🚀 Elevate Your Printing Game!
The HP Officejet 7110 Wide Format ePrinter is a versatile inkjet printer designed for professionals who need high-quality prints in various formats. With impressive print speeds of up to 33 ppm for black and 29 ppm for color, it supports a maximum media size of 13 x 19 inches, making it ideal for large documents and presentations. Connectivity options include Wi-Fi, USB, and Ethernet, while the user-friendly touch control and Android compatibility ensure a seamless printing experience.
B&W Pages per Minute | 33 ppm |
Color Pages per Minute | 29 ppm |
Total USB 2.0 Ports | 1 |
Total Usb Ports | 1 |
Hardware Connectivity | Ethernet |
Connectivity Technology | Wi-Fi, USB, Ethernet |
Ink Color | Color |
Control Method | Remote, Touch |
Controller Type | Android |
Print media | Envelopes, Paper (plain), Card stock, Glossy photo paper |
Scanner Type | Sheetfed |
Maximum Copy Speed Black and White | 33 ppm |
Compatible Devices | Smartphones |
Printer Type | Inkjet |
Additional Features | network-ready |
Printer Output Type | Color |
Item Weight | 18.7 Pounds |
Maximum Sheet Capacity | 250 |
Media Size Maximum | 13 x 19 inch |
Wattage | 25.4 watts |
Power Consumption | 25.4 Watts |
Duplex | No |
Color | Black |
T**K
Was recommended to me by a fellow artist because she adored ...
Was recommended to me by a fellow artist because she adored the quality of their prints, and I have to say that I wholeheartedly agree with her. The results with photos and art prints are amazing. It does use up quite a bit of ink, but I guess that's the tradeoff you make in order to get high-quality prints. I use it mostly for my home-based business, but I can see some people using it for personal projects, like scrapbooking etc. Sometimes, depending on the store, you don't quite get the quality that you're looking for. I like having control over the results, and once I got the hang of the program, I haven't had any major problems!
B**S
EASY SET UP!
Easy wireless set up! Press a button on your wireless router, press a button on the printer & they sync up. Add printer to your control panel & it's done! It takes up less space on the desk than our HP7610. No loud noise or taking forever to print as others have stated. As for ink I guess I'll cross that bridge when I come to it. I know ink is expensive so depending on how much you print will determine how often you replace it. I'm extremely satisfied with this printer.
L**J
Horrible Borderless printing, and Ink control
I am a former graphic designer, turned chef/restauranteur. I am very well educated and versed in using printers and printing.I purchased this printer to replace a fantastic printer that I used to death (another HP 7000 model). After using this printer for only a week, I have serious buyers remorse. I print lots and lots of menus and flyers...all my designs require borderless large format printing. With my previous printer, not a problem...very easy to manipulate to print exactly what I wanted to print on what paper I wanted to print on. Due to the nature and color of the paper I use, I designed it so I could use a draft quality print (to save ink) and remain within a consistent look that matches my restaurant feel. WIth this printer, it is not possible to print borderless draft quality on a plain paper setting, therefore it uses TONS of ink for no reason. Also, it uses TONS OF INK!!! Did I mention it is slow and uses TONS of ink. AND, with my old printer, I could print until the cartridges literally ran out of ink, therefore getting my money's worth out of each cartridge...with this printer, once IT deems print quality it compromised, it just starts printing in greyscale so you are forced to replace the cartridge. I also purchase this because of the wireless printing feature. Well it only works about 1/2 the time. The set up was rather easy...but, it doesn't work reliably. I was lured in by the price, but now I know, HP is probably giving these things away. Utterly disappointed...looking for a replacement NOW. I do not recommend this printer.
W**G
Vs. Epson Artisan 1430 and Canon IP8720
I've tried a lot of wide-format printers over the last year trying to find one that I was happy with. Canon and Epson make high-end wide-format photo printers which are expensive, but I need one appropriate for general use in an office setting, which means printing lots of graphics and the occasional photo. Three I've tested in the last few months are the Epson Artisan 1430, Canon IP8720, and HP Officejet 7110.SETUPI intended to use the printer via a wireless connection. All three are easy to set up via WPS (Wi-Fi Protected Setup); just press a button on your router, then press a button on the printer and the connection is automatic. The HP printer setup guide stated that I would need to connect the printer via USB cable first, but this was incorrect. All three preformed flawlessly via wireless.INK SYSTEMThe HP is the winner here in terms of ease-of-use. It uses the fewest ink tanks (four, vs. six for both the Canon and Epson), and to install the cartridges you simply click them in and click them out, sort of like using a ballpoint pen. There were no tabs to pull or caps to remove, as there are with the Epson and Canon cartridges.OUTPUT QUALITYBoth the Canon and Epson had excellent photo-quality output. Even when using the "standard" quality setting I was able to get beautiful, vibrant prints on photo paper. If you compare the output side-by-side, the Canon may have a very slight edge in quality, but I really needed to take time and examine the prints closely to make this determination. The HP however wasn't up to the level of the Canon or Epson, probably in large part because it uses four ink cartridges vs. six for the other two. The HP's output looked dull and a bit washed out, even on the "best" quality setting.PRINTING ON MATTE PAPERSince I'm using this in an office I do most printing on matte photo paper. Here is where the Canon was the big looser. In printing graphics and images that covered large areas of a page, the paper that came out of the Canon was wavy like bacon, even after waiting for the ink to fully dry, and even when printing on thick (60 lb.) matte photo paper. I don't know if the Canon printer puts down more ink than the other printers thereby soaking the page, or if the ink is more watery in consistency, but the finished product was unacceptable. The HP was the best in this department with only slight wrinkling in areas of heavy graphics. The Epson was somewhere between the HP and Canon, with some wrinkling, but still very acceptable on 32 lb. matte photo paper.PAPER HANDLINGBoth the Canon and Epson have rear-loading paper slots, while the HP uses a slide-out tray on the front of the printer underneath the output area. Consequently, the HP has a smaller footprint when loaded with paper. The rear-loading method should theoretically allow for better handling of thicker paper, but I had no problem using 60 lb. matte photo paper in the HP.SOFTWARESoftware installation was about the same for all three printers. (I always forgo using the included CD and instead download the latest software directly from the manufacturer's website.) When printing, the Canon and Epson both have a good number of custom controls in terms of color adjustments and custom paper sizes that were more than adequate for my needs. The HP had by far the worst software, offering very few options for color control and custom paper sizes. The HP software would also pop up a message for "free offers" every time I changed an ink cartridge; these were nothing more than advertisements.The Canon did have one annoying trait in its software. There is a setting to "avoid paper abrasion"; this basically increases the distance between the print head and the paper to avoid the print head coming in contact with the paper and causing scrape marks. I had to use this setting because of the paper wrinkling as described above. However, when you print a page with this setting enabled, the Canon software throws up a warning message EVERY TIME a page is about to print, and you need to click "OK" to dismiss the message before the page starts printing. This made it impossible to print multiple pages and walk away from the computer, because you needed to click "OK" before the next page would print. The Epson printer also has the paper-abrasion setting, but it does not throw up a warning message and simply prints what you ask it to.CONCLUSIONAll three printers have their strengths and weaknesses. For me the Epson Artisan 1430 was the easy winner. The output quality is fantastic, it didn't saturate the page with ink like the Canon, and the settings you have in the software are more than adequate.If I was printing only graphics where vibrant photo output didn't matter, I would choose the HP. It has the smallest footprint and is certainly the most uncomplicated of the three printers. It is also the least expensive of the three by a good margin.If I was printing mainly photos on heavy gloss photo paper, the Canon would be an enticing choice. It had a very slight edge in output quality over the Epson. However, the Epson has great output quality and has performed flawlessly in the several months I've had it, and if I had to buy another general-use wide-format printer today it would be the Epson.
R**S
Can't get it to print 11X17 sheets
I give this three stars because I have not been able to make the printer work properly. Of course there is the possiblity that it could be my fault. I bought this printer to print 11 X 17 sheets. I have had other HP wide format printers ( 2 HP Office Jet 7000) with which set up was no problem, and I have printed thousands of pages. If the printer I just received is in good working condition, it seems that there should have been some instructions on how to print 11X17 sheets. Mine came with no such instructions. I have tried every combination of settings I can think of to try to make it print properly, but always with bad results. It prints 8 1/2 X 11 sheets just fine, but I would have only needed to pay 1/3 the cost for a printer that would do that.
J**A
Exceeds my expectations...I am vey happy with the level of quality it peoduces.
Exceeds my expectations. This printer is used in an office setting, we mostly do drafting design with occasional renderings. It only took 15 minutes to get it setup and printing wireless. Works as well as if not better than any other HP printer I have used in the past. I am very happy with the level of quality it produces. There are some bad reviews about this printer due to the paper sizes provided with the driver package. This is not an issue for me, I am printing borderless Arch B prints from Autodesk and PDF software. Windows 7 OS and 34 lb 12"x18" paper.
Trustpilot
Hace 1 semana
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