12 out of 12 people found this review helpful.
Photo printing for the masses...
Date of Review: Mar 7, 2008
The Bottom Line: If price is the ultimate factor, this is the cheapest HP with their newest print system. For a few more dollars, the D7360 adds the touch-screen.
Please note - this is substantially the same printer, and same printer review as my Photosmart D7460 Review with updates specific to this model. All D74x0 models have the exact same internals.
A million and one printers...
I've had great luck with HP printers. From way back the days of the original "Deskjet 500" to the birth of the "Laserjet II", HP has always been a market leader. So, when my older HP printer ran out of ink, I decided to look at what was new on the market for inkjet printers. Wow, was that the wrong isle to walk down at my local superstore... there must have been 50 printers...
Narrowing it down
First of all, I already own a great scanner - a scanner that does film. There are a great deal of multi-function printers that include scanners and fax functionality. Although I'm sure they'd save a bit of desk space, none of the 'all-in-one' models I saw would scan film negatives. I have no use for a fax either...
My older HP printer used a 2 cartridge system. One for 'photo color' and one for 'regular color'. The two together made for a 6-ink system, and each cartridge was about $40 at my local store. I was attracted to the printer models that used seperate ink tanks for each colour. Canon has a few models like this, as does HP. Generally, they are the higher-end models.
This narrowed by search to: a 'single function' printer with multiple ink tanks.
The short list
The HP 7x60 line were attractive to look at and had the features I wanted. The complete line-up at this time is the 7160, 7260, 7360 and 7460. All contain the same basic print engine, and each has more do-dads. All contain built in memory card readers for all the popular card-types, and allow you to print directly from Pictbridge enabled cameras, or from the memory card. All support PC's and Mac's, and all connect via USB at a minimum.
The 7160 begins with a simple 2.4 inch color LCD which shows you which is going on.
The 7260 adds a 3.5 inch color touch screen, which is both informative and interactive. It also includes built-in wired ethernet for network printing.
The 7360 is the same as the 7260 without the ethernet (USB only).
The 7460 adds built-in Wi-fi 802.11g networking, as well as the ethernet wired connection.
All models include the same 100 sheet paper tray and a seperate mini-tray for 4x6 paper that you can leave loaded all the time. When you want a photo, it pulls from the bin automatically. And, if you are using HP paper, their paper includes markings that automatically ajust the printer for the best output. How cool is that?
These printers are not small, but not unweildy either... they come in nice white and silver plastics that match current and previous generation iMacs quite nicely.
I looked at the competetive Canon models, but to be honest, they just looked ugly with their off-black and grey color schemes, and the paper handling just didn't seem as clean. HP has traditionally used the front-load cassette type of system, while Canon has traditionally used the rear-load 'stand up' type of system. The HP and Canon have approximately the same foot print, while the Canon requires you have a bit more vertical space available (no sliding it into a small shelf).
The printing
OK, so what does the print look like? We'll, if you've got an inkjet more than a year old, prepare to be amazed by both the speed and clarity of the print. Web-screen print outs look fantastic, and photos? Well, I am not exaggerating at all when I say they look BETTER than my local Wal-mart photolab prints. The colors are vibrant and clear and I have not seen a better photo come off of any machine. The 6 ink system obviously works well, and at my local Staples the cartridges are $12 each (the black is $20 and is bigger). Still, $50 for a full set of colors isn't cheap - but not having to replace a whole cartridge when just one color runs out only makes sense.
Networking
The D7160 is the entry level model and supports only USB printing. All models support Bluetooth add-ons for wireless printing. This is only an important factor if you are planning to share the printer among several networked computers, or if you want to locate the printer near a hub or router and use it as a print server. If all you want is a single computer/single printer set-up, this is the model for you. You get the same print engine as the rest of the family, at a much cheaper price.
The Screen
The screen on the D7160 is a smaller, 2.4" display that does not have the touch sensitive functions of the 3 higher models. The touch screen is by no means essential, but does make it easier to print directly from your camera or memory card. Currently, the D7160 is only $10 less than the touch-screen equipped D7360. For my money, I'd get the D7360. The screen is a bit bigger, and looks nicer.
Nigglies
The only problem I've had is some crappier paper doesn't seem to feed through the tray very well... the rollers just won't pick it up and the printer declares 'out of paper'. This was easily fixed by using a slightly heavier paper than cheap photocopy paper.
Summary
The D7160 is a feature rich printer with the latest ink and paper technology, at a price that is competitive with low-end 'entry level' printers. If you find it on sale it is worth a look. Otherwise, spend $10 more and get the D7360, or if you are interested in networking look at the D7160 (wired) and D7460 (wired/wireless) models. All provide the same great output and access to the cheaper multi-tank ink system.