Typical price: £140
What is it: Inkjet colour photo printer
What we think: Speed and economy make the HP Photosmart 8250 a reasonable choice for family photo printing
HP Photosmart 8250 Review
Reviewed on: 16 September 2005
The HP Photosmart 8250, a replacement for the Photosmart 8450, retains the 4,800x1,200dpi resolution, the long-life Vivera inks, and the relatively speedy printing of its predecessor, but replaces the old print engine with a radically redesigned one. Rather than using the old tricolour ink-cartridge systems with their built-in printheads, HP has switched to an innovative reservoir system fed from six separate ink tanks. The individually replaceable ink cartridges and recycling system coupled with bulk paper purchases mean 100x150mm prints can cost very little.
Although it functions serviceably as a speedy text printer (especially with the optional duplexing attachment), the HP Photosmart 8250's real strength is as a personal photo lab. On the downside, the relatively large 5-picolitre ink drops (some competing models such as the Canon Pixma iP5000 squeeze out 1-picolitre drops) can produce a visibly grainy texture that some users might find objectionable. And depending on the settings you use, you'll achieve printing speeds quite a bit slower than advertised.
Design
At 447 by 160 by 386mm and 8.5kg, the HP Photosmart 8250 will dominate any desktop or printer stand where it resides. You'll need to keep about 15cm in front of the printer clear for the output tray, a 20-sheet 100x150mm photo paper tray, and a main tray that holds up to 100 sheets of 90x125mm to 215x355mm stock. The back of the printer can snuggle up close to a wall or a partition, if you like -- during testing, we didn't experience any paper jams that would have required opening the back cover.
Setup is speedy, involving little more than connecting the power cord, linking the printer to your computer through a USB 2.0 cable and snapping in the five compact colour ink cartridges (cyan, magenta, yellow, light cyan and light magenta) and a larger-capacity black ink tank. Installing the HP Image Zone software and drivers takes another 10 minutes or so.
You can carry out an impressive array of functions from the printer itself. Flip up the LCD and insert a memory card into one of the slots on the front or connect a camera through the PictBridge port in the lower-right corner of the front panel, and the first shot appears on the screen. The HP Image Zone Transfer software will also pop up on your computer display and offer to copy the photos. You can scroll among all the images using left/right arrow keys and press a Select button to mark photos for printing. With zoom in/out buttons, you can enlarge a portion of the photo to as much as 5x, and a separate four-way cursor control pad with embedded OK key moves the zoom box within the image.
Once you've marked your photos, pressing a Layout key cycles through arrangement choices of one to nine images per page. There's also a Rotate button to change the orientation of your shot, Print and Cancel Print buttons to start and stop the printing process, a Photo Tray key to toggle back and forth between the photo paper and main trays, and an Instant Share button that whisks your shots off via email.
Tapping the HP Photosmart 8250's Menu button reveals even more options. Print Options include proof sheets, video action prints, stickers, passport photos and panoramas. Edit tools let you add frames or special effects such as sepia tones, as well as adjust brightness with a slider control. Other menu options let you view slide shows, print test pages, perform printer maintenance, set printer and Bluetooth preferences, or access a simple built-in help system for most printer functions. When working from a computer, the driver offers only a basic set of tools (although these include colour correction sliders), relying instead on the Image Zone software for more advanced editing and correction.
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