I think I found the keyword my self: Chipsresetter! For app. 20 USD I can
buy a chipsrestter, which will reset my ink cartridge so the printer
believes it is full, not empty.
Annother tool is buying/changing the cartridge chip. This is even cheaper.

Anyone tried this?


Jens Bladt
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://hjem.get2net.dk/bladt


-----Oprindelig meddelelse-----
Fra: Jens Bladt [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sendt: 3. december 2004 16:43
Til: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Emne: RE: Epson Printer (Stylus Photo)


I still think the chips in the ink cartidges suck!
If I accidently lift the lid to one of the cartridges, the ink is no more
useable. A normal repair will cost 100 USD including part up to a value of
16 USD. A repair that includes a new head (worth 170 USD) will cost 275 USD.

A new printer would be cheaper, I guess. I still regard buying an EPSON
printer was i mistake and a very bad investment, which I won't repeat.

So, is there a trick to make the printer ( perhaps the cartrigde chip)
forget, that I may have opened the blue lid??
Then I could at least use it for B&W text sheets.


Jens Bladt
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://hjem.get2net.dk/bladt


-----Oprindelig meddelelse-----
Fra: Keith Whaley [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sendt: 2. december 2004 13:48
Til: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Emne: Re: Epson Printer (Stylus Photo)


Sure.
In an Epson (as opposed to the Hewlett-Packard style wherein the ink
jets are contained in the ink cartridge itself) they are in the
cartridge's carrier/print head. No practical way to remove and clean, so
the machine has a cleaning cycle built into it's software.
To elaborate, at  the end of every session, one should shut down the
printer, whereupon the printer parks it's print head on a sponge
material, which is meant to seal the jet orifices from ink evaporation.
Ink evaporation causes the ink to eventually get more and more
concentrated, and finally solidify and plug up one or more of the many
orifices.
When that happens, eventually you'll observe blank horizontal lines in
anything you print.
Then you have to run a cleaning cycle until it comes out clear (clean)
and prints well.

It may well be true that one cannot use an Epson ink jet printer
sporadically, but must use it regularly to keep the ink jets from
plugging up.
My observations support that contention...

keith whaley  <== uses a cheap Stylus Photo 820.

Jens Bladt wrote:

> Can anyone please explain what clogging means?
> Thanks
>
> Jens Bladt
> mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> http://hjem.get2net.dk/bladt
>
>
> -----Oprindelig meddelelse-----
> Fra: Paul Stenquist [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sendt: 2. december 2004 00:42
> Til: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Emne: Re: Epson Printer (Stylus Photo)
>
>
> My Epson 2200 is an absolute joy. It uses seven inks, five colors plus
> black and light black. The cartridges can be replaced individually.
> And, as with the Canon, I can pop a cartridge out and reinsert it to
> try for another print. It's so quiet, I sometimes have to walk right up
> to it to make sure it's printing. Prior to this printer I had an Epson
> 1200 Stylus Photo. Never had a problem with that printer either,
> although the 2200 is definitely superior in terms of the way it renders
> shadows and gradations of color. My next printer will be the Epson that
> replaces the 2200.
> Paul





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