


REVIEW HP PHOTOSMART 7510 E ALL IN ONE PRINTER DOWNLOAD
You can drag your finger across the list of apps to select one, delete ones you don't use, or download any apps from the growing list in the ePrintCenter. The home screen has a set of scrollable icons for your favorite applications as well as four shortcut buttons at the bottom to bring up controls for photo printing, copy, scan, and fax. We also wish you could adjust the angle of the touch screen, which instead is fixed in place, but we'll let that slide. If you know you'll be printing a high volume of documents, you'll find yourself wishing for competing printers like the Lexmark S405 that hold up to 135 sheets of paper and can print over 5,000 pages a month. Second, the D110a works best for low-output work stations, as the printer has an 80-sheet paper input tray and a maximum monthly output capacity (also called a "duty cycle") of 1,000 pages. That means Sony Memory Stick and Compact Flash card users are forced to use a computer to transfer photos for printing. In terms of general printing functionality, the D110a is limited in two ways that you should consider before buying it: first, the media reader just underneath the display can only read Secure Digital (SD) and MultiMediaCard (MMC) storage cards and there's no available USB port for direct camera connections. In fact, the printer has a copier and a flatbed scanner that tucks neatly into the top of the unit, and the rest of the front panel is limited to a paper tray, a memory card reader, and a 2.3-inch color touch screen LCD on the left with virtual buttons surrounding it that control the typical menu functions. Photo output was also a little sluggish, at 50 seconds for a single 4×6 print on glossy paper, but the quality was extremely good, and the use of separate cartridges for the cyan, magenta, yellow and black inks ensures that you only need to replace individual inks as they run out.At 17.4 inches wide, 15.9 inches deep, and just 7.1 inches tall, the HP Photosmart D110a takes up so little real estate on your desktop that others might mistake it for a single-function inkjet. The OfficeJet 7510 did slow down a bit when stepping up to A3 format, taking 30 seconds to print a poster containing text and colour graphics, but that’s still fine if you’re just using A3 printing every now and then. Text quality was very good – not quite up to laser-printer standards, but more than adequate for most routine printing tasks. Performance when printing A4 documents is quite respectable for a printer in this price range, at 12.5 pages per minute for mono text and 7.5ppm for text and colour graphics.

Our only other concern about the design of the OfficeJet 7510 was that the print-head mechanism where you insert the ink cartridges felt rather flimsy, and the large metal springs in the print-head look like an accident waiting to happen. HP has reduced the size of the OfficeJet 7510 as much as possible by having the paper input tray project out from the front of the printer by several inches – rather than being housed entirely inside the main body of the printer – but you’ll still need a pretty big and sturdy desk to support it. Inevitably, an A3 printer such as this is going to be fairly bulky.
