Saturday, February 22, 2014

How Do I Get HP Laserjet Ent 600 M603N Printer

HP Laserjet Ent 600 M603N Printer

HP Laserjet Ent 600 M603N Printer Review


Tackle large-volume print jobs with ease, and enable printing policies with top-flight expandability. Improve security and quickly adapt to changes within your managed printing environment with a host of manageability features.


Price : $1,175.00
* Get the best price and special discount only for limited time



HP Laserjet Ent 600 M603N Printer Feature


  • Print at rapid speeds on a variety of paper types
  • Manage workflow with intuitive features right on the printer, and get quick prints from a flash drive.
  • Cut energy use as much as 45%, compared to a majority of competing laser printers, with this Energy Star qualified printer






Maybe you should visit the following website to get a better price and specification details

Costumer review

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful.
4A Solid Workgroup Printer
By Garrett Mccutcheon
My organization purchased 2 of these printers and have now been using them for approx. 6 months. So far we have had very good results from these printers. They seem to be fast, responsive, and they haven't been using toner nearly as quickly as the 10 year old units they replaced. The printers are used in a retail environment for printing invoices and pick lists, with an average ink coverage of approx. 2%. Time to first page and the quickness of subsequent pages has helped us increase customer service quality and cut down on maintenance costs. Also, 6 months in and not a single paper jam to speak of. Overall, I'm quite satisfied with these units and would recommend them to any small to mid-sized business.

3 of 4 people found the following review helpful.
2Unrefined, Not For MICR Printing
By Slim Pickens
By way of background, our small business has extensive experience with HP printers, in particular their high-speed monochrome LaserJets. We recently retired one our LaserJet 4250 printers which printed 1.2 MILLION checks for us before experiencing mechanical problems. That is a fabulous track record. In April we purchased a M603 printer and have put roughly 100,000 sheets through it since then. Here's the bottom line: this printer is fast and has a larger output tray, but other than that is mostly inferior to the LaserJet 4250 it replaced.

For our business, The MAJOR problem is that this printer does not work well for printing checks using MICR toner cartridges! Our business prints lots of checks which must be accepted by banks everywhere. We've tried two different brands of MICR cartridge and both experience the same problem: a gray field of toner appears on every check we print. Not only does it result in checks which look "dirty", it also causes us to burn through expensive MICR cartridges way too fast. Simply put, the output is not professional quality. Also, the MICR cartridges we've used are not some off-brand, remanufactured cheapies. We've primarily used Troy brand (allegedly the best) and another brand which takes new, HP original cartridges, empties the regular toner, and replaces it with MICR toner. Each of these carts has cost us well over $500. And yes, we've tried every setting, firmware version, and driver option available. Nothing changes it. Seems to me that nobody tested this printer with MICR toner. Once the last of our MICR cartridges are depleted, this printer will be removed from check printing duties, which is pretty frustrating since that's what we bought it for.

Aside from that, here are the other areas where I've found the M603 to be inferior to the 4250:

1) Our 4250s are very tolerant of imperfect reams of paper, like when a ream has a damaged corner incurred during shipping. Not so with the M603. Small imperfections in the leading corners of the paper often end up as dog-eared corners in the output tray.

2) The M603 doesn't print as straight as our 4250s.

3) The firmware, even the latest, is pretty buggy. For example, I've found that if I change the toner density setting, my next print job comes out upside down! Which leads to my next point:

4) It takes forever to boot. Strange that it has more RAM, a better CPU, and (I believe) a built-in SSD, yet it takes maybe 3 times as long to boot as our 4250s.

5) Working at the printer is annoying. Yes, the display is color, but also really small and hard to see unless looking down at it from above. Also, the printer is slow to respond to user input and menu options selected via the console.

6) Subtle warnings when printer runs out of paper. No beeps, only slow blinking by a couple of small, dim LEDs. It's too easy to think a print job has completed, when in reality it hasn't.

7) Second rate documentation. The 4250 manuals are more informative and useful.

In summary, if you intend to print checks using MICR toner with this printer, I would look elsewhere. Otherwise I would say this printer is serviceable, but not nearly as refined as it should be given its status as HP's top of the line. No doubt about it, I like my old 4250 printers better than this new kid. HP may have lost a loyal customer over this one.

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