HP No. 96 High-Yield Black Ink Cartridge (C8767W)
Details
- Availability:
- Usually ships in 1-2 business days
- List Price:
- $29.99
- Our Price:
- $25.39
- Savings:
- 15%
- Average Customer Rating:
- 2.5 out of 5
- Manufacturer:
- Hewlett Packard Office
Ready to Buy?
- List Price:
- $29.99
- Our Price:
- $25.39
Features
- Pigment based monochrome black ink
- 800-page yield based on 5% density
- 15 pl ink drop size, 21 ml cartridge volume
- Employs TIJ 2.X Gen II resolution technology
- Genuine HP quality
Description
This genuine HP black inkjet print cartridge prints professional, laser-quality black text and graphics. Designed for faster printing, this higher yield cartridge is ideal for frequent and/or high volume printing - so you'll change cartridges less often, make fewer trips to the store and improve productivity. Provides superior reliability and ease of use. And used in conjunction with HP printers, this genuine HP inkjet print cartridge provides proactive alerts so you'll always know when ink levels are running low. Genuine HP inkjet print cartridges, HP printers and HP papers are designed as an integrated printing system to deliver exceptional print quality, time and time again.
Spotlight customer reviews
good color
[ Posted: 2007-02-12 ]
i use this ink for my hp photo printer and i love the color. the color is bright and beautiful. its a good product.
Nice Ink at a Grossly Inflated Price
[ Posted: 2007-01-07 ]
Despite being very happy with my HP Officejet 7310, the ink has turned out to be a painful expense. In the past six months, I have gone through three of these cartridges. I hate to single HP out, but the entire inkjet industry is guilty of fighting price transparency with inexpensive printers and inflated ink. This is not to mention the constant changing of ink cartridges models. Does HP really need 200 different models of ink cartridges? No. It would, in fact, be much cheaper to consolidate the cartridge offerings. However, this would lead to excessive duplication and remanufacturing by third parties.
What is particularly amusing, and perhaps offensive to some, is the enclosed "recycling" envelope that comes with new HP ink cartridges. This prepaid envelope, with the empty cartridge, goes back to HP so that it can demonstrate its environmental leadership. Of course, HP doesn't want the empty cartridges to go back into the hands of companies that refill and remanufacture them. Although I haven't done the calculations, I would assume the transportation and handling costs would actually do more harm than good to the environment. My suggestion is to fill the prepaid envelope with torn up remains of the consumer packaging that comes with the cartridges.