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Tuesday, December 20, 2011

HP LaserJet 3055 All-in-One Printer/Copier/Scanner/Fax (White)

HP LaserJet 3055 USB ALL-IN-ONE Excellent SUPER LOW COUNT Machine ALL-BUT-NEW ONLY - 36,361 - (REALLY) PRINTS TO DATE 19 Page/Minute Desktop Speed Demon INCLUDES FAX OPTION NO GAMES HERE ACTUAL COUNTS-ACTUAL PRINTS FROM MACHINE BUY WHAT YOU SEE HERE These printers are selling today on other sites for $1050 EACH (Check HERE) - save hundreds right here at GetThatPart! About This Item Acquired from the US Government. Actual item is shown. Only what is shown is included. Shows a 36,361 page count indicating little use. This printer was tested and we ran it through a battery of internally generated test pages. TONER NOT INCLUDED. These pages are attached to the listing. Perfect printing. Please see the attached configuration sheet for details on the unit. Unit guaranteed to be and perform as described, and guaranteed functional. Know What You are Buying We take the time to post actual pictures of the unit you are buying We also take the time to thoroughly test the units we are selling Buy with CONFIDENCE from a reputable seller with 10 Years experience WARRANTY This printer will sell guaranteed to be as described above. In addition, and as an added bonus, we will offer BUYER a 30 day full performance warranty, in which we will cover the machine fully for all functional performance defects, including those untested. The warranty will be from the date of purchase.

Color: GRAY Brand: HP Model: Laser Jet 3055 Number of items: 1 Dimensions: 20.00" h x 20.00" w x 20.00" l, 26.46 pounds Box Content - HP LaserJet 3055 All-in-One, power cord, HP LaserJet Q2612A Black Print Cartridge, Getting Started Guide, support flyer Print speed, black - Up to 19 ppm Print quality - Up to 1200 x 1200 dpi Input capacity - Up to 260 Envelope input - Up to 10

Most helpful customer reviews 83 of 90 people found the following review helpful. Poor quality control By MARTIN HELLMAN Note added October 15, 2008: Amazon still won't let me change my rating, which now would be 1 star (the lowest) based on horrendous quality control. I bought two of these and both had hardware failures within a year or two, of course outside of warranty. The one I bought for my daughter had its network card fail. She can still use it via USB, but not over the network. The one I bought for myself recently failed to scan, fax or copy when using the document feeder, which uses a separate sensing window from flatbed copying and scanning. As a flatbed copier or scanner, it still works. But when using the document feeder, the copies or scans come out blank. And, yes, I've put the paper in the right side up. I suspect that there's a separate sensor or light for that window and it's broken. On top of the horrible QC this seems to imply, my email to HP took them eight days to answer and then all they said was "this case is a hardware issue so our recommendation for you is to call 800-HP-INVENT (800-474-6836) so you can talk with a Hardware technical agent that can guide you through some trouble shooting steps to determine the cause of this problem and also give you the best solution." OK, I call and after over a significant wait time, I learn that they can help trouble shoot by phone for a fee, offer me a trade-in on a new model, or repair this one. No way am I going to waste more money on this disaster. While maybe I've just had a bad run of luck, this does not appear to be the HP I used to know, where quality was top notch. Note added March 19 2007: Amazon won't let me change my rating from 4 to 3 stars, but I would do so if I could due to networking problems that resurfaced. I suspect that this is an issue with networked printers in general, not HP, but the time it took to solve the problem makes me wonder whether I would have bought this printer if I knew then what I know now. When the network access works, it's great, but if your network undergoes a change (I had to replace a Linksys router that went bad), be prepared to do some work. It took me several hours to get things working again. Before I had this problem, I bought one of these as a gift for my adult daughter, living in another state. She had to get the "geek squad" in to solve her similar problems, at a cost of roughly $200. The problem seems to be changes in the IP addresses in the network, and the manual didn't make it easy to figure out how to even find out the IP address that the printer currently is using. (Hint: Print a Configuration Report from the printer's front panel, using the menu. The manual does tell you how to do that, and the IP address is part of that report.) Once you have the IP address, I think getting the printer back up would be a lot easier -- but I'm not about to bring it down and find out! Hoping this helps. I have several Macs and one Windows machine and had been using two separate printers for the two "tribes." I also had a fax machine, an old flat bed scanner, and a copier -- all taking lots of real estate. When the Samsung ML1430 that I was using on an Airport Extreme USB printer sharing system broke after three years, I decided to go with a networked printer that could be shared between the Macs and the PC. I wanted a major printer brand, and HP was at the top of that list. Why? Because Samsung had stopped supporting the Mac and, as I upgraded my OS, I had had difficulties keeping the printer working. The old driver didn't work with some OS upgrades. I hoped that a networked printer would make sharing among the Macs and the PC easy -- and to a large extent it has. I did have minor problems getting the printer to work with the PC since I had to turn off all firewalls during the installation and Dell had two. After about an hour of on-line research and fiddling, I got it to work. Getting the Macs to recognize the printer was

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