oldabelincoln
Active member
I'm looking for comments about how to successfully use an inkjet printer infrequently - like once a month or two. I've got a laser printer that I use for almost all my work, but every once in a while I need to print a photo using a good inkjet photo printer.
I know that the usual wisdom is to print something - however small - every so often, or to run a nozzle cleaning cycle every so often, but those methods don't work for me - I've tried to do it, and I simply forget, so I need to find another way around the problem. I want to be able to put the printer - or the cartridges - aside when not in use, and forget about it till I need to print again - just like anything else on my computer system.
I had an Epson 700 Photo, which died a mechanical death - the print assembly kept banging - after 3 or 4 years. It had nozzle clogs, which cleared in the usual manner with lots of ink wasted. I foolishly stocked up on Epson ink for the 700 Photo only to find that the date on the ink really meant something and that old ink usually didn't work, even factory sealed (at least on the 700).
When the Epson died, I decided to open up a Canon BJC-2010 (360 dpi CMYK) that had been unopened since it came for free with a Dell computer that I had bought in February 2000. It stayed in its box for nearly 4 years because I was already running better printers when it arrived. I figured the ink would be useless after that long a time, but worth a try. To my amazement, it worked out of the box, with no ink problems.
The Canon 2010 is no photo printer, and I do need one, but it made me wonder - suppose I removed the cartridges after printing, wrapped them airtight in plastic film (e.g., Saran Wrap in the US) until I needed them again. That's a procedure that would work ok for me, but would it keep the ink ok? I believe that the HP 7960 has some sort of storage area for special purpose cartridges, but I don't know how well it works over long periods, and if that idea would work for other brands. And I don't know if my experience with inks for the Epson 700 (bad) or the Canon 2010 (good) is applicable to other printers - Epson, for one, has a bewildering array of inks out there, and new Epson inks might be a different story - as might new Canon inks, for that matter.
Of course the nozzles on the Canon had never been used, so they were not a problem, which might not be the case after some use. I know that HP's inclusion of nozzles in the cartridge "solves" the clogging problem in normal use, but if I can't put it aside for a few months, I'll end up buying a new set of cartridges every time I print, which is not much of a solution if that is the case.
So - has anyone tried this method, or any** method that would allow very infrequent printing??? Conversely, has anyone tried likely sounding methods that failed?
I'm not looking for any specific brand or model - I'll go with whatever works - I've gotten acceptable test prints out of all three brands using test files on cards.
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Abe
I know that the usual wisdom is to print something - however small - every so often, or to run a nozzle cleaning cycle every so often, but those methods don't work for me - I've tried to do it, and I simply forget, so I need to find another way around the problem. I want to be able to put the printer - or the cartridges - aside when not in use, and forget about it till I need to print again - just like anything else on my computer system.
I had an Epson 700 Photo, which died a mechanical death - the print assembly kept banging - after 3 or 4 years. It had nozzle clogs, which cleared in the usual manner with lots of ink wasted. I foolishly stocked up on Epson ink for the 700 Photo only to find that the date on the ink really meant something and that old ink usually didn't work, even factory sealed (at least on the 700).
When the Epson died, I decided to open up a Canon BJC-2010 (360 dpi CMYK) that had been unopened since it came for free with a Dell computer that I had bought in February 2000. It stayed in its box for nearly 4 years because I was already running better printers when it arrived. I figured the ink would be useless after that long a time, but worth a try. To my amazement, it worked out of the box, with no ink problems.
The Canon 2010 is no photo printer, and I do need one, but it made me wonder - suppose I removed the cartridges after printing, wrapped them airtight in plastic film (e.g., Saran Wrap in the US) until I needed them again. That's a procedure that would work ok for me, but would it keep the ink ok? I believe that the HP 7960 has some sort of storage area for special purpose cartridges, but I don't know how well it works over long periods, and if that idea would work for other brands. And I don't know if my experience with inks for the Epson 700 (bad) or the Canon 2010 (good) is applicable to other printers - Epson, for one, has a bewildering array of inks out there, and new Epson inks might be a different story - as might new Canon inks, for that matter.
Of course the nozzles on the Canon had never been used, so they were not a problem, which might not be the case after some use. I know that HP's inclusion of nozzles in the cartridge "solves" the clogging problem in normal use, but if I can't put it aside for a few months, I'll end up buying a new set of cartridges every time I print, which is not much of a solution if that is the case.
So - has anyone tried this method, or any** method that would allow very infrequent printing??? Conversely, has anyone tried likely sounding methods that failed?
I'm not looking for any specific brand or model - I'll go with whatever works - I've gotten acceptable test prints out of all three brands using test files on cards.
----
Abe