![]() ![]() Print duplex pages, and the speed drops back to 4 sides per minute, as there are noticeable waits for ink drying between sides. Under test, though, we saw 6.7ppm on the five-page black print test, rising to 10.7ppm on the 20-page one. HP rates the Photosmart 7510 at 13.5ppm for black print and 9ppm for colour, both respectable speeds if they’re realised. Supplied software is HP’s normal bundle, including PhotoCreations, Solutions Center and Smart Web Printing, but there are also downloadable apps for pre-designed forms and access to your Facebook photos, among many other things. These include two blacks, with a higher capacity cartridge of pigmented ink to handle text. Hinge up the whole of the upper section of the machine and the head carrier slides to the centre of the carriage to present its five ink cartridges. The first 20 incoming and outgoing faxes each month are free. You can also send faxes wirelessly this way, using eFax, without needing a phone line. This is the better way to do things, as in addition to HP’s ePrint facility, the machine supports Apple’s Airprint for easy transfer of documents from iPhone, iPod and iPad. There’s a single USB socket at the back, but the printer also offers wireless connection and with WPS setup it’s only a few button presses to connect. It supports gestures, but you have to press quite hard for it to recognise virtual button presses. While it does have a touchscreen and dedicated touch buttons down either side, it’s functions are limited and its touch action is not very sensitive. In front of the scanner is what looks vaguely like an iPhone, laid on its side. Pages feed out onto the top of the paper tray cover with an extending paper support and flip-up stop.Īt the top of the machine is a fold-open feed tray for the scanner’s 25-sheet Automatic Document Feeder (ADF) and this is a very low-profile unit, adding only a couple of centimetres to its height. There’s no real reason for the extended surround at the bottom of the machine, though it does hold a memory card reader for SD and MemoryStick cards. In fact, though, it’s a standard A4 printer, with a 125-sheet tray topped off by a 20-sheet photo tray, which powers into the machine when photo print is selected. You’d be forgiven for thinking this machine could handle A3 paper, as the lower section, which houses the paper tray, runs the full width of the machine. The Photosmart 7510 shows the designers’ latest outing. In its latest round of machines, it has tried hard to break away from the square-box-with-a-scanner-on-top look of many home multifunctions. If you could be please continue to help me navigate through this issue with a fair solution, I would greatly appreciate it.Nobody can say the industrial design of HP inkjet all-in-ones is mundane. I understand issues do arise with equipment that is not a fault of any one direct person or company - however, at this point I am left without a function printer for work and am only seeing undesirable solutions. I appreciate your assistance thus far, and will contain my frustration with this situation, which seems to have the cost for the solution spiralling beyond any rational course of action. I then tried to use the automatic detection to determine if my printer was still under warranty, but the software downloaded has simply stalled at 0% detection (very discouraging). I tried locating the product number and model number of the printer and could not identify the specific numbers from the various numbers provided on the sticker beneath the printer (mainly the model number, however the product number has a smudge on one of the characters). My next step was to determine if any of these costs could be covered by HP itself, for I believe the printer cannot be more than 16 months old, but believe the actual age to be closer to 12 months - I will begin searching through my receipts from last year to retrieve the original receipt. Furthermore, it again is not a cheap part, totally a nearly a third of the total cost of the printer. This suspicion was first raised when the HP parts store did not list the product number as a replacement for the HP Photosmart 7510 model. The next step, per your instructions, was to replace the printerhead - however, after searching the links provided and also doing a separate web search - the product number given refers to a printerhead that appears different than the one installed (via pictures found from a web search). ![]() I have tried to clean the printerhead/cartridges several times (draining my ink cartidges, which are not cheep and to replace them equals the total cost of replacing the unit itself.). Unfortunately, using the information that you had given me hasn't resolved my issue. Business PCs, Workstations and Point of Sale Systems.Printer Wireless, Networking & Internet.DesignJet, Large Format Printers & Digital Press.Printing Errors or Lights & Stuck Print Jobs.Notebook Hardware and Upgrade Questions. ![]()
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