All of the photo printers use these many, or even a higher number of cartages. Compared to a two-ink system where one cartridge carries all three colors – cyan, magenta and yellow one separate cartridge is deployed here for every color, to create more precise shades on paper. Four-ink systems, if you don’t know already, are the way to go for color printers now-a-days. If I talk about photograph printing, the OfficeJet 7510 has got the four-ink (CMYB) system to get it covered.
#HP PHOTOSMART 7510 DETAILS DRIVER#
The printer broadcasts an SSID and any laptop setup with the required driver can connect directly to it and issue a print command.Īlternatively, it has conventional connection options too – LAN, USB 2.0 input, Line In for fax and a USB port for printing directly from pen drive. Wireless direct printing is also available on the 7510 that eliminates the need for a router to wirelessly form a connection. A host of applications can also be downloaded over the web to print format specific pages. This enables the printer to communicate with smart devices connected to the HP e-print server via any other network in the world. OfficeJet 7510 has wireless connectivity capability mated to Internet access built into the software. It’s a tough decision to choose 7612 over this, especially when the print quality comes out to be better.
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The duplexing function is also found missing on the printer. The scanner bed isn’t wide enough to take an A3 sheet which bars the printer from handling A3 size documents, other than for printing off course. The bad news is that the size cut comes at a compromise. But the ADF tray does make the lid so heavy that not ramming the lid (with a “bamm”) on the scanner bed is a caution you will have to follow every time. All for a prettier design that works no harm since the printer is made with thick and heavy A-grade plastic. The ADF tray above it is a strong structure and the rear part of it is the leverage HP wants you to use to lift the lid up.
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On the OfficeJet 7612, the scanner lid has no extended “lips”. And with the option to add pages as small as a 4.33inch wide DL envelope or as big as the 19 inch long A3+ does ring a rational bell that the tray should be quite easy to access.
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Outer part of the inlet tray (it has two parts, the fixed one with the scale and marking and area for pages to rest on and the moving one that, well, err moves in and out below the fixed portion to make the whole arrangement look like a “tray” that has a closed front) too is not easy to pull out. The outlet tray is a platform that needs to be lifted, reluctantly, to add pages and there is no fixed track or a spring helping the motion out. Its trays are still not easy to deal with. The empty space to keep things beside the tray is now gone too, and the buttons and the USB port shifted up for convenience. Maybe HP figured out if this is the way to increase longevity of the screen. The display-cum-control panel is fixed on the body and doesn’t rotate to change angle. The design cues are a mix, taken from the HP OfficeJet 7500A and Officejet 7612. The OfficeJet 7510 obviously looks better, exuding a more advanced look in its rebellious matte black and piano black color combination.Īnd since weight does matter too, let me tell you it’s equally heavy. It looks stout and curvy in comparison to the muscular looking OfficeJet 7612, which has sharp edges and a slightly broader front. HP OfficeJet 7510 looks like a toned down version of the OfficeJet 7612 we reviewed earlier this year. Printing from and scanning to a pen drive option is also available on the HP OfficeJet 7510. Its interface includes options to crop, rotate and brighten them before printing. The printer can also print directly from (only) FAT formatted pen drives via the USB port at its front. It also supports HP cloud printing service HP e-Print using its capability to connect to the Internet. Priced at Rs 23,500 the printer is armed with a Scanner bed at the top with an Automatic Document Feeder above it to perform scanning, copy and Fax function all of which can involve up to legal size of sheets. It uses 4-ink system to create high quality Inkjet level graphics, but is faster than most of them. The HP OfficeJet 7510 is one of such kind, capable of printing up to A3+ sizes in matte or glossy brochure, photo paper, plain or Inkjet Hagaki pages. So there aren’t many options available to choose from. The market is drier than both bigger and smaller size segments.
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There aren’t many A3 printers released every year. And finding a nice one for your office? Tough! But if handling paper sizes above A4 is going to be your regular tussle, an A3 capable printer is what you will need. When was the last time you needed to scan an A3 size sheet or send a design deliverable twice the size of an A4? Mostly the answer would be a casual NO.