>With R2880, I am also spoiled, and not waiting for long, if at all.
Sadly, I could only realize its strengths after killing it.
:(
Bulent
-
http://patoloji.gen.tr
http://celasun.wordpress.com/
Thank you, Ralph for sharing your experience.
>There used to be hot-air and infrared dryers for RC photo paper in the days of
>analog photography.
Oh no!
No more gadgets in the... bathroom!
:)
Bulent
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http://patoloji.gen.tr
Bipin,
Thank you for sharing your experience and advice.
My inks are declared to be pigment type and understand that
this might have something to do with my problem.
I think I will be looking for different papers first.
While refilling, I will certainly consider non-Epson ones as well.
>A
I vaguely remember that instructions for some inkjet photo printer or photo
papers suggested to let the prints dry for 24 hours.
With R2880, I am also spoiled, and not waiting for long, if at all.
Igor
Sent from mobile phone
Bulent Celasun Sat, 21 Nov 2020 02:06:49 -0800 wrote:
I used
Am 21.11.20 um 17:58 schrieb Bipin Gupta:
g) A Radiant Heater placed in front of the Prints made them dry almost
instantly - Best Solution.
There used to be hot-air and infrared dryers for RC photo paper in the
days of analog photography.
One example would be the Kaiser 4022 (3ßx40 cm).
Hello Bulent and other Friends with a similar problem.
I bought some photo paper in Dubai in bulk and pretty cheap. Using a
Canon Pixma MG6470 AIO Printer I had the same problem with the Black
Ink taking longer to dry. It would smudge and spoil the entire print.
This Printer uses two kinds of
I used to have an Epson Stylus Photo Inkjet Printer (Probably R2880)
which was using Ultrachrome K3 ink set. The print quality, even on
common garden papers, was above my expectations and I had no problems
ever when it was operational. Due entirely to my long neglect,
clogging problem killed that
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