But the economic picture gets even brighter with the high-yield cartridges: A 2200-page black cartridge costs $36 (1.6 cents per page), while each 1400-page color cartridges costs $26 (1.9 cents per color per page). A page printed with all four colors would cost just 9.3 cents. ![]() The machine ships with a 1000-page black cartridge priced at $26 (2.6 cents per page), and three 900-page cyan, magenta, and yellow cartridges for $20 (2.2 cents per color per page). The icing on the OfficeJet Pro 8500 Wireless All-in-One’s substantial cake is its incredibly low ink pricing. ![]() On HP’s own paper, the images tended to be slightly dark but very smooth. Photos and graphics appeared grainy but had natural colors on plain paper. ![]() Text output looked black and fairly crisp. In our tests conducted at the MFP’s default settings, it printed text pages at 15.6 ppm and graphics pages at 4.5 ppm–far short of the company’s promises, but plenty fast nonetheless. ![]() I advise you to take HP’s speed claims with a grain of salt: The unit’s 35-page-per-minute text speed and 34-ppm graphics speed are possible only in draft mode.
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