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Any of the cartridges listed on this page will work reliably in your HP Deskjet. Cartridge Save offers a wide selection of HP Deskjet D1560 ink, at the lowest. HP Deskjet D1560 Inkjet Printer Ink Cartridges - Free next day delivery available. Yield rate of any particular cartridge, the print quality that it will produce for you. Your HP printer is rated to print around 18 pages per minute in black.
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How HP measures yields
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For all Deskjet, Photosmart and Officejet inkjet printers and All in Ones sold since July 2005, HP publishes page yield data based on the industry standard for measuring ink cartridge yields (ISO/IEC 24711).(For laser printer yields see LaserJet page yields).
Under the ISO 24711 testing guidelines, a standard set of five 8 1/2 x 11 pages is printed continuously until the cartridge reaches end-of-life.For a variety of reasons, these testing conditions may not reflect what you experience in everyday use.Therefore, ISO standard page yields should be used only as a starting point for comparison purposes and not to predict the actual yield you will get from your HP printer and cartridge. Actual yield varies considerably based on the content of printed pages, frequency of printing, ink used in printer set-up and other factors, as discussed below.
The five standard ISO pages shown below consist of a mix of text and graphics and a mix of black and colour.
Actual yield will vary depending upon the amount of content on the page.Highly 'dense' documents, such as the text document below, may yield fewer pages than the ISO standard, while less dense one's such as the organisation chart below, would yield more pages than the standard.Printing that uses primarily one colour could cause lower yields for that colour and higher yields for colours not heavily used.The yield you experience will depend upon the content that you print.
HP has a separate yield standard for photo printing. See Inkjet photo yields for more information.
Some inkjet users print a few pages at a time and hours, sometimes days, pass between print jobs.With this kind of start/stop printing, inkjet printers use some ink to keep print nozzles clear and ink flowing smoothly.This is critical to maintain the health of your printer and ensure that you continue to experience the same great print quality that your printer delivered when it was new.However, it can cause your yields to be lower than if you printed the same content continuously.
Some HP inkjet printers use ink from the first cartridges installed for printer start up. This one-time ink usage is not included in the ISO 24711 test and could impact the yield for your very first cartridge.Also, some HP inkjet printers include an 'introductory cartridge' in the printer box, which may print less than an HP replacement cartridge.HP's printer packaging indicates whether introductory cartridges are included with the printer
For more information on how HP inkjet printers use ink see How ink is used.
Inkjet page yield testing methodology
HP publishes page yield data based on the ISO standard for measuring ink cartridge yields (ISO/IEC 24711):
- The test is based on a standard suite of five pages printed consecutively until the ink cartridge reaches its end-of-life. A cartridge is determined to be at end-of-life when the test pages fade or, for some printers, when the printer automatically stops due to out-of-ink detection.
- To account for variations that may occur, a minimum of 3 cartridges of each cartridge type is tested in each of 3 printers.
- The ISO test does not account for ink used for printer start-up. The standard specifies that after the printer completes initial start up, the cartridges must be removed and replaced with new cartridges prior to measuring yield
![30 minute hp carbon survivair bottles 30 minute hp carbon survivair bottles](/uploads/1/2/5/7/125796747/554070315.jpg)
Details of the ISO/IEC printing standards are available at www.iso.org/jtc1/sc28
What is ISO?
ISO (International Organization for Standardization) is the world's largest developer and publisher of International Standards.ISO is a network of the national standards institutes of 157 countries, one member per country, with a Central Secretariat in Geneva, Switzerland, that co-ordinates the system.
ISO is a non-governmental organisation that forms a bridge between the public and private sectors. On the one hand, many of its member institutes are part of the governmental structure of their countries or are mandated by their government. On the other hand, other members have their roots uniquely in the private sector, having been set up by national partnerships of industry associations.
Therefore, ISO enables a consensus to be reached on solutions that meet both the requirements of business and the broader needs of society. For more information on ISO see www.iso.org.
How HP displays page yield data
Example of individual yields on HP printer packaging
HP publishes specific page yield numbers for each cartridge that is recommended for each inkjet printer. Generally this will be the ISO standard yield. The major exception is for cartridges that are used primarily for photo printing, for which HP publishes photo yield (see Inkjet photo yields).
Example of composite CMY yields
on HP printer packaging
For select printers that have individual colour ink cartridges, HP publishes a 3-colour composite page yield. The composite yield is based upon the ISO 24711 reporting methodology, which provides for a single average reporting yield for Cyan, Magenta and Yellow ink cartridges. Black is reported separately as an individual yield.
Most HP inkjet cartridges are used by more than one printer model and yields for a given cartridge can vary from printer to printer, although this difference is usually small. Generally HP determines cartridge reference yields based upon the yield of the first printer released that uses that cartridge. As a result, the cartridge reference yield may be different than the yield published for that cartridge in your printer. HP inkjet cartridge reference yields are always stated in terms of individual, not composite yield. In the example shown below, the Deskjet 6540 was the printer used to determine the reference yields for the 94 and 95 cartridges.
Number | Cartridge reference | Deskjet 6540 | Deskjet 6620 | Photosmart B8350 | Officejet H470 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
94 | 480 | 480 | 490 | 480 | 500 |
95 | 330 | 330 | 330 | 310 | 330 |
Although yields are reported for individual cartridges, the test itself is conducted with all of the cartridges installed. Inkjet printers often use ink from more than one cartridge when printing text and graphics.See How ink is used for more details.In many cases, HP printers allow for more than one cartridge type in a given printer stall, so that different combinations of cartridges are possible.In these instances the yield of one cartridge may be affected by the choice of other cartridges in the printer. The specific cartridge pairings used for each of our printer yields are included on our printer page yield web site HP Printer: Page Yield.
Some older HP printers and cartridges and cartridges used primarily for large format graphics, do not have page yields.
How HP displays ink volume data
Ink volume (millilitre) information is meant to supplement the published page yield information. For ink cartridges and compatible Deskjet, Photosmart and Officejet printers introduced since July 2005, the ink volume information is based on the volume of ink filled in the cartridge when it is manufactured rather than extracted ink volume. For inkjet cartridges used in printers introduced before July 2005, the ink volume information is based on the extracted ink volume. For cartridges used for commercial and industrial use, such as DesignJet, the ink volume information is also based on the extracted ink volume.
HP does not recommend using ink volume a sole basis of comparison between printers using different types of cartridges. Different printing systems may use ink very differently (see How ink is used for more details). Comparing printing systems based on ink volume alone may be inadequate. Customers may find ink volume, along with page yield, to be a useful basis for comparison.
HP does not recommend using ink volume a sole basis of comparison between printers using different types of cartridges. Different printing systems may use ink very differently (see How ink is used for more details). Comparing printing systems based on ink volume alone may be inadequate. Customers may find ink volume, along with page yield, to be a useful basis for comparison.
HP's recommendation
Keep in mind that page yield is just one component of cost, and that factors such as quality, reliability, productivity, and efficiency affect cost as well. Products that work reliably will ultimately save you time and money. When you choose an inkjet printer, make sure you consider your individual printing needs.
Original DeskJet 500
DeskJet 3845
Deskjet is a brand name for inkjet printers manufactured by Hewlett-Packard.[1] These printers range from small domestic to large industrial models, although the largest models in the range have generally been dubbed DesignJet.[2] The Macintosh-compatible equivalent was branded as the Deskwriter and competed with Apple'sStyleWriter, and the all-in-one equivalent is called OfficeJet.
HP's first inkjet printer is the ThinkJet.
History[edit]
HP began making inkjet printers with the HP Thinkjet (models HP 2225A and HP 2225B) in 1984.[3] In 1988, HP introduced the first DeskJet. It included a built-in cut sheet feeder, 2 ppm, and 300 dpi. This was followed by the DeskJet Plus in 1989. It offered a landscape printing ability. The DeskJet 500 was introduced in 1990, offering a faster printing speed of 3 ppm. Meanwhile, HP introduced the DeskWriter for the Macintosh in 1989, based on the DeskJet 500.
By 1987, the world's first full-color inkjet printer, the PaintJet, was introduced. It was so successful that HP introduced a version of the DeskJet capable of color printing, the DeskJet 500C, in October 1991, which is also HP's first 300 dpi color printer, offering 4 minutes per page in color, using a swappable either black or CMY print head cartridge. It was replaced by the DeskJet 550C in October 1992, HP's first dual-cartridge color DeskJet, offering a real black instead of mixed black ink in color prints, using both the 500C's cartridges at once. The DeskJet 560C followed in March 1994, which introduced HP ColorSmart to intelligently analyze documents for the best color output.
Meanwhile, HP introduced the DeskJet Portable (3 ppm) in 1992. It was designed to be easily portable. It was targeted at mobile professionals. It was replaced by the HP DeskJet 310 (4 ppm B&W, 4 minutes per page color) in 1993, the HP DeskJet 320 in 1994, the HP DeskJet 340 (2 minutes per page color) in 1995, and the HP DeskJet 350 and 350CBi (5 ppm B&W, 2 ppm color) in 2000.
HP continued to make black-and-white-only inkjet printers with the HP DeskJet 510 (1992) and 520 (1994). The HP DeskJet 520 introduced resolution enhancement technology, or REt, to HP inkjet printers. It was also HP's last black-and-white-only inkjet printer. The HP DeskJet 500, 510, 520, 500C, 550C, and 560C were all replaced by the HP DeskJet 540 (3 ppm B&W, 1.5 minutes per page color). A one-pen inkjet printer, color was optional. Also it introduced a different industrial design.
HP's high-end printer line started with the HP DeskJet 1200C, introduced in 1993, offering 6 ppm B&W, and 1 ppm color. This was replaced by the HP DeskJet 1600C (1995), offering 9 ppm B&W, and 4 ppm color, which offered a successor, the HP DeskJet 1600CN (1996), the 1600C with built-in networking.
HP replaced the PaintJet XL300 and the DeskJet 1600C/1600CN with the HP DeskJet 1000C/1100C/1120C in 1998, HP's first A3 inkjet printers under the DeskJet brand. These printers were replaced by the HP DeskJet 1220C in 2000, offering 12 ppm in B&W, and 10 ppm in color.
Vivid, enduring HP Vivera inks were introduced with the HP Deskjet 6540 in 2004, offering breakthrough printing speeds of up to 30 ppm in black-and-white, and 20 ppm in color.
HP all-in-one inkjet printers under the Deskjet brand exist, starting with the HP Deskjet F380 printer/scanner/copier, introduced in 2006, using HP Vivera inks, and offering print speeds of 20 ppm in black-and-white, and 14 ppm in color.
Today, HP sells various Deskjets. The current line of HP Deskjets include the HP Deskjet 1000/2000/3000, and all-in-ones like the 1050/1055/2050/3050/3050A/3510/3520.[4] The 1000, 1050, and 1055 were introduced in 2010, while the 2000/3000/2050/3050/3050A/3510/3520 were introduced in September 2011. The 3050/3050A/3510/3520 include touchscreen LCDs.[citation needed] Many current HP Deskjets offer print speeds of 20 ppm B&W and 14 ppm color.[citation needed]
See also[edit]
References[edit]
- ^'HP Deskjet Printers and All-in-ones.' HP Deskjet Printers and All-in-ones. N.p., n.d. Web. 23 Nov. 2012. <http://www.hp.com/products1/inkjetprinter/deskjet.html>.
- ^'HP Designjet: Future-Ready Printer.' Hewlett-Packard, Oct.-Nov. 2011. Web. 23 Nov. 2012. <http://h10010.www1.hp.com/wwpc/pscmisc/vac/us/product_pdfs/Designjet_Family_Guide2011.pdf>.
- ^Shapiro, Ezra (April 1984). 'Stylish Output'. BYTE. p. 82. Retrieved 22 October 2013.
- ^'HP Deskjet Printers 1000 upwards current lines.' HP Deskjet Printers 1000 upwards current lines. Internetink 25 Nov. 2015. <https://www.internet-ink.com/hp-deskjet-printer-ink-cartridges-models-1000-upward>.
External links[edit]
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