Here is everything you need to know about the Hp officejet 8022 manual– a document that contains information about installing, configuring, maintaining, and troubleshooting the Hp officejet 8022 printer.
How to install Hp officejet 8022 manual
- Select the desired Hp officejet 8022 manual from the table and download it;
- Open the download folder on your computer;
- Double-click the downloaded file to run;
Hp officejet 8022 manual
User Guide | Download |
HP Printers – Dynamic Security Enabled Printers | Download |
Reference Guide | Download |
Setup Poster | Download |
The OfficeJet Pro 8022 looks every inch the small office printer. It’s made from muted grey and off-white plastics, and proudly wears its ADF like a hat. There’s little clutter. The 225-sheet paper tray juts out slightly from the front, but the eye is drawn by the tilted, touch-sensitive control panel above it.
This MFP has most of the features you’re likely to need in a micro or home office. There’s copy, scan and fax support, along with both wired and wireless network connections. The printer can automatically print on both sides of a page, but the 35-sheet ADF is simplex only, ruling out unattended double-sided scans, copies or faxes.
HP has mastered touchscreen controls, and the example here is a case in point. The menu responds predictably to drag-and-tap gestures, making it a pleasure to use. There’s support for cloud services including Google Drive and Dropbox, but no USB or memory card slot for direct prints or scans.HP has ditched the humble setup disc for an online installer that can be frustrating, and which seems overly eager for you to install the HP Smart app. We sat through several minutes of entertainingly corporate messages including “finishing software solution discovery” before getting to download conventional driver software.Plain paper print quality was superb, with jet-black, sharp text, and exceedingly bright and bold colour graphics. The only letdown was slight banding in some presentation slides. Scans were also very good, although our 600dpi photo looked as though it had been sharpened in software. Speeds were decent all-round, with the printer reaching 3.9ppm on our graphics test even including the long initial spool time. The only exception was our 1,200dpi photo scan, which took almost two minutes.
Stick with the largest supplies and the OfficeJet Pro 8022 should print a colour page for about 8.1p. That’s okay for a light daily workload, making this a good – if not outstanding – small or home office MFP.