PC Pro

HP OfficeJet Pro 9022e

A super-speedy inkjet printer that can give a laser a run for its money: it’s ideal for printing text in volume

- ANDY SHAW

SCORE ★★★★ PRICE £194 (£233 inc VAT) from pcpro.link/324hp

With the OfficeJet Pro 9022e, HP isn’t just selling you a printer but trying to change the way you think about printing itself. Although you can certainly buy this printer and use it like any other, HP intends it to be a flag bearer for its HP+ Instant Ink subscripti­on service.

In some ways, this is a positive thing: signing up gets you six months of free ink and adds an extra year on the warranty, taking it up to three years in total. The downside is you have to contractua­lly tie your new printer into the service and forgo using non-HP cartridges.

The 9022e we’ve reviewed here is essentiall­y the same as the OfficeJet Pro 9020, but with all the elements you’ll need to get started with HP+.

■ Big statement

Few printers are small and compact, but the HP OfficeJet Pro 9022e is larger than most. Measuring 437 x 396 x 318mm (WDH) and weighing 11.6kg, it requires a significan­t slice of desk to sit on. If it looks more like a laser printer than an inkjet, it’s a deliberate ploy – everything about this printer screams office efficiency, from the 35-sheet automatic document feeder that sits on top of the scanner to the dual 250-sheet paper trays in the base. The paper output tray juts out between the two.

The printer is operated via a slick touchscree­n in the top-right corner, which can be tilted upwards and out, making it easier to view and operate if you’re standing over it. HP is good at these screens and this one is as responsive as the rest for swiping and tapping. It’s not as bright or crisp as a phone screen, but it’s good enough.

If you were thinking of connecting this printer to a PC using its USB port, you might be put off by the sticker over the port, imploring you to use Wi-Fi instead. That makes sense because, if you’re going to use HP+, the printer has to be connected to a network.

■ Soft touch

Thankfully, Wi-Fi setup is simple.

You use the HP Smart app, which can be installed on a mobile device, Windows PC or Mac. This uses the Wi-Fi on your device to connect to the printer and to automatica­lly transfer your network’s credential­s so it can be found by other devices. There’s also an Ethernet port, so you can hardwire it to your network.

The apps for all devices have a uniform look and there are plenty of tools available to make printing easier. You do get a slightly different selection, however, depending on the platform – from a smartphone or tablet, for example, there are options to scan from the camera and print from photos, features that are missing from the PC/Mac apps. The app also connects well to all the usual cloud-based services, including Dropbox, Google Drive and Box.

You can even create your own shortcuts that link services, allowing you to do clever things such as scanning straight to your email app or sending photos of receipts to cloud storage.

■ Brutal speeds

HP’s OfficeJet Pro range is designed to churn out prints fast, so it can be shared between multiple users on a network. The 9022e doesn’t hold back on this front. At 16 seconds, it’s not particular­ly fast to drop the first page, but from then on it’s blistering.

When printing mono pages it passed the 20ppm barrier, making it the fastest text printer I’ve reviewed this year, and that list includes laser printers. It slowed down when printing in colour, dropping to 8.5ppm. That’s still quick for an inkjet, but a colour laser printer will typically be faster. Colour duplex prints slowed the printer further, dropping it to 4.6ppm. It’s no slouch in this department but it isn’t going to win any gold medals.

Thankfully, the scanner doesn’t hold back when printing copies.

In our tests, a mono copy was produced in 11 seconds, while a colour copy took 17 seconds.

The document feeder slowed it back down to average speeds, but it’s certainly still impressive overall.

■ Instant Ink

Print costs are slightly complicate­d, thanks to HP’s Instant Ink subscripti­on service. If you sign up to HP+, you get the first six months free, which could save you hundreds of pounds if you hook up to a pricier plan.

At best, you can print for around 3p per page (it doesn’t matter if it’s a colour or a mono print), but you have to get close to printing the maximum amount in order to make it pay, otherwise you’re paying for prints

“If you sign up to HP+, you get the first six months free, which could save you hundreds of pounds if you hook up to a pricier plan”

you don’t produce. There are a range of plans you can opt for, all based on the number of pages printed per month ( see table opposite).

Here’s how it works: Instant Ink monitors your printing remotely, keeping track of how many pages you have printed (note that even a cancelled print counts against your quota if some ink has hit the paper). If you don’t use your entire allowance, pages are banked and used against any overprinti­ng in subsequent months, although you can only bank twice the number of pages as you have in your monthly allowance.

While HP is monitoring the volume of your printing, it keeps an eye on your ink levels and sends replacemen­t cartridges before the current batch runs out, which is the best part of the service. You’re also sent an envelope so you can send spent cartridges back to be recycled.

If you want to buy cartridges off the shelf, it could work out cheaper still. At the time of writing, HP was selling all four cartridges in a bundle for £90. The black cartridge can print 1,000 pages, while the three colour cartridges can print 700 pages each. Presuming they all run down at the same rate, the price per page works out to 2.9p.

If you run through the cartridges at different rates, black on its own costs £30 while the three colour cartridges are £22. This works out slightly more expensive – 2.9p per mono page and 3.1p per colour page

– but still better than all but the highest volume subscripti­on costs. If you can find HP cartridges at a discount, you’ll be quids in.

■ Print quality

If you’re looking for the last word in graphics quality, and at speed, the 9022e isn’t your friend. I saw banding in areas of solid colour at standard settings, and once you spot these you can’t unsee them. Switching to the best quality fixes the problem, but a reasonable-quality print shouldn’t be reserved for the highest settings.

Despite the speed at which it flies out of the printer, text is better. Close inspection (with a magnifying glass) shows it’s rougher than printers that take more time and care over their prints, but there’s not that much in it.

Photo print quality is disappoint­ing. Large areas of black in our test prints came out blotchy and colours were generally washed out. Clearly, this printer isn’t intended for keen photograph­ers.

In contrast, the scanner performed reasonably well. Colour copies produced from the printer’s control panel were more washed out than ideal, but scanning a photo direct to Windows at 1,200dpi produced detailed, colourful results.

■ The right home

A busy small or home office is going to find the 9022e a useful device to have around. It’s easy to set up, easy to use and prints text documents at a phenomenal rate. The option to have 250 sheets of two paper types ready to print, and a subscripti­on to ensure ink never runs dry, means you don’t have to do much to keep it running.

For home users prepared to wait for their prints, though, there are better products. Printing a lot of photos? The Canon Pixma TS8350 ( see issue 320, p81) produces vastly superior results. And although the 9022e isn’t expensive to run, you can find a better price per print elsewhere, too. Most notably, the Canon Pixma G650 ( see issue 323, p69) provides great prints at 0.2p per mono and 0.4p per colour page.

The 9022e strikes a good balance between speed and print costs and it’s convenient. However, those seeking the highest quality or lowest costs are better off looking elsewhere.

SPECIFICAT­IONS

4,800 x 1,200dpi inkjet MFP four cartridges (CMYK) 1,200 x 1,200dpi scanner 2.7in touchscree­n 100-sheet rear tray 802.11n Wi-Fi Ethernet USB fax modem 437 x 396 x 318mm (WDH) 11.7kg recommende­d 2,000 pages monthly volume 3yr limited warranty with HP+

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? ABOVE From the slick touchscree­n to the 35sheet ADF, the 9022e screams efficiency
ABOVE From the slick touchscree­n to the 35sheet ADF, the 9022e screams efficiency
 ??  ?? ABOVE HP’s subtle attempt to dissuade people from using the USB port
ABOVE HP’s subtle attempt to dissuade people from using the USB port
 ??  ?? BELOW The apps offer plenty of features that make the print process smoother
BELOW The apps offer plenty of features that make the print process smoother

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