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Basically, just don't print a lot at once. Those things weren't meant for high volume printing, and we found out the hard way that 1000+ pages a day is high volume to a Brother.
I have managed to keep it alive for a while though (HL5370DW if you're curious). And of course, the first issue we had with it was flaky wireless performance, so I ran an Ethernet line to it and from a connectivity standpoint it's been flawless since.
I think you just hit the nail on the head is what is wrong is wrong with the company on the whole... "they are junk for the most part". Once upon a time HP made damned nice computers rock solid desktops and laptops and printers. Now they are all junk, the thinnest plastic, horrible drivers, just garbage.
I USED to buy HP for my business customers, now its all Asus and Samsung, you can't trust HP anymore. instead of bringing Compaq up they brought HP down to the level of Compaq, similar how Seagate is now nothing but Maxtor with more sales and junk drives.




Member since:
2005-06-29
Compaq was once a great computer company; when HP bought them they had fallen very far already. If it weren't for Compaq's IBM clones back in the 80s the entire industry would be vastly different. Perhaps Apple might even be the leading computer manufacturer (speaking strictly of desktops and laptops).
I do agree with you though: When I think of HP, I think of laser printers and F/OSS friendliness, relatively speaking. As for their inkjet printer offerings...well I'll say from first hand experience that they are junk for the most part. My part time job sees me bench testing all manner of printers, and by far the ones I loathe the most are the HP inkjets, especially the OfficeJet line. In contrast, their mid to high tier laser offerings are a dream to work on, and don't require nearly as much maintenance and repair as other brands (Brother, I'm looking at you).
The only down side to HP laser printers is the cost of consumables, but that's par for the course in that market. In fact, that's the one area where a Brother printer is a solid choice: Not only are their replacement cartridges dirt cheap, they are chipless, employing a simple to reset mechanical cartridge life indicator, and an easy access plug to pour refills into. The trick is getting the printer itself to outlive the included starter cartridge and drum.
I for one would love to see the company spin off the OEM PC/laptop segment as Compaq, and focus on printing and enterprise under the HP brand. And yes, please consolidate those thousands of printer SKUs into a few dozen models! That would certainly make many people's jobs easier, mine included.