The main control panel contains an 89mm touchscreen, with three dedicated touch buttons down either edge. The photo tray also slides freely in and out, making it more fiddly to load. Above this tray is a 20-sheet photo tray, though oddly neither has an end-stop for its paper, which means you have to insert sheets carefully to get them under the feed rollers. One of the reasons for its low-to-the-desk look is the paltry 80-sheet main paper tray, which needs regular restocking in all but very infrequent-print environments. The designer has accentuated the scanner section and control panel, making them look almost removable (they aren’t), which somehow makes the device look low-profile, too. We’re not sorry to see the piano black go, and this machine is well turned out and subtly styled. HP seems to have turned the corner away from high gloss, black plastic, in favour of brown and gunmetal colour schemes. It includes some high-end features, such as touchscreen controls. HP’s Photosmart 6510 is a mid-range, home all-in-one, designed for those with an interest in photography, who probably also own smart phones.
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