Brother MFC-420CN
2.27
3.1
2.95
0.15
3.19


CNET Labs' all-in-one quality tests
(Longer bars indicate better performance)
Color scan
Grayscale scan
Photo
Graphics
Text
HP Photosmart 2710
Fair
Fair
Excellent
Good
Excellent
Canon Pixma MP780
Good
Good
Good
Excellent
Fair
HP PSC 1610 all-in-one
Fair
Fair
Good
Good
Good
Brother MFC-420CN
Fair
Fair
Good
Good
Good
Dell 962
Fair
Fair
Good
Fair
Good

Click here to learn more about how CNET Labs tests printers.

Service and support of HP PSC 1610 All-in-One

The HP PSC 1610 all-in-one comes with an industry-standard, one-year warranty, with toll-free, bilingual, 24/7 telephone support. You also get a five-color, printed quick-setup guide; a thorough, 130-page user guide; and an HP ImageZone help guide on CD-ROM. The help guide includes a detailed troubleshooting section that covers all of the HP 1610's main functions.

If that's not enough, there's a vast array of help at HP's Web site, including troubleshooting tips, answers to FAQs, setup and installation procedures, product information, and opportunities to chat online with a technician or to e-mail tech support.

HP PSC 1510 All-in-One

The good: Standalone copying; flatbed scanner with removable lid; PictBridge compatible; 24/7 support; Windows and Mac compatible.

The bad: Flimsy printout management; manual ink swapping for photo prints; awkward control panel; no control-panel photo preview.

The bottom line: This capable multifunction cuts corners on convenience, but the $99 price is right.

The HP PSC 1510 all-in-one printer has some nice touches, including a removable flatbed scanner lid, standalone copying, a PictBridge camera port, and unbeatable 24-hour support. But in exchange for the low purchase price, you'll suffer sluggish photo printing and having to manually swap ink cartridges. You may also need to put up with some design problems, such as a flimsy output tray and a confusing control panel. But if you're a photo hobbyist and have a PictBridge-compatible digital camera, this is a fun machine to have around the home for occasional printing, scanning, and copying. If you'd rather have an all-in-one with digital memory card slots, check out the Epson Stylus CX6600.

Design of HP PSC 1510 All-in-One

The HP PSC 1510 all-in-one sports a glossy two-tone gray body and rounded edges. This lightweight 11.2-pound multifunction is a compact 17.1 inches wide and 16 inches high, but its length roughly doubles to 23.1 inches when you flip down and fully extend the front paper tray. Up to 50 printouts land atop the 100-sheet paper tray, but you'll need to extend the tray to keep these printouts from falling over the edge.

The control-panel buttons atop the HP PSC 1510 are the same size and color, which doesn't help to distinguish the functions. While the LED is backlit, glare from overhead lights makes it hard to read unless you stand over it. Luckily, the flatbed scanner lid detaches so you can easily scan books. On the right side of the machine, a flip-down panel opens to reveal the black and tricolor ink cartridges. To get six-ink photo prints, you need to swap the black cartridge for the optional photo ink cartridge--an awkward yet common step for budget color inkjets.

The HP PSC 1510 offers what you would expect for its price, but if you have extra cash and want extra features, such as faxing options, a straight paper path, or a manual feed slot, then you should look at a higher-end machine such as the Canon Pixma MP780. If you don't have a PictBridge camera, you might want to consider a budget all-in-one with a display that previews your photos, such as the Lexmark P4350.

Features of HP PSC 1510 All-in-One

You can use the HP PSC 1510 to copy, scan, and print text and photos. Without a computer, the 1510 makes copies at a range of quality settings. Plug in your PictBridge digital camera via the 1510's front USB port to print photos.

Connect the HP 1510 to your computer, and one-button scanning brings up a tweakable preview; however, this process was sluggish on our Windows XP machine (you may need to reset the scanning defaults to improve the speed). Scanned images appear inside HP's Image Zone program, where you can adjust color, brightness, and orientation. You can scan to e-mail and to apps such as Microsoft Word and Paint Shop Pro (the 1510 comes with a trial version), or share images with others via an ad-laden e-mail template on HP's photo Web site. Image Zone even lets you create photo-album pages, DVD covers, and panoramas that stitch together multiple images. For complete software support as well as ReadIris optical character recognition (OCR) software, choose the Full installation, but be wary: we've had problems with HP's bloated all-in-one software package hogging PC resources.

As with most inkjets, ink costs may quickly surpass the 1510's price. The ink tanks offer a low yield of 210 pages for the $14.99 black cartridge and 160 pages for the $19.99 color one. Per-page costs thus run a moderate 7.1 cents per black page and a pricier 12.5 cents for color. Higher-capacity black ink cartridges cost $19.99 with a yield of 450 pages, or 4.4 cents per page. Tricolor ink cartridges cost $24.99 for a yield of 260 pages, or about 9.6 cents per sheet. The photo ink cartridge costs $24.99, but HP doesn't estimate how long it will last. For cheaper consumables, you might want to spring for the Epson Stylus CX6600.

The HP PSC 1510 is a decent choice for a device in its class, but if you must have a photo-preview display, we recommend the Lexmark P4350 as a budget all-in-one. The feature-rich, PictBridge-free Brother MFC-420cn is a better option for home offices.

Performance of HP PSC 1510 All-in-One

In CNET Labs' tests, when scanning and printing nonphoto graphics, the HP PSC 1510 all-in-one performed sluggishly compared with the Lexmark P4350 and the Canon Pixma MP130. You'll have to wait about 2.57 minutes (0.39ppm) for the HP 1510 to print a letter-size photo, but the Lexmark P4350 spent a long 5.43 minutes (0.18ppm) to do the same. We found the speeds of the HP 1510 average for a machine in its class, and it finished text prints faster than other budget all-in-ones, such as the office-oriented Brother MFC-420cn.

CNET Labs' multifunction speed
(Longer bars indicate better performance; measured in pages per minute)
Copy speed
Color scan speed
Grayscale scan speed
Photo speed
Text speed
Dell 942
3.49
2.99
4.15
0.21
6.9
Lexmark P4350
3.43
2.41
3.9
0.18
6.71
Canon Pixma MP130
1.92
3.12
3.12
0.32
5.99
HP PSC 1510 All-in-One
1.56
2.59
3.25
0.39
4.88
Brother MFC-420cn
2.27
3.1
2.95
0.15
3.19
HP PSC 2355 All-in-One
1.01
2.92
5.13
0.43
2.92


Quality
The output quality of the HP PSC 1510 was decent overall. Text prints were excellent for an inkjet--less than perfect but smooth and crisp, even at 2-point size. Graphics prints displayed smooth gradients and curves with good colors and detail. Photo hobbyists may like the details in the photo prints, but picky pros won't like the visible dots or the heavy use of cyan, which makes skin tones look less than rosy and creates low contrast.

CNET Labs' multifunction quality
(Longer bars indicate better performance)
Color scan
Grayscale scan
Photo
Graphics on inkjet paper
Text on inkjet paper
Canon Pixma MP130
Poor
Fair
Good
Excellent
Excellent
HP PSC 1510 All-in-One
Fair
Good
Good
Good
Excellent
HP PSC 2355 All-in-One
Fair
Fair
Good
Good
Excellent
Dell 942
Fair
Fair
Good
Good
Good
Brother MFC 420-cn
Fair
Fair
Good
Good
Good
Lexmark P4350
Poor
Fair
Good
Fair
Good

Click here to learn more about how CNET Labs tests printers.

jueves, 30 de agosto de 2007

HP PSC 1610 Multifuncion

Improvements in IT technology now filter down from top of the range to budget models in only a few months. Nowhere is this more obvious than with printers and All-in-One devices, where last year’s cunning innovations are this year’s mainstream features. Just to prove this point, HP has released the PSC 1610, a sub-£100 All-in-One aimed at the home user and digital photographer, which includes most of the goodies reserved last year for machines costing over twice as much.

Let's get the bad news out of the way first; the PSC 1610 doesn't have a colour LCD display for viewing your photos. It would be pretty surprising if it did, given the price point, but it does have a two-line, alphanumeric LCD with, praise be, a backlight. This makes it very easy to read and with HP's well-designed menu system, the device is very easy to control.

The machine has a conventional design and looks much like several earlier PSC models. The main difference is that it's smaller and its paper trays fold neatly out of the way when it's not in use. This is ideal for the person who only prints or copies occasionally. Paper feeds from the tray at the front and ejects directly on top of the input pile, with no separate output tray.

In between, each page is printed on by twin ink cartridges, one black and the other tri-colour. For top-quality photos, you can replace the black cartridge with a three-colour photo one. Cartridges are easy to fit, as the top section of the PSC 1610 hinges up for access. The device includes a reader for all the common memory card types and a direct connection for PictBridge cameras.

On top of the print engine is an A4 scanner flatbed and to the right of this is a comprehensive set of control buttons, including extras for selecting photos and printing a proof sheet. HP's proofing technique, which enables you to select which images from a camera or memory card to print by colouring in ovals on a proof sheet, has still to be beaten for intuitive simplicity. It goes some way to balance the lack of a preview LCD.

There's over 750MB of software on the supplied CD, most of which is HP's ImageZone suite. It includes image editing applications, photo management, HP Director and HP Quick Prints. There's also a copy of Read IRIS, for recognising text.

The printer driver includes most of the bells and whistles you would expect, including watermarks and imposition of multiple pages on each sheet. There's good control of photo image quality, with separate sliders and a preview thumbnail for contrast, focus, sharpness and smoothing, as well as effects like red-eye removal and digital fill-in flash.

The PSC 1610 can print on plain paper or HP's photo paper in any size from 10cm by 15cm, up through A4, to what the company calls large panorama, 215mm by 610mm. All these sizes can be printed borderless and it's a welcome bonus to have borderless A4 on a machine in this price range.

The print engine has a maximum, optimised resolution of 1,200 x 4,800dpi, though by default most prints come out at a lower setting. It’s matched by the optical resolution of the scanner head and both figures are impressive in such an inexpensive machine.

While not the fastest printer on the planet, our five-page text document completed in one minute eight seconds, while the mixed text and business graphics page took just 36 seconds. Copying only took nine seconds longer than printing and a 5 x 3in photo at best quality took one minute 42 seconds. All these times are very respectable.

Print quality is extremely good for an entry-level device. Black text is very full and dense, without any noticeable feathering into the nap of the paper. Coloured business graphics are also clean and there’s no noticeable banding in areas of solid colour. Finally, photographic output is precise, with sharply defined edges, good natural colours and better than average detail in areas of shadow.

There's only one black cartridge designed to run in the PSC 1610, but there’s a choice of standard or high-capacity tri-colour cartridges. The lower capacity 343 cartridge is supplied and was used in our calculations, based on the actual number of pages we printed at 20 per cent cover (five per cent for each primary). We only managed 211, 20 per cent colour pages against the claimed rating of 260, which is disappointing and 275, five per cent black pages, against a claim of 450, which is more so.

With a cost for HP glossy photo paper of 28p a sheet – the cheapest we could find – we calculated page costs of 4.9p and 44.9p for black and colour print, respectively. These sit at the high end of running costs for this type of ink-jet printer.

Verdict

Sales of All-in-One machines have proved what a good idea it is to combine printing, copying and scanning into one, small-footprint device. Being able to read digital photographs from a memory card or camera is an added bonus and with extras such as panoramic borderless print, the only problem with the £90 PSC 1610 are its running costs.

Test Times (min:sec average)
5 page text document01:08
1 page mixed text and graphics00:36
5 x 3 top quality photo01:42
A4 colour copy00:45


Running costs at street prices inc (ex) VAT
Black cartridge part code338
Price£12.21 (£10.39)
Colour cartridges part codes343 standard, 344 high capacity, 348 photo
Price£14.89 (£12.67) standard, £19.69 (£16.76) high cap, £14.86 (£12.65) photo
Print head – head life (pages)Integral with cartridge
A4 glossy photo sheet28p
Claimed 5% black pages/cart450
First black ink-out warning261
Actual 5% black pp/cart275
Claimed 5% colour pp/cart260 standard, 450 high capacity
First colour ink-out warning197
Actual 20% colour pp/cart211
Cost/A4 5% black page4.91p (4.18p)
Cost/A4 20% colour page44.87p (38.18p)
Noise level (dBA)55dBA