HP Deskjet 6840

By Kristina Blachere, ZDNet US
12 April 2005 01:47 PM
Tags: printer, hp, colour, wi-fi, inkjet, 6840, deskjet, photo
HP Deskjet 6840 Ready for a wired or Wi-Fi network, the HP Deskjet 6840 handles text and photos well for a small business or a home.

The HP Deskjet 6840 occupies the high end of HP's line of home and home-office inkjet printers, so it handles less traffic than the HP Business Inkjet 1200d, and it lacks office-oriented features such as software to monitor the printer over a network.

But, for the same price as the base model in the 1200 series, the Deskjet 6840 delivers comparable print quality, faster photo-print speeds, and built-in Wi-Fi and Ethernet capability. What's more, you can add reasonably priced double-sided printing or an extra paper tray. Office workgroups may prefer a colour laser that offers high-volume printing with zippy text. But families, small home offices, and organisations on a tight budget might appreciate this understated, network-ready, solid performer -- either for general use or as a spare colour printer -- to pair with a laser model.

The modern, nondescript rectangular shape and the glossy-black casing of the HP Deskjet 6840 seem designed to blend into an office's background. The 50-sheet output tray serves as the cover of the 150-sheet input tray, and unlike most lower-priced inkjets, you can adapt the 6840 to heavier network usage by attaching an additional 250-sheet input tray to the bottom of the printer. The output tray features a slot that holds either photo paper or a single envelope so that you don't have to wrestle with paper guides every time you print on different media. Less useful is the output-tray extension that you must slide out to keep prints from falling off the edge, extending the printer's depth to a space-gobbling 23 inches. With this tray left unextended, the printer measures just 542mm by 366mm by 145mm (WDH). You can also attach a duplexer, or a duplexer with a photo paper tray, to the back of the 6840 for paper-saving, two-sided printing.

The HP 6840 conceals USB and Ethernet ports in its back panel, as well as built-in 802.11g/b Wi-Fi compatibility and a PictBridge camera port in front, though it lacks the digital media-card slots commonly found on photo printers such as the Epson Stylus Photo R320. The 6840 is also wireless network key-compatible, so you can quickly add the printer to your Wi-Fi network by plugging a USB flash drive that holds network settings into the PictBridge port.

The HP Deskjet 6840 comes with HP's useful, easy-to-master Director, an umbrella interface for HP peripherals, as well as Image Zone software. The latter installs automatically with the drivers and helps you organise your photos and perform basic editing functions, such as cropping, red-eye removal, lightening dark photos, or creating projects such as scrapbook pages, flyers, and calendars. HP's print drivers allow you to make exhaustive tweaks, such as adding a watermark or adjusting individual colour levels. Luckily, the first tab in the drivers contains Printing Shortcuts to show adjustments relevant to your type of print job; for example, Photo Printing brings up a button for HP Digital Photography tweaks, and Everyday Printing brings up the duplexing option.

The HP DeskJet 6840's performance was good across all categories in CNET Labs' tests. Text was heavily saturated with ink and therefore ultradark, but crisp for an inkjet. Close inspection of CNET Labs' graphics tests revealed banding, visible dithering, and lack of detail, but the samples easily passed muster for everyday use. Photos were good despite visible dithering; skin tones looked smooth, and the printer did a decent job capturing fine details. We printed our tests with black and CMY cartridges, but photo enthusiasts may want to replace the black cartridge with HP's Photo Ink cartridge for six-colour photo printing.

This printer was fast in CNET Labs' tests, delivering text at 6.68 pages per minute (ppm) and an 8x10-inch photo at 0.52ppm -- a tad ahead of the HP Business Inkjet 1200d's text speed and more than double its photo-printing pace. A home photo inkjet such as the Epson Stylus Photo R320 prints text at an aching 1.9ppm but creates photos at about the same rate as the HP 6840.

CNET Labs' inkjet speed (pages per minute)
(Longer bars indicate better performance)
Photo speed  
Text speed  
Canon Pixma iP4000
0.55 
6.69 
HP Deskjet 6840
0.52 
6.68 
HP Business Inkjet 1200d
0.13 
6.46 
Epson Stylus Photo R320
0.26 
1.9 

CNET Labs' inkjet quality
(Longer bars indicate better performance)
Photo  
Graphics on inkjet paper  
Text on inkjet paper  
Epson Stylus Photo R320
Good 
Good 
Good 
HP Deskjet 6840
Good 
Good 
Good 
HP Business Inkjet 1200
Good 
Good 
Good 
Canon Pixma iP4000
Good 
Good 
Good 

NOTE: Products in this test are for comparative purposes only and are not necessarily available in the Australian market.

Click here to learn more about how CNET Labs tests printers.

Small-office users will appreciate the 6840's automatic ink backup mode that lets you make emergency prints if one ink cartridge runs dry; this would result in black text composed of three colour inks or colour graphics printed in grayscale. Many other inkjets will simply stop printing completely if the appropriate cartridge goes empty.

HP Deskjet 6840
Company: HP
Price: AU$399
Phone: 13 23 47

Advertisement

Talkback 0 comments

Reviews by category

Sponsored content

Power Centre - Content from our premier sponsors

Blogs

  • Jacquelyn Holt G'Day USA: Aussie start-ups head to America
    The G'Day USA: Australia Week campaign today announced the finalists for the Innovation Shoot Out event, which will see eight Australian technology start-ups travel to San Francisco in January 2010 to demonstrate the commercial viability of their products in the US.
  • Array All I want for Xmas is Telstra pricing
    Five consecutive days without broadband has led me to what seemed at the time to be an act of desperation: contemplating signing up for Telstra's 100Mbps cable modem service.
  • Array Sick of broken tender sites
    Some of the state governments desperately need to invest in more user-friendly tender sites so that looking for information on government tenders doesn't have to be a game of blind man's bluff.
  • More blogs »

Tags

Back to top

Featured