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Kodak Hero 7.1

RH Numbers

The mid-range model in Kodak’s higher-end Hero range, the main differences from the ESP 3.2 are a front-loading paper tray, with a separate 40-sheet photo tray, a much larger touchscreen, duplex print and a five-colour cartridge. While this includes a photo black and a gloss enhancer, it can still be wasteful, if you don’t use all colours equally.

Print speeds of 5.3ppm and 3.1ppm for black and colour are slower than from the ESP and quality is much the same on all papers. Ink costs, at 1.4p and 4.1p, give the lowest colour cost in the group. ®

Kodak Hero 7.1 all-in-one inkjet photo printer

Reg Rating 75%
Price £170
More info Kodak

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differences

The differences are explained right at the start of the article. A photo printer generally has more than 4 inks, some offer CD/DVD printing and some have negative/slide scanners.

The truth of all this though is that printing photos at home is a waste of time and money. Online photo printing services can have the pictures out to you next day and they'll be better quality and cheaper than you can possibly achieve at home.

When my current printer dies or the ink becomes hard to find I'll be getting myself a laser, probably black and white, and all my photo printing will be done online.

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Would have liked to have seen some 'normal' inkjet all-in-ones as a comparison

Apart from the fancy pop-up LCD displays (are they needed when you've probably previewed the pic on a phone/camera/tablet/desktop already?), what's the difference between an colour inkjet photo printer and a "normal" colour inkjet printer?

It might have been nice to incude a few "non-photo" colour inkjets in the review, load them up with photo paper and see what sort of job they do. With the price of photo paper and inkjet cartridges already very high, I've got to question spending anything more than 100 quid on any sort of inkjet printer.

Me? I've got an HP colour all-in-one inkjet printer, but no somewhat pointless colour pop-up LCD on it. Price? 25 quid directly from hp.com - throw in some photo paper and it does a good enough job at printing photos. No printer here costs under 80 quid, the difference of which could go on buying a reasonable number of cartridges and photo paper.

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Re: When is £300>£499?

If you're price conscious (as you should be), then you'd be crazy to compare prices of the printers themselves and not spend at least twice the time comparing the cost of the ink. If you actually use a printer, the cost of the ink will swamp out the price of the printer itself several times over.

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