HP Laserjet P1505 Review
- By Alan Wilson
- Published June 10th, 2008
- Hardware
- Unrated
Alan Wilson
Alan Wilson has over 10 years experience in the imaging industry and is currently a director of Cartridge Concept, stockists of laser toner cartridges for all the above printers including original HP toner cartridges.
View all articles by Alan WilsonThe HP Laserjet P1505 is clearly aimed at the entry-level end of the Laser Printer market and can be found for under £90. At this price you cannot expect many extras and the P1505 is indeed a very basic model only suitable as a standalone device for the home office or personal desktop use. HP does offer a network capable model, the P1505n, but the price increases by an unreasonable 50% and better options are available for less, for example the Lexmark E250dn that offers USB, Ethernet and parallel ports.
Design
The P1505 will certainly not take up too much room on your desktop. At 8.9x14.9x9.6 inches, it is smaller than many inkjet printers and weighing only 12.9 pounds it is not difficult to move single-handed. Without an LCD screen, the control panel consists of an array of lights labeled with icons that are so confusing, you often have to refer to the on screen documentation to figure out what the light sequence is telling you. HP has obviously cut corners to get down to this price and the paper guides that are located deep within the input tray are small and hard to move. The output tray also has a rather flimsy fold out extension showing more cost paring.
Cartridges
The printer is supplied with a starter cartridge with a limited capacity of 1,000 pages, so it will not be long before you are forced to buy a replacement. The only toner cartridge suitable for this printer
Performance
Unfortunately there was also evidence of cost cutting in the print tests. Plain text is handled fairly well given the likely workload, HP’s new spherical toner delivering crisp characters, however graphic performance isn’t up to par. Gradients were afflicted by plenty of banding and the maximum resolution of 600x600 dpi is half of that available from some other budget printers, like the Brother HL-5240. If print quality is disappointing, the same cannot be said for print speed. This printer hit 22ppm in tests that included both text and graphics, a result that is excellent for a budget laser printer and is faster than many more expensive printers.
Verdict
If you are just after a fast affordable mono laser printer for your home office, at less than £90 the HP Laserjet P1505 may just fit the bill. But if you require a little more in the way of usable features or better quality output, you would be well advised to increase the budget slightly and look one division up, at the likes of the Brother HL-5240.
Spread The Word
Related Articles
- 3D Animation in the Entertainment Industry
- Printer inkjet page yields.
- Canon Pixma iP2600 – Best Budget Printer?
- Battery Charger – A Necessity to Save Money
- The secrets of Windows code Name 7 – Part III
- DVD Replication - The Next Level
- Identity Crises for the HP Photosmart C6280 Printer
- The secrets of Windows code-named "7" - which you should know
- All you Wanted to Know about Render Farms
- Disappointing New MFP Laserjet - The M2727
- What are differences between Vista and XP?
- The End of Microsoft Windows XP's Era is coming closer
- Samsung ML-1630 - Style Over Substance?
- Canon Pixma MX7600 – Revolution or Evolution.
- Make Vista 64-bit Faster and Save Energy with Vista SP1
- Upgrade to a Colour Laser Printer
- What are the Benefits and Disadvantages of Windows Vista 64-bit?
- Why Windows Vista 64-bit makes your computer more secure?
- Online Shooting Games – Entertainment With Involvement
- Is it time for Windows Vista 64-bit?
- Understanding the Difference between 64-bit and 32-bit Systems.
- Is Windows 32-bit (x86) better or 64-bit and which one I should get?
- What should you do if you have problem with your Windows and Linux System?
- How can you recover your RAID System after Crash?

