
![]() | |||
| Resolution | 9600 x 2400 ppp | ||
| Speed B&W / color | 33 / 31 ppm | ||
| Ink drop size | NC picolitres | ||
| Number of cartridges | 5 | ||
| Number of base colors | 4 | ||
See all specifications | |||
| Scanner / Copier / Fax | oui / oui / non |
Hide specifications | |
Test date: January 28, 2009

Moreover, the scanner is quite slow. The initial preview takes 17 seconds, 13 seconds for a scan of a 300 dpi 4x6” photo. Other cheaper models work twic as fast.
For copies however, it’s much better. The black and white takes 14 seconds and the colour 22 seconds.
Office printing: fast and high quality
Going up in the range with HP means you can finally achieve better speeds than the 4480 and 4580. You go from 5.3 ppm in colour to 10.6 ppm on this 6380! In black and white, there is less of a gain but still an appreciable one: around 12 ppm on our test document instead of 7 ppm on the others. And draft mode (excellent quality) goes up to 26 ppm. Do leave it on the default parameters as, although the blacks will be less deep, it’s more economical.
The 6380, then, betters the Canon MP630 and its 8.5 ppm in colour and 10.4 ppm black and white.
Ok so it’s fast but is this to the detriment of quality? In fact, no. Quality is more than satisfactory. Text and graphs are sharp. The text is a deep black and the characters precise. The tinted areas on the graphs are nice and even and the characters are clear.
.jpg)
Photo printing: rapid and as it should be
Photo printing is also fast: 45 seconds to get a 4x6” print, 1 minute 30 for an A4 format: more than ok. However, although photo quality is a bit better (more accurate) than on HP printers that don’t come with the black photo cartridge, we are still some way off “photo quality” on Canon printers (or even HP) with the full photo cartridge (with a light cyan and magenta). If you look at the image closely, you’ll still see ink drops. Nevertheless, this quality is more than good enough for your album.
Cartridges
Two different sets of cartridges are available. Standard and the more expensive XL, also much longer-lasting.
| Cartridge | ISO lifespan |
||
| 364 (black) | 250 | ||
| 364 (cyan) | 300 | ||
| 364 (magenta) | 300 | ||
| 364 (yellow) | 300 | ||
| 364 (black photo) | 1500 |
With standard cartridges you’ll already get a fairly decent yield. If you’re not a big consumer, these will be enough. You’ll have to change them more often but there’ll be less risk that one dries out and blocks your machine. Because HP is following Canon’s lead on its separate cartridges: the print heads are no longer on the cartridge itself (in contrast to their single unit cartridges) but in the printer. This necessitates more frequent cleaning so as not to risk blockages.
If you do a lot of printing, best to straight for the XL versions:
XL cartridges
| Cartridge | ISO lifespan |
||
| 364 (black) | 800 | ||
| 364 (cyan) | 750 | ||
| 364 (magenta) | 750 | ||
| 364 (yellow) | 750 | ||
| 364 (black photo) | 4500 |
With XL economy is much better than average but still twice what you get with laser printers.
-
Separate standard or XL cartridges, the XL are more economical
-
High speeds for an ink jet
-
Ethernet and Wi-Fi
-
Excellent office printing quality, very good draft mode
-
Fairly nice photos, fast
-
Drops visible on the photos






Product Face-Offs


See all specifications
Hide specifications










