- Joined
- Oct 27, 2005
- Messages
- 3,666
- Reaction score
- 1,349
- Points
- 337
- Location
- South Yorks, UK
- Printer Model
- Epson, Canon, HP... A "few"
For the avoidance of doubt on this, yep, there is a commercial product but the purpose of this post is to solicit, nay beg for, feedback on this video with particular emphasis on two key questions:
The reason I'm asking is that I invested stupid amounts of time and money into tackling this printer as a sort of suck-it-and-see type deal and because I figured the Canon Megatank models are more likely to be seen as worthy of the time. Ironically the process for the lower ranked G1000 to G4000 series printers is much simpler but I digress... Warts and all input would be welcome.
NB: This is 50 minutes of video with some commentary that isn't strictly necessary so please use the chapter links in the description to speed thing up and/or skip to the bits you fancy.
- Does it terrify the end-user and leave them running for the local recycling centre to dump their printer...
...or armed with the information/confidence to complete the task?
(sub-question: For the experienced end-users on here, would you consider doing this process if you hit the waste error, assuming you had the printer model?)
- Is it going to be worth doing this for more Canon printers?
The reason I'm asking is that I invested stupid amounts of time and money into tackling this printer as a sort of suck-it-and-see type deal and because I figured the Canon Megatank models are more likely to be seen as worthy of the time. Ironically the process for the lower ranked G1000 to G4000 series printers is much simpler but I digress... Warts and all input would be welcome.
NB: This is 50 minutes of video with some commentary that isn't strictly necessary so please use the chapter links in the description to speed thing up and/or skip to the bits you fancy.