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HP Photosmart 8750 Large-Format Professional Photo Printer | |
Printer Type:
INK JET
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| Merchant & Rating | Product Details | Price* | Sales Tax* | Availability* |  Excellent Return Policy and customer service
Read Reviews: 4 / 5
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HP Photosmart 8750 Large-Format Professional Photo Printer (Q5747A#ABA)
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Buy it from Amazon
 | WA,ND |
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Free Shipping on most orders over $25 | | 
Read Reviews: 4 / 5
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HP Photosmart 8750 Pro Photo Printer 4800DPI 20PPM 9 INK 13X19
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Buy it from zones.com
 | CA, IL, MO, NV, OH, TN, WA |
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Shipping Info: $30.04 | |  Discount Superstore
Read Reviews: 1 / 5
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Photosmart 8750 Printer The ultimate HP 9-ink photo printer designed for the professional, fine art, portrait and serious amateur photographer who wants finished, professional-quality photos up to 13 x 19 inches.
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Buy it from Ecost.com
 | CA,TN |
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Free Shipping on orders over $25 | | CompUsa.com
Read Reviews: 3 / 5
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Q5747A#ABA HP Photosmart 8750 Professional Photo Printer
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Buy it from CompUsa.com
 | Most States - See Site |
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Shipping Info: $27.54 | | 
Read Reviews: 4 / 5
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HP Photosmart 8750 Professional Photo Printer Box Contents: HP Photosmart 8750 Professional Photo Printer, HP 22 Tri-color Inkjet Print Cartridge, 5 ml ink volume, HP Image Zone Express Photo and Imaging Software on CD-ROM, Setup Poster, User's Guide, Pow
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Buy it from J&R.com
 | NY |
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Shipping Info: UPS Ground 0.00 | |
| Product Reviews from Amazon.com (Rating System 1 to 5) |
| Review | Rating | Last Updated | TERRIBLE TECHNICAL SUPPORT STAFF I will NEVER buy another HP product again....be it a printer, computer or whatever. The main reason is HP has arguably the worst technical support staff. On two separate occasions, I had problems with my HP Photosmart printer so I called HP's techical support. They ask you the perfunctory questions and try to sound all polite and concerned and everything but then the inevitable always happens--they recommend you to buy an ugraded HP printer! They don't even bother trying to help you fix the printer that you already have. Well, after I spoke to technical support, I contacted a buddy of mine who knows a lot more about computers than I do. Needless to say he fixed my printer, which wasn't that big of a problem, unlike HP's technical support. The problems? 1) I was having difficulty with the cradle inside the printer going back and forth. It was stuck. 2) After I bought a new laptop computer that came with Microsoft Vista, I had difficulty hooking up my HP printer with my new computer. In conclusion, I strongly discourage anyone to buy anything from HP until their technical support staff stops acting like salespeople instead. | 1 | Today | HP 8750 Review Not what I was hoping for...upgraded from a CP1700....Oooops.
This thing eats ink, is ridiculously slow, prints faded images (with no insight from tech support) and consistanly pulls multiple pages.
Oh but it looks nice. No more HP's for this kid... | 2 | Today | HP 8750 The HP 8750 prints B&W and Color beautifully. It took some time to figure out the right printer preference settings. I did not having experience with color management settings so for awhile my prints were coming out way too dark. Once the settings were correct between my Corel Paint Shop Pro X software and 8750 printer life was good. I am still amazed that the engineers at HP can't get the paper to feed through perfectly aligned every time, not that it's off that much. Overall the printer turns out awesome 13x19 prints which are much more impressive than 8.5x11, and has taken my photos to a professionally looking level. | 4 | Today | Printer We've had the printer up and running now for two weeks and so far it does exactly what it's supposed to do. Not the fastest machine availble but for the price- well worht it- so far.... | 5 | Today | Great printer, better than my old Canon i9900 As a former professional photographer, a printer's performance as a photo processor is really where the rubber meets the road.
I shoot Nikon pro-level cameras and lenses, both film and digital. I have a Canon 9950F dedicated print scanner, a Nikon CoolScan negative/slide scanner, and an HP 8750 as a dedicated printer for larger format photo prints. I use Photoshop, Lightroom, DNG Converter, and other top-end photo software. The quality of my photo prints is absolutely crucial to me artistically.
I had a Canon i9900 printer, which made great prints in non-archival inks; not acceptable. The Vivera inks used in the 8750 will last over 100 years when used on HP's Premium Plus papers, and the unit yields stunning prints. Image quality is as good as one gets from a lab.
The printer interfaces beauutifully and reliably with my computer system (a periodic problem with the Canon, I might add), a desktop running XP Media Center Pro. Absolutely no glitches at all.
I have to say, I love this printer, and strongly recommend it.
| 5 | Today | Excellent printer I own this printer along with a Canon ip6700d. The ip6700 has much higher theoretical resolution and being used to that quality i was torn between this printer, the Canons (non pigment ink) and the Epsons (Head clogging!). I ran across this printer for a stunning 199 and couldnt pass it up. Glad i didnt. I only use it for 13x19 and 11x14 and i have to say once you've seen a couple of your photos pop out at 13x19 you'll never go back. The print quality is excellent even on Non-hp paper. I bought some "cheap" office max 13x19 for about $40, expecting inferior results. Boy was i suprised. Using either "other paper" or "HP Prem plus" profiles the printer pumped out stunning prints. I now use the ip6700 for 8.5x11's because of its marginally better quality and the hp for the big prints. I have to say if the hp pro paper ($75 for 13x19) makes as much difference as everyone says ill be giving away the canon. BUY this printer, you'll be glad you did. Knowing what i do now theres no way id buy the Canon or Epson wide formats.
There is one drawback. The longest print you can print is 24". Theres no real reason for this as hp should be able to allow you to print any lenghth with a smple change n software. And the Epson and canon will both print larter. But to be honest if you're prnting that large you'd probably come out cheaper and better usng one of the online print shops. (Though watching a 13"x48" pano to hang on the wall print out would be amazing) | 5 | Today | Great printer, great service I've had my HP 8750 for a year now - i do not use it as much as I expected, which means it sits a lot. Yet it always delivers sharp, clear printing on a variety of photo papers, and creates beautiful 13x19 enlargements. The ink lasts much longer than I expected - I am still on the original cartridges. And HP was terrific to work with. I had trouble with the first printer received, and HP used overnght shipping and top-knotch phone supoprt to get to issue solved. | 5 | Today | Save money on photo labs This printer will save you from going to the photo store or ordering prints online. The 3 cartridge printing head makes true to life photos. The 13x19 photo size that is even borderless makes a big impression. Prints are best on hp photo paper. I have done some flyer layouts on 11x17 regular paper as well. All around a best buy. | 5 | Today | Pro Printer This is the printer for you if you are into pictures of all sizes. The quality of the prints are unbelievable. It doesn't use as much ink as I thought it would. | 5 | Today | Great color. Handles small paper (4 I have a love/hate relationship with this printer.
First, the good features:
1) Superb color. Hard to beat.
2) I've never experienced a clogged print head (Epson is notorious for this). HP print heads are replaced when you replace the ink cartridge; on Epsons, you are just replacing the ink.
2) Networked. You can print to it from every computer on the network.
3) Handles plain paper documents very well.
4) Prints up to 11"x19"!
5) Photo prints are excellent (when the paper is straight - see bad features).
Now, the bad features:
6) Handles small (4"x6"). It often pulls the paper in crooked. I've had batches of prints where every other one was bad. You know how expensive the photo print paper is. Even installing the small paper is funky; you have to shove it way into the machine -- not intuitive.
7) It accepts memory cards and, theoretically, you can print directly from the cards. The reality is that the physical interface is so clunky, you should expect to do everything from your computer.
8) Software drivers are bloated and intrusive -- [...].
| 4 | Today |
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