HP Smart Tank 7001 / 7005 ink tank printer review


Specs

Type: color ink tank printer

Functions: Print, scan, copy, mobile fax (send only)

Connectivity: USB, Wi-Fi

Data storage slots: none

Print speed: 15ppm (mono)

Max paper size: Letter/A4

Max print quality: 4,800 x 1,200 dpi

Memory: 128MB

Apple AirPrint: yes

Consumables included: 5 x 80ml ink bottles (8,000 color or 6,000 black pages)

Dimensions/Weight: 723 x 435 x 285 mm (WxDxH)/71.4lb/32.4kg

The HP Smart Tank 7001 (or 7005 in the UK and Europe) is a refillable inkjet aimed at the home or the office. It’s a neat desktop design with enough room for 250 sheets of Letter paper in its protruding tray and a Letter-sized scanner bed on top. Self-healing dual-band wi-fi and Bluetooth are built in and it can auto-duplex, but there’s no multipurpose input tray and no touchscreen.

If that seems mean for a printer costing around US$260 (£230), remember that this is a supertank, so you’ll save money on ink in the long term and there’s a generous amount of ink in the box. But Smart Tank makes up a relatively small part of HP’s printer line-up so let’s see how it compares to the best ink tank printers, from MegaTanks to EcoTanks, currently crowding the market.

HP Smart Tank 7001: Design and build

HP Smart Tank 7001 / 7005 printer during our review

(Image credit: HP)

The HP Smart Tank 7001 (let’s stick with the US name now) looks pretty sharp with its crisp lines, light basalt livery and seamlessly integrated ink tanks. It’s only a pity the paper tray sticks out at the front like that, because it makes the footprint larger than that of its two nearest rivals, the Canon PIXMA G3270 and Epson EcoTank ET-2850. But being larger, does enable it to hold more paper. With room for 250 sheets of Letter, or A4 paper instead of the 100-sheet capacity of its peers, it could serve an office more efficiently. The four ink reservoirs are about the same size as those of the Canon and Epson, holding 70ml of each colored ink and 135ml of black. That’s enough to keep you printing for two years, according to HP in the US. In the UK, HP says three years because there’s one extra bottle in the box, so I’ll take both claims with a very large pinch of salt. Clear plastic windows into these tanks make it easy to check your levels at a glance, which is important because running out of ink can allow problematic air bubbles into the system. The tiny two-line display is not backlit, so it’s harder to see, as are the small black buttons of the up-facing control panel.



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