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  Home > Printers > HP LaserJet M5035 MFP


HP LaserJet M5035 MFP

Hewlett-Packard 13 23 47  |  Price at time of review $4968

  Author:  Dave Mitchell
Performance:
Features & Design:
Value for money:
Overall Rating: Rating: 4 out of 6

Date:  05/03/2007

In Short
Loads of printing features and good output speeds from this well-built MFP, but poor print quality lets it down.

Specifications
600 x 600dpi A3 mono, 35ppm (A4), 18ppm (A3) • 600dpi colour scanner • 460MHz MIPS • 256MB RAM • 40GB hard disk • USB • 10/100 Ethernet • 2 x 500-sheet input trays • 100-sheet MPT • 50-sheet ADF • drivers for Windows 98 onwards, web browser management. Running Costs Mono cartridge (15,000 pages), $270. Overall cost per A4 page with high-capacity cartridge, $1.73
Review Pricing  


HP’s LaserJet multifunction printer family just keeps growing. The latest M5035 MFP is aimed at large workgroups of up to 15 users with a desire for mono A3 printing and copying, colour scanning and the ability to email documents directly from the printer.

Paper handling options are impressive, as the base model on review comes with a pair of 250-sheet lower trays, or you can opt for the next models in the range that extend this by up to 1,500 pages. Either way, the M5035 can be upgraded with extra trays, duplex unit, stacker/stapler and analogue fax card. The printer comes with 256MB of memory but, as we found with the M3035xs MFP, if you want to upgrade HP will relieve you of an eye-watering $980 for a 256MB 100-pin DIMM module. On a brighter note, printing costs are low, as the 15,000-sheet cartridge delivers an A4 page for a mere $1.73.

HP has streamlined the installation process well. We like the menu option on the control panel’s main page, which allows you to view and print all network address details with two button presses. Driver and utility installs are also deftly handled, with the routine searching the network for HP printers during this process. The printer’s operator panel is easy to use and there are scanning options aplenty, as you can copy and print multiple pages using the automatic document feeder, scan and email as an attachment, and scan directly to a network folder or FTP site. The latter worked fine with our Windows Server 2003 domain controller running IIS, and we could also send files to shared folders as PDFs, JPEGs or TIFFs. You can send documents directly from the control panel or printer driver for storage on the internal 40GB hard disk and each can be PIN protected.

The quoted print speeds were slightly pessimistic: our tests actually showed the printer to be marginally faster. A 35-page A4 Word document was despatched in 59 seconds at 600dpi, while an 18-page A3 document took 55 seconds. Plus, our heavy-duty 24-page DTP-style document printed in 40 seconds for an average speed of 36ppm. Moving resolution up to the maximum ProRes 1200 setting didn’t faze it either, as this took 40 seconds too.

We wish we could say the same about print quality, but the M5035 fails in this department. General text output was pin-sharp down to the smallest of font sizes, but charts and photographic images faired poorly. Bar and pie charts suffered from an unsightly banding, which became more obvious in photographs, and the general level of detail for the latter was poor. We found quality for the M3035xs MFP to be average, but for the M5035 it was unacceptable. Further tests also showed almost no discernable differences between the various resolutions available from the driver panel.

HP’s MFP printers usually offer an unbeatable range of features for the price. The M5035 MFP is no exception, but it’s a real shame that general print quality is so uninspiring.





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