luvmycanonfinally
Newbie to Printing
- Joined
- Dec 24, 2008
- Messages
- 2
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This may not be much help to some, as the 4500 is rather hard to come by. I guess my ultimate point will be that it is so rewarding to get a ciss system and screw Canon or anyone else out of ill gotten gains. If a fair price were charged, well that would be another story.
My wife is a teacher and with the economy the way it is, a number of monetary constraints have been imposed. Teachers are only allowed a certain number of copies a month. The worst part is having to wait on others to make their copies. So, we bought this 4500. Well, let me tell you..after about 250 pages we learned that ink carts were not the way to go, even if we re-filled them. I stumbled across the Lyson website after reading the remarks about their ink quality. Even after reading that, I took a chance and bought their ink system for the 4500. I just printed the eeprom report and I was shocked at the page count. She has printed 37,488 pages and this printer has not misfired one time nor has the ciss. Of course, I have had a few streaking problems here and there, but they were easily fixed with a head cleaning procedure. I use the dyebase inks from MIS Associates. I even have the original printhead. This printer is so dependable I bought two more last year.
So, if you get the chance buy a ciss and print a whole lot cheaper. Do your homework and get a system with good reviews. The Lyson unit has performed flawlessly for me, but I don't honestly know if it is even made by the same company as when I purchased mine.
Also, after a lot reading I chose to put the upper most liquid level of the supply bottles even or just below the print head nozzles. At first, I had the bottles on the same surface as the printer, when I started noticing random drops of ink on some pages. That's when I started reading about several people experimenting with bottle placement. Anyway, my two cents.
I hope this helps someone to free themselves from the big boys.
My wife is a teacher and with the economy the way it is, a number of monetary constraints have been imposed. Teachers are only allowed a certain number of copies a month. The worst part is having to wait on others to make their copies. So, we bought this 4500. Well, let me tell you..after about 250 pages we learned that ink carts were not the way to go, even if we re-filled them. I stumbled across the Lyson website after reading the remarks about their ink quality. Even after reading that, I took a chance and bought their ink system for the 4500. I just printed the eeprom report and I was shocked at the page count. She has printed 37,488 pages and this printer has not misfired one time nor has the ciss. Of course, I have had a few streaking problems here and there, but they were easily fixed with a head cleaning procedure. I use the dyebase inks from MIS Associates. I even have the original printhead. This printer is so dependable I bought two more last year.
So, if you get the chance buy a ciss and print a whole lot cheaper. Do your homework and get a system with good reviews. The Lyson unit has performed flawlessly for me, but I don't honestly know if it is even made by the same company as when I purchased mine.
Also, after a lot reading I chose to put the upper most liquid level of the supply bottles even or just below the print head nozzles. At first, I had the bottles on the same surface as the printer, when I started noticing random drops of ink on some pages. That's when I started reading about several people experimenting with bottle placement. Anyway, my two cents.
I hope this helps someone to free themselves from the big boys.