I've been using Epson R2880 for close to 5 years now, and one question is still not quite settled in my mind:

Q.: When the printer is switched off, does it do anything special (e.g. parking the printing head in a particular place/way) that minimizes clogging of the nozzles?


Here is the background for this question.
Fact 1. When you turn the printer on, it initializes itself in a procedure that includes using some portion of the ink. (I derive this from the fact that sometimes after that the status of some ink cartridges can change from full to "alarm-pre-empty" or from "alarm-pre-empty" to empty".) I am not sure if this procedure is waisting as much ink as the one that initializes [unfortunatly all(!)] cartridges when you replace any of the ink cartridges.
(If someone knows an answer to this question, I'd appreciate it as well.)

Fact 2. Over time the ink left in the nozzles of the printer head can dry. Nozzle-cleaning procedure that is available through the printer-driver utilities helps to unclogg the nozzles, but waists a lot of ink.

When you leave the printer turned on between printing sessions for a certain period of time, T, you can avoid waisting ink for startup initialization, but go into a danger of getting nozzles clogged if T is too long. So, what is the optimum time T? While I don't expect an exact quantitative answer, a factor that contributes to this is the question I formulate at the very beginning, as that would tell me if turning the printer off reduces the probability of the ink drying up inside the nozzles, thus clogging them.

I'd appreciate if someone knows the answer or has some clues or links to the resources with such.

Thank you,

Igor


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