canonfodder
Printer Guru
WARNING: This may be an FNO Post.
The Canon Sponged carts are really very special. They represent an invention that may be simple in its manufacture, but it embodies very shrewd engineering and probably is the best inkjet ink cartridge that has been made.
Over the past few months I have become extremely familiar with the Canon sponged carts. The patents must be protecting Canon's position pretty well, because there are no successful imitators that I have seen. When I speak of imitators, I do not mean "near imitators" or "almost imitators". A true imitator would be someone selling carts that have the same construction and the same performance as the Canon sponged carts, with no functions left out.
Some alternative cart makers brag about the absence of sponges in their carts. I can understand what they are talking about, because extending the life of a sponged cart is hampered due to a build up of some contaminant in the sponge which eventually blocks ink flow. This blocking of ink flow is very correctable by using Grandad35's Purging Process, see: http://www.nifty-stuff.com/contact.php , but it would be quite desirable to eliminate that need by eliminating the sponge. However, NO SPONGE = NO GREAT OPERATION. Others may get SOME functions to work well in their spongeless carts, but there will be important capabilities left out and there will often be erratic operation. You don't have to go far to find someone with a tale of woe concerning alternative carts used in place of Canon OEM sponged carts.
I would not dare say that an equivalent performance cart can not be made by using some other technique than the sponges. Inventions never end. Improvements never end, no matter what type of hardware or software you are speaking of. In 1943, I told my father that, "Airplanes built with four engines would be too heavy to fly and carry great loads". That was my last prediction or proclamation of physical limitations placed on inventions. Dad just opened a Life Magazine and showed me a new military airplane that could carry a great load of bombs or such, and it had 4 engines. I was younger then.
I am going to stop here, because I always put too much in my posts. If anyone would like to know something more about the Canon sponged carts and what makes them tick, and what makes them special, I will answer questions, even if I have to get help to do that.
Right now, I have a question of my own.
Does anyone know the ink pressure right at the interface between a sponged cart's Exit Port Filter and the Print Head's wick material that the filter contacts. The pressure I wish to know is present when the printer is printing some page which uses plenty of the particular cart's ink color?
Has anyone seen any references to this parameter? Has anyone done this measurement yourself?
I am thinking of how to do that measurement, and I believe I can do it, but I'd much, much rather have the answer handed to me.
The Canon Sponged carts are really very special. They represent an invention that may be simple in its manufacture, but it embodies very shrewd engineering and probably is the best inkjet ink cartridge that has been made.
Over the past few months I have become extremely familiar with the Canon sponged carts. The patents must be protecting Canon's position pretty well, because there are no successful imitators that I have seen. When I speak of imitators, I do not mean "near imitators" or "almost imitators". A true imitator would be someone selling carts that have the same construction and the same performance as the Canon sponged carts, with no functions left out.
Some alternative cart makers brag about the absence of sponges in their carts. I can understand what they are talking about, because extending the life of a sponged cart is hampered due to a build up of some contaminant in the sponge which eventually blocks ink flow. This blocking of ink flow is very correctable by using Grandad35's Purging Process, see: http://www.nifty-stuff.com/contact.php , but it would be quite desirable to eliminate that need by eliminating the sponge. However, NO SPONGE = NO GREAT OPERATION. Others may get SOME functions to work well in their spongeless carts, but there will be important capabilities left out and there will often be erratic operation. You don't have to go far to find someone with a tale of woe concerning alternative carts used in place of Canon OEM sponged carts.
I would not dare say that an equivalent performance cart can not be made by using some other technique than the sponges. Inventions never end. Improvements never end, no matter what type of hardware or software you are speaking of. In 1943, I told my father that, "Airplanes built with four engines would be too heavy to fly and carry great loads". That was my last prediction or proclamation of physical limitations placed on inventions. Dad just opened a Life Magazine and showed me a new military airplane that could carry a great load of bombs or such, and it had 4 engines. I was younger then.
I am going to stop here, because I always put too much in my posts. If anyone would like to know something more about the Canon sponged carts and what makes them tick, and what makes them special, I will answer questions, even if I have to get help to do that.
Right now, I have a question of my own.
Does anyone know the ink pressure right at the interface between a sponged cart's Exit Port Filter and the Print Head's wick material that the filter contacts. The pressure I wish to know is present when the printer is printing some page which uses plenty of the particular cart's ink color?
Has anyone seen any references to this parameter? Has anyone done this measurement yourself?
I am thinking of how to do that measurement, and I believe I can do it, but I'd much, much rather have the answer handed to me.