The copier works as a standalone to produce fine quality copies in colorand black ink, with reduction and enlargement options ranging from 25 to 400percent. The standard paper tray holds 150 sheets, accommodating plain,ink-jet, glossy and matte photo paper, labels, transparencies, and more.
The fax feature programs up to 100 speed dials and holds 90 pages inmemory, and the 14.4 Kbps modem sends messages at 3 seconds per page at 300x 300 dpi. Rely on the fax forwarding, scan and send, broadcast faxing (upto 20 locations), delayed fax sending, and automatic reduction features toimprove productivity. The automatic document feeder further frees you forother projects, and the 1220 uses one phone line for integrated connectionsbetween answering machine and telephone. Hewlett-Packard's one-yearlimited warranty covers parts and labor.
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24 of 26 people found the following review helpful: By This review is from: HP 1220 Plain-Paper Inkjet Fax Machine (Office Product) After 10+ years of solid service my Omnifax L41 finally bit the dust (the fax feed pinch wheel became too worn to work reliably and I could not find a replacement). After hunting around the web for reviews, the HP range of Faxes universally came out highly rated. So far the 1220 has been great. Easy to set up, easy to program and easy to run. What more could I ask for? Well, a deeper plain paper tray would be nice (the OmniFax could hold approx. half a ream!!). Other than that, the 1220 is highly reccomended. 7 of 7 people found the following review helpful: By A Customer This review is from: HP 1220 Plain-Paper Inkjet Fax Machine (Office Product) My HP 1220 fax has been nothing but trouble. It had a variety of irritating problems from the beginning, like not being able to fax to certain other brands of fax machine. More recently, it's copy quality deteriorated completely; and it began to display a permanent error message: "Press enter to align cartridge." When you press "enter," you get the message "Alignment failed ... press enter to align cartridge." When I called HP product support, they charged me $30 to connect me to someone in India who spoke imperfect English and had no idea what the problem was. She finally suggested that I try a new ink cartridge, even though the old one was not empty. When replacing the cartridge did not fix the problem, I called HP back, only to be told that I must pay HP another $30 to be able to tell its tech department that their advice didn't work. The result was that I learned to live with the error message and had to stop using the machine as a copier...Read more |