Hewlett Packard Laser Printer
Hewlett Packard Laser Printer M1319F
Technical Details
- Multifunction laser printer that prints, faxes, copies, and scans
- Print and copy in Black-and-white at speeds up to 19 pages per minute
- Powerful 240 MHz Tensilica on-board processor with 32 MB of memory
- Scan documents in full-color as large as 8.5 x 14 inches
- 250-sheet paper tray, 10-sheet priority tray, and 30-sheet ADF
What’s in the Box
Hewlett Packard Laser Printer M1319f MFP, power cord(s), introductory HP LaserJet black print cartridge, Getting Started Guide, support flyer, software and documentation CDs, control panel overlay, Readiris PRO text recognition software, 250-sheet input tray, output bin support.
Description
The Hewlett Packard Laser Printer M1319f - Multifunction (MFP) will print, fax, copy, and scan, and it does it fast and efficiently. The LaserJet M1319f prints and copies black and white documents fast at speeds up to 19 pages per minute (ppm). Create professional-looking 1200 x 1200 dpi B&W documents with ease, and use the manual duplex printing feature to print on both sides of the paper. Scan documents into your computer in full-color using the Hewlett Packard Laser Printer M1319f at resolutions as high as 19,200 dpi for superior image quality - even when enlarging the image.
Fax at lighting-fast speeds as fast as 3 seconds per page, and the 32 MB of on-board memory will store up to 120 numbers for added convenience. The LaserJet M1319f can handle its fair share of paper with ease. This MFP comes equipped with a 250-sheet input paper tray, 10-sheet priority tray, and 30-sheet automatic document feeder (ADF). Compatible with Windows and Macintosh, the Hewlett Packard Laser Printer M1319f MFP measures 18.4 x 17.3 x 18.1 inches (WxDxH) and weighs 22 pounds.
Reviews
By: Robert Murphy
I had an HP Fax 1010 for my home office, and it was a trouper - always worked great. But then HP had a recall due to potential fire hazard, and offered a rebate on several of their faxes and multifunction fax/printer/scanners. So I went for the Hewlett Packard Laser Printer M1391F MFP. I don’t really care about printing - I’ve got a color duplex laser printer for that. I wanted something that would fax, copy, and scan with an auto-feed.
Here’s what it’s good at:
- Scanning letter-size pages (although their Mac software could use some work).
- Copying letter-size pages.
- Faxing letter-size pages to U.S. recipients.
- And the document feed works great.
Here’s what it won’t do:
- Scan legal-sized pages
- Ring or make any kind of noise when it gets an incoming call, from a fax machine, cell phone, or land line. Even with all the volume settings turned to high.
- Receive an incoming fax or phone call. From anywhere.
The capper tonight was that I had to fax a time-sensitive document to New Zealand, and this piece of work thinks the NZ dial tone is a busy signal and won’t connect. I tried to access HP’s live chat help desk, but nobody picked up in over a half-hour. So now I’m having an extended, hours-between-installments email correspondence with Nigel from Bangalore, and he’s asking me to verify the model number and what version of Windows is on the attached computer and am I using USB.
Well, there is no computer attached, Nigel, I’m using this as a detached fax machine. But as someone who’s written printer drivers for your own company’s printers, and fax software for your competitors, I can assure you that if the attached computer is preventing this unit from receiving faxes or recognizing international dial tones, you need to look for another job. I dug out the old 1010 and it sent the fax just fine. This unit has a wonderful feature set.
If only it worked. When I was in grad school over 20 years ago, HP sold the best lab equipment money could buy. You knew if you got an HP gas chromatograph, or infrared spectrometer, or oscilloscope, you had the highest quality available on the planet. Now… I’ve bought probably a dozen HP laser printers since 1990, and never even looked at another brand, with one costing over $10,000. But after this hunk of junk, I will certainly look at alternatives in the future.



