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CNET editors' rating:
stars
Very good
Detailed editors' rating - Average user rating: 1.0 stars out of 10 reviews
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Product summary
The good: Connects to the Internet without a PC; good photo print quality.
The bad: Expensive; so-so text and graphics print quality.
The bottom line: The 9130's cool new ability to autoarchive images and documents to online folders doesn't outweigh its so-so print quality, but this printer does reproduce photos very well.
Specifications: Office Machine Functions: Fax , Copier , Printer , Scanner ; Printing Technology: Ink-jet See full specs
Price range: $595.00 check prices
CNET editors' review
- Reviewed on: 05/18/2004
- Released on: 03/02/2004
We found the control panel well presented. On the left side sit six speed dial buttons with an extra button for additional contacts. In the center lives a 4-line by 20-character backlit LCD, just underneath mode buttons for e-mail, fax, scan, copy, and print functions. Below the LCD, you'll find navigation buttons to scroll through menus and options. There's also a separate Help button to display troubleshooting tips on the LCD screen. To the right of the LCD is full numeric keypad for fax dialing or selecting copy counts. Buttons for PIN security, color/monochrome, stop, and start sit to the far right. In addition, the OfficeJet 9130 model includes a tiny keyboard for typing in Internet addresses that tucks away under the control panel when not in use.
But its advanced photo-imaging capabilities really set the OfficeJet 9130 apart from other office-based multifunction printers. The 9130 includes media card slots for SmartMedia, CompactFlash, Secure Digital, MultiMedia, or Memory Stick cards, a feature already common in home-based inkjet multifunction printers. If necessary, network administrators can disable the media card feature to prevent employee abuse.
Using an ordinary Web browser set to the OfficeJet 9130 HP JetDirect's IP address, system administrators can update fax speed-dial numbers, e-mail addresses, and various other printer functions such as job accounting and color usage controls from afar. There is built-in security for this Web access, requiring a secure PIN to access the configuration page, but sadly, the PIN requirement is not turned on by default.The OfficeJet 9130 All-in-One is packed with useful features and many hardware options. The standard configuration includes two trays: a 150-sheet tray and a replaceable 250-sheet tray and a 50-sheet automatic document feeder (ADF). That's a 400-sheet total native input capacity, which is OK for most small businesses. Additionally, you can replace the 250-sheet tray with an optional 500-sheet tray ($149) for a maximum of 650 sheets, adequate for small-business needs.
The OfficeJet 9130 comes with 128MB of memory that you can expand up to 384MB, which should do the trick for most small businesses. That's also enough memory to allow for multitasking, so you can, say, walk up, attach your digital camera media card directly to the printer, and print out your images while the 9130 simultaneously prints or sends a scan job to a network folder. The OfficeJet 9100 series also has the scan-once-print-many feature becoming popular on business-class multifunction printers, allowing you to scan a multipage document once, then print its individual pages from memory.
Both the OfficeJet 9120 and 9130 models include the HP JetDirect 620n Fast Ethernet print servers for digital sending, which HP defines as the ability to send scanned images to network folders, e-mail addresses, or remote Internet addresses. On the 9120, this requires the use of the fax numeric keypad to type network folder addresses and Internet addresses, much like using your cell phone keypad, where the number 5 key must be pressed four times to get a capital J. However, the OfficeJet 9130 model includes a tiny keypad, so if you plan to store images online regularly, it's worth spending $100 more.
The OfficeJet 9130 is a four-color inkjet printer, not a laser printer, so the cost of consumables over the lifetime of this printer may be high in an office environment. A 1,750-sheet color or black and individual color cartridge costs only $33; however, for every 16,000 sheets printed, you'll also need to purchase new printheads at $33 each. HP says this translates to 8.4 cents per color page, or 2.2 cents per monochrome text, which (if true) is not that much higher than laser costs, but your own usage will vary.
Drivers for the OfficeJet 9100-series printers work with Windows versions 98 through XP and Mac 9.2 and OS X (10.1.x and 10.2.x). The OfficeJet 9100 series includes HP's Photo And Imaging software for Windows and HP ImageZone for Mac. HP also includes ReadIris Pro OCR software for more advanced OCR features such as search and replace. The drivers included with the 9100 series support HP's own PCL and PostScript language emulation.Printing performance
The HP OfficeJet 9130 All-in-One performed competently in CNET Labs' text speed tests, averaging 5.1 pages per minute (ppm) for text, which puts this printer second only to the Dell A960, whose score was 6.3ppm. Compared with other HP OfficeJets, the 9130 beat both the 7130 at 4.1ppm and the 4215 at 4.8ppm.
On the other hand, the 9130's photo print speed was slow compared with other inkjet multifunction printers, producing a high-resolution, 8x10-inch color test photo at a mere 0.2 pages per minute. This score, however, is typical of the OfficeJet family, with both the 7130 and the 4215 taking the same amount of time.
Unfortunately, the 9130's print quality is a bit mixed. The monochrome text printed well but was too dark. Graphics printouts looked least impressive, with visible banding and dithering. On the other hand, the printer did very well with photos; our samples were sharp, with accurate color matching.
Scanning and copying performance
On average, the HP OfficeJet 9130 All-in-One scanned slower than the 7130 but faster than the 4215. On the other hand, it copied faster than both. The 9130 scanned grayscale documents at 1.9ppm, as opposed to the 7130 at 3.3ppm and the 4215 at 1.5ppm. The 9130 scanned color documents at a middling 1.8ppm, while the 7130 scanned at 2.7ppm and the 4215 at 1.5ppm. For copying speeds, the 9130 copied at a fast 2.6ppm, while the 7230 copied at 2.27 and the 4215 at 1.4ppm.
With scans, the test unit showed a similar problem with our grayscale and color samples. Both suffered from high contrast, resulting in washed-out images and loss of fine details. We do not evaluate the quality of photocopies in our tests.
We tested the HP OfficeJet 9130 at the default factory settings, which can be adjusted to better the output and address the above-mentioned issues. Click here to learn more about how CNET Labs tests printers.
Performance analysis written by CNET Labs project leader Dong Van Ngo.
| Text speed | Photo speed | Grayscale scan speed | Color scan speed | Copy speed |
| Color scan | Grayscale scan | Photo | Graphics on inkjet paper | Text on inkjet paper | Graphics on plain paper | Text on plain paper |
HP's printed setup guide and detailed onscreen manual are both informative and useful. Online, HP provides for the OfficeJet 9130 a model-specific Web site, with an extensive knowledge base, downloadable drivers, and links to e-mail and chat access with HP technicians.
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