Often there was a way to manually wind the ribbon. If you were to drop the
cartridge and have the ribbon fall out, manually winding the ribbon once
you closed the cartridge would likely be the easiest solution. That assumes
a continuous ribbon in the cartridge.
On Tue, Jun 8, 2021, 14:23 Philip
Thanks Brian for the great info.
Philip
On 9/06/2021 1:57 am, Brian K. White wrote:
On 6/8/21 3:54 AM, Philip Avery wrote:
So Brian, where do you apply the drops of ink? Just to sponge inside
the card, or directly onto the spooled-up ribbon in there as well?
Wherever makes the most sense
On 6/8/21 3:54 AM, Philip Avery wrote:
So Brian, where do you apply the drops of ink? Just to sponge inside the
card, or directly onto the spooled-up ribbon in there as well?
Wherever makes the most sense for a given cartridge. They're all a
little different. Some just have a big cavity with
I have used WD-40 to "revive" an old dried-out ribbon. It seems to both
soften the dried ink and lubricate the print pins. But it doesn't add any
ink, so eventually you need to re-ink.
I have owned two "MacInkers", devices designed for re-inking ribbons, but I
got rid of both due to what I
So Brian, where do you apply the drops of ink? Just to sponge inside the
card, or directly onto the spooled-up ribbon in there as well?
Philip
On 8/06/2021 5:23 pm, Brian K. White wrote:
On 6/7/21 7:37 PM, Jerry Davis wrote:
Something Charles Hudson mentioned about his DMP105 yesterday led me