HP Deskjet D4260

By Felisa Yang on 06/08/2007

More HP reviews , RRP: AU$99.00

The good:

  • Inexpensive
  • Fast print speeds, especially with graphics and photo prints
  • Good text quality for the price

The bad:

  • Photo quality needs improvement
  • Photosmart Essential software is limited

The bottomline:

The HP Deskjet D4260 is a good choice for home users looking for a basic printer that's good enough for projects like school reports, but that won't break the bank.

Buying choices:

Editors' rating:

7.1/10

Users' rating:

5/10

The HP Deskjet D4260 is one of our favourite low-cost inkjets we've tested, because of its combination of features, quality, and price. The AU$99 printer is suitable for home users with light printing needs. Its speeds are impressive for a printer of its class, and the print quality is good enough for personal and school use, though those users requiring very high quality text prints should look elsewhere.

Design
The HP Deskjet D4260's body is simply designed and understated. The silver-and-black printer stands 45.9cm wide, 48cm deep, and 14.4cm tall, and weighs just 3.5 kilograms. The paper handling system comprises an output tray that sits above a 100-sheet input tray. The output tray has an extendable arm for corralling paper, and the tray folds up so you can easily load paper into the input tray.

The control panel is also simple, consisting of a power button, a feed/continue button, and a Photosmart Essential button. There are also icons that light up to indicate a problem with the printer or low ink levels. Below the control panel is a single USB port for connecting cameras, USB memory card readers, or USB drives such as hard drives or flash thumbdrives.

The Deskjet D4260 uses a two-tank ink system: one black and one tricolour. Both come in standard and XL sizes. Both numbers are reasonable for a low-price inkjet printer. HP also offers a tricolour photo ink tank (to replace the black) for six-colour photo printing.

Features
As the HP Deskjet D4260 is a basic printer, it offers a basic feature set. The USB printer isn't duplex-ready, but the printer driver will assist you with manual duplex print jobs. The front USB port can be used to connect cameras, USB drives (hard and flash), or USB memory card readers, but you can't print directly from them. Instead, you'll have to transfer the contents of the attached device to your PC and print from there. Most inkjets in this price range don't even have front-mounted USB ports, so it seems like an added feature, but it's not particularly useful. After all, it's rare to find a PC that doesn't have an onboard USB port these days, so you might as well plug these devices into your PC to transfer the images.

If you want help organising, editing, and printing your photos, you can turn to HP's Photosmart Essential software, which comes on the installation CD. You can launch it on your PC or by using the Photosmart Essential Launch button on the printer. Photosmart Essential lets you browse your PC via file tree to find photos. Editing options include colour treatments, cropping, red-eye reduction, and some basic corrections for noisy images, low resolution, or faded images. Most of the "advanced" features are available at a basic level (on or off), so if you want more granular control of features such as brightness and contrast, you'll have to find a different program.

Performance
The HP Deskjet D4260 performed admirably when compared to other inkjets in this price range. It scored 6.03ppm when printing text, between the Lexmark Z1420 and the Canon Pixma iP180. It was the fastest of the three by far with graphics and 4x6 photo printing, scoring 2.26ppm for the former and 1.01ppm for the latter.

Inkjet printer performance (in pages per minute)
(Longer bars indicate better performance)
Photo  
Graphics  
Text  
Lexmark Z1420
0.72 
0.99 
6.68 
HP Deskjet D4260
1.01 
2.26 
6.03 
Canon Pixma iP1800
0.72 
1.79 
5.82 

The Deskjet D4260 also performed reasonably well in the quality tests, especially for a budget inkjet printer. It produced text that was a rich, dark black, but we saw lots of jagged edges. The colour graphics print showed good detail, but in some areas, the colours were oversaturated. The photo elements were a bit washed out and grainy, too. The 4x6 photo fared the worst in our evaluations. The colour was a bit dull and flat and fine details weren't sharp.

Overall, the HP Deskjet D4260 is a fine, serviceable machine for home users who print occasionally. It's better suited for reference prints for personal use (such as directions) and the occasional school report, but for formal business use, we would look for an inkjet with better print quality (and likely a steeper price tag). The less expensive Canon Pixma iP1800 is slower across the board, and offers only slightly better print quality than the Deskjet D4260.

Inkjet printer quality
(Longer bars indicate better performance)
Photo  
Graphics  
Text  
>Canon Pixma iP1800
3 
3 
3 
HP Deskjet D4260
2 
3 
3 
Lexmark Z1420
2 
2 
2 

HP backs the Deskjet D4260 with a standard one-year warranty. HP's site has drivers, software downloads, FAQs, and troubleshooting guides, as well.

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king
10/09/2007, 05:40 AM

rating
5
/10

decent printing capabilities and easy to use, however, it does not take thicker stock paper well.

Pros: inexpensive - decent quality

Cons: not good for cardmaking

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