The impressive-looking 4.3" (10.9 cm) touch-panel LCD screen is used to navigate and set the printer's various functions as well as to preview photos. The overall appearance is very boxy with minimal controls - just the power button and a touch-sensitive LCD screen. The HP C310 is visually the least appealing of the three test units, it may blend in perfectly in an office environment, but for home use it's perhaps too 'corporate' in its styling. The C310 uses five inks, but only four are used for photo printing - cyan, magenta, yellow and photo black. I let the printer do a recommended install.Ĭlear instructions inside the C310's case explain exactly how to set the printer up. The software installation took over 20 minutes on a fast computer, I can only deduce that the installation also looked to the HP site to ensure the latest drivers were installed, although there was no notification of what was happening. The supplied setup inks will prime the print heads and produce a limited amount of prints, but we'd recommended that you purchase a full set of inks at the time of purchasing the printer. The C310 has five inks - Photo Black, Magenta, Cyan, Yellow and plain old 'Black' for text printing. Then you simply remove the protective cover from the print head cradle and supplied ink cartridges. Installation of the C310 is a simple process: power up the printer, open the printer case and a print head cradle appears out of the side wing. The C310 is the least impressive printer in this group in terms of specification, but nevertheless it still produces good quality prints.
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