- Joined
- Jan 18, 2010
- Messages
- 15,792
- Reaction score
- 8,824
- Points
- 453
- Location
- Residing in Wicklow Ireland
- Printer Model
- Canon/3D, CR-10, CR-10S, KP-3
The several ways that Canon Service Agents will know if you have been using compatible cartridges and inks in your printer ?
The first is they can see which cartridges are fitted in the printer at that time and the obvious one is they can and will ask you if non OEM cartridges/inks have ever been used ?
The best way for them is to view the EPROM printout that can tell nearly all, but is limited to operational functions only, like how many time you ran a head clean, how many times you removed or replaced the print head, how many time you have replaced each cartridge, how many time you have powered on, etc etc.
However it can tell if anything out of the ordinary has been going on like the ink monitoring has been disabled or there were ARC chips used or if the original setup cartridges are still in the printer, basically anything that is not covered under warrantee and so requires all repairs to be paid for.
However an OEM cartridge chip that has been reset multiple times can’t be detected by these technicians except for visual inspection of the installed carts, setup carts use a chip which is coded and labelled differently which forces you to purchased new ones.
The prism on a compatible cart is exactly the same as on an OEM cart and if it wasn’t then it wouldn’t work plus ARC chips will trigger a low ink warning just like normal chips do.
Ink splatter around the purge unit is just that ink splatter OEM or otherwise and the use of a waste ink Potty eliminates proof of all ink usage, plus print heads can and do be cleaned by the owners..
So when it boils down to it apart from inconsistencies in the EPROM readout, and the usual visual inspection of the printer itself, and of course what the owner admits to the Service Agent, that’s all they have to go on, which is usually enough..
The first is they can see which cartridges are fitted in the printer at that time and the obvious one is they can and will ask you if non OEM cartridges/inks have ever been used ?
The best way for them is to view the EPROM printout that can tell nearly all, but is limited to operational functions only, like how many time you ran a head clean, how many times you removed or replaced the print head, how many time you have replaced each cartridge, how many time you have powered on, etc etc.
However it can tell if anything out of the ordinary has been going on like the ink monitoring has been disabled or there were ARC chips used or if the original setup cartridges are still in the printer, basically anything that is not covered under warrantee and so requires all repairs to be paid for.
However an OEM cartridge chip that has been reset multiple times can’t be detected by these technicians except for visual inspection of the installed carts, setup carts use a chip which is coded and labelled differently which forces you to purchased new ones.
The prism on a compatible cart is exactly the same as on an OEM cart and if it wasn’t then it wouldn’t work plus ARC chips will trigger a low ink warning just like normal chips do.
Ink splatter around the purge unit is just that ink splatter OEM or otherwise and the use of a waste ink Potty eliminates proof of all ink usage, plus print heads can and do be cleaned by the owners..
So when it boils down to it apart from inconsistencies in the EPROM readout, and the usual visual inspection of the printer itself, and of course what the owner admits to the Service Agent, that’s all they have to go on, which is usually enough..