Jetdirect Simm

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Jetdirect Simm

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HP J2549-60001 JetDirect Simm HP J2549-60001 JetDirect Simm Paypal US $47.76 15d 13h 51m
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HP JETDIRECT EX ENET FLASH SIMM UPGRADE MODULE J2549A J2549A#ABA HP JETDIRECT EX ENET FLASH SIMM UPGRADE MODULE J2549A J2549A#ABA Paypal US $66.90 7d 21h 3m
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HP - HP J2549-60001 SIMM JETDIRECT HP - HP J2549-60001 SIMM JETDIRECT

HP J2549-60001 SIMM JETDIRECT

HP JetDirect EX Enet Flash SIMM Upgrade Module J2549A J2549A#ABA HP JetDirect EX Enet Flash SIMM Upgrade Module J2549A J2549A#ABA

HP JetDirect EX Enet Flash SIMM Upgrade Module J2549A J2549A#ABA. Product may differ from image shown.

HP LaserJet 5P – 6 PPM Printer with No Expandability

There are pieces of technology so solid in design and timeless in performance that they seem to never become obsolete. The HP LaserJet 5P is not one of them. With painfully slow print speeds as well as an almost complete lack of features and connectivity options, the HP LaserJet 5P is not a purchase worth considering.

Operating at an inacceptable print speed of 6 pages per minute, the HP LaserJet 5P produces documents that would be faster to copy by hand. Partially to blame is its built in, ridiculously slow 20 MHz Intel 80960JF RISC processor that would barely run a calculator by today's standards. Its maximum monthly duty cycle is also scoffable, with only 12,000 total sheets allowed before this aging wreck begins to fall apart. With such a slow print speed, a low monthly duty cycle is to be expected, but with a 12,000 page maximum, the recommended usage rests somewhere around 500 total sheets. Most small businesses require much, much more output than this.

As a home device the HP LaserJet 5P might be considered acceptable, but the unfortunate fact is that the device has virtually zero convenience features whatsoever. As a bare bones device, its versatility is limited, and it is not suited for users who require flexibility from their monochrome laser printer.

The only leeway this machine gives is with its maximum paper weight. With a 43 lb thickness limit, users could potentially barely squeeze an envelope or transparency through the device. Custom paper sizes are also selectable down to 3 in x 5 in and up to standard letter size. Print resolution is not only locked at a 600 x 600 dot per inch maximum, but the unit can only manage a range of 120 levels of gray, making shading and blending imagery impractical.

The device comes with no USB port but does, for some reason, offer not one but two high speed IEEE 1284 compliant parallel ports. It also has an infrared option for pre-bluetooth wireless connectivity. No networking option is included, but an HP JetDirect EX print server can be attached to the unit if one so desired to try spooling two projects at once and learn the true meaning of slow.

While standard memory included in box is a sorry 2 MBs, the unit does include an internal 72 pin SIMM slot for upgrades of up to 50 MBs of RAM. Upgraded memory can help reduce slowdown when dealing with complex projects such as mixed text and imagery, but seeing as how this type of media would come out at poor quality anyway it's hard to see the point.

Paper handling abilities come in the form of a single, awkwardly sized 350 sheet capacity paper tray. No paper storage expansion options are available, leaving users constantly stuck dealing with strange, almost empty reams of paper that aren't enough to fill the tray entirely. The HP LaserJet 5P may have been a reasonable option as a bargain laser printer in its day but, by today's standards, your best value would be to get as far away from it as you can.

For more information:

http://printdocs.org/hp-laserjet-5p-6-ppm-printer-with-no-expandability/

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