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Review: HP Officejet 6500
Laser printers are often seen as the obvious choice when printing in bulk,

but HP is looking to tempt smaller businesses with its new range of inkjet

printers.Promising savings of up to 40 per cent compared to lasers in terms of running

costs, the

Officejet

6500 costs just £100 including VAT and can copy, scan and fax, as well as

print. It is sturdily built and, thanks to the large control panel located at

the front, easy to install and operate.

Hooking the Officejet 6500 up to a corporate network is no problem thanks to

integrated Ethernet. USB connectivity is also provided, but there's no wireless

option.An automatic document feeder is included as standard and allows for

multi-page copying, but it's only able to cope with 35 pages at a time. There's

no automatic duplex unit for double-sided printing, but it does feature a manual

duplexer which basically means it's up to you to flip the page over to allow

printing on the other side.Using replacement ink prices on HP's online store, we calculated print costs

at 3.3p per page for mono and 8.1p for colour. A high-capacity black ink

cartridge can also be purchased, reducing mono prints to just 1.9p each. So,

compared to most sub-£300 lasers, the Officejet 6500 is indeed a fair bit

cheaper when it comes to running costs.Power consumption is also low, drawing just 23 watts when printing and under

seven watts in standby mode.

The Officejet 6500 might be cheaper to run than a laser, but it's not nearly

as fast. Printing a fairly text-heavy document at default settings, we only

managed a rather lethargic six pages per minute, around half the speed of most

lasers.In terms of print quality, though, HP's inkjet impressed and you'd be hard

pushed to tell the difference between its text prints and that of a laser.

Inkjets always have the upper hand when it comes to photo output, and the

Officejet 6500 is no different with its four ink cartridges able to produce some

vivid and reasonably detailed images. Again, though, it's much slower than a

laser, with an A4 photo taking almost three minutes to materialise.There's no doubt that the Officejet 6500 is cheap to run compared to lasers,

and £100 isn't much for an inkjet with print, copy, scan and fax functionality.

However, its slow print speeds ultimately make it really suited only to very

small workgroups or home offices.

Taken from here