Print Smart, Live Green! 🌱
The HP LaserJet Pro P1102w is a compact monochrome wireless laser printer designed for both home and office use. It features HP ePrint for mobile printing, a maximum print speed of 19 pages per minute, and is recognized as one of the most energy-efficient laser printers available. With a sleek design and voice control capabilities, it combines functionality with modern convenience.
Paper Size | 8.5 inch x 11 Inches |
Media Size Maximum | 8.5 x 11 inch |
Maximum Sheet Capacity | 150 |
Color | Black |
Wattage | 370 watts |
Printer Connectivity Type | Wireless;USB |
Hardware Connectivity | USB 2.0 |
Control Method | Voice |
Maximum Copy Speed Black and White | 19 ppm |
Ink Color | Black |
Warranty Type | full warranty |
Resolution | 1200 x 1200 |
Print media | Envelopes |
Scanner Type | Document |
Controller Type | Amazon Alexa |
Item Dimensions D x W x H | 7.7"D x 9.4"W x 13.7"H |
Item Weight | 14 Pounds |
Compatible Devices | Smartphones, PC, Laptops |
Printer Type | Laser |
Additional Printer Functions | Print Only |
Printer Output Type | Monochrome |
Additional Features | network-ready |
B&W Pages per Minute | 19 ppm |
Duplex | Manual |
B**E
HP Laserjet P1102W Wireless Works on MAC OS 10.7.5
After reading all the reviews both pro and con about installing this printer on a MAC I went ahead and bought it anyway. And I did get it to work properly (wireless) the first time on MAC OS 10.7.5. (The USB worked easily also although we no longer use the printer on USB.) Only the first installation was difficult. We have several MACs installed at this location all of which reach their printers over wireless. The other printers all saw the printer and connected flawlessly. So I like this printer for it's cost, size and operating efficiency. Good, low-end B/W laser!Follow these installations instructions which I found on the Apple site. They work!The wireless configuration proccess is the same on Mac OS X 10.7 as for Snow Leopard.Before configuring the wireless connection, make sure to install the latest Software version using USB first.Any previous version will appear differently and will not work on Lion:[...]Follow these steps to change to a wireless network in Mac OS X v10.6 and v10.7.You can view a video demonstration to learn how to set up a wireless connection, or you can follow the written steps listed below the video.The following video demonstrates how to set up a wireless installation on the HP LaserJet P1102w printer on a Macintosh computer. The product in the video might not look exactly like your product, but the steps are the same.If you have trouble viewing the video, or to view the video in a different size, click here to play the video on YouTube.In Finder , click Applications , and then double-click System Preferences .Click Print & Fax (in Mac OS X v10.6) or Print & Scan (in Mac OS X v10.7).Click Open Print Queue , and then click Printer Setup .Click the Utility tab, and then click Open Printer Utility .Click HTMLConfig .Click the Networking tab, and then click Wireless from the list on the left.Under Communication Mode , click Infrastructure , select your network SSID from the Available Network Names (SSID) list, and then click the << button.From the Security Mode pop-up menu under Authentication , click WEP or WPA/WPA2 . Your selection depends on which Wireless Security Protocol your network uses.NOTE:If your network does not have Wireless Security, leave the Security Mode set toOpen System (No Authentication) .Type your WEP/WPA/WPA2 key in the appropriate field, and then click Apply .In the confirmation box, click OK , and then close the HTML Config and Print Queue windows.In the Print & Fax or Print & Scan window, click your HP product from the list of printers, and then click the Minus sign to remove it from the list.NOTE:This action removes the USB Connection from the list so that the only entry for your HP product is the Wireless Connection.Disconnect the USB cable from the product and the computer.Under Printers , click the Plus sign ( ).Select your product name with Bonjour as the Kind , and then click Add .Close the Print & Fax or Print & Scan window.Step two: Delete the USB connected printer, and then add the wireless connected printerClick the Apple icon, and then click System Preferences .Click Print & Fax .Under Printers , click your product, and then click the Minus sign (- ) to remove the product.Click the Plus sign (+ ) to find your product.When you find your product, make sure that the connection type listed under Kind is Bonjour .Click Add to add your wireless connected product.
B**P
refurb-great value-setup adventure
this is a refurbished unit, but you would never know from the looks of the unit. you will know it have been previously setup when you try to set it up wirelessly on your wifi router, however, because the previous users info is there. first the good: after set up, works great. very quick with a 10 sec warmup time. after that prints pretty continuously on multiple page printing. it is just black and white, but that makes it quick and cheap and good for most things. lightweight, pretty small footprint, but the paper tray takes space just like the picture shows. now the cons(kinda): 1. the physical setup was pretty straight forward, but the pictures directions could have used some wording--however this is a multination printer so they took the Ikea route. the software setup for a wireless printer was less that straight forward. i am fairly savvy on consumer electronics and was able to get the printer working in about 20 minutes. i am no I.T. guy, but i like all my electronic toys--smartphones, smart tvs, amazon alexa, wifi cameras, tablets, laptops,desktops(all apple), etc. this printer setup was a bit of a challenge. directions were less that stellar on a macbook(apple laptop). maybe a windows setup was straight forward. basically had to insert CD that comes with, does not start automatically, click on box picture, start download of software, then back out when the pop up box tells you the software already in the printer is newer than what it wants to download from the CD. then go into your printer preferences, look for your new printer, click thru to configuration setup, find the IP address(IpV4 address), type that into you browser, change the router SSID name and password, unplug the printer cable, go back into your printer profiles and add this printer. you ten need to add this printer to your other laptops/desktops and find and enable on your tablets and smartphones. techies i am sure do this is their sleep. i found it a small adventure which i actually appreciate since i am retired and approaching 70. if this sounds too adventuresome, then maybe pass on this computer for an apple setup(again, maybe windows would be very different). or just have the nearest high schooler or college kid do it for you in a flash. overall, i am very happy with the printer so far and a refurb for half the price that looks and preforms as new is a great deal.
D**N
Drivers are garbage
My tech level is high, nearly as high as my frustration level in trying to get this printer to work. I have a wired and wireless network at my home, designed and installed by myself. No matter how I tried I could not get the drivers from the CD nor from the website to install on my primary windows 7 machine. The installation froze part way through the installation. Repeated attempts failed. The uninstall portion of the install never finished, so I was not able to do an official uninstall. I finally got my wife's windows 7 laptop to install the CD drivers after three attempts. Once the printer was properly installed, my computer saw it on the network and I was able to use the shadow of remaining drivers on my machine to access it.So what about my kids' Windows XP machines? No way. Drivers would not install. Not the CD, not the web based.Never in all my years of building computers or installing software have I seen such a poorly designed set of drivers and installation tools.The printer itself is fine. Starts quick, prints as it should. Drivers = crapola.It is now three months since I started using this printer on a limited basis. I've printed around 200 pages of various text, nothing toner-intensive. The cartridge is empty. Really HP? Only 200 prints? I'm going back to my 4-year old Samsung which I can get a 5000 print cartridge for not much more than what HP charges. My two stars is being changed to one.
Trustpilot
2 months ago
1 day ago