palombian
Printer Master
- Joined
- Feb 4, 2014
- Messages
- 1,882
- Reaction score
- 2,261
- Points
- 297
- Location
- Belgium
- Printer Model
- PRO10,PRO9500II,MB5150,MG8250
I had nozzle checks with a blank color recovered by soaking (but I didn't continue to print as you probably did).
To prevent further frying of the printhead, and more serious of the logic board, masking the contacts of the cyan color could help (but you are entering specialist terrain here).
In your case this limits the printer to B/W.
My son runs a printer for 2 years this way.
I have no experience having a failed printhead (blinking/error messages) damaging the logic board (can't confirm the 50:50 chance, I could have had luck), so you could as well continue to print in B/W as long as possible.
Do not forget that for Canon a printhead is a consumable, just as a set of carts.
To prevent further frying of the printhead, and more serious of the logic board, masking the contacts of the cyan color could help (but you are entering specialist terrain here).
In your case this limits the printer to B/W.
My son runs a printer for 2 years this way.
I have no experience having a failed printhead (blinking/error messages) damaging the logic board (can't confirm the 50:50 chance, I could have had luck), so you could as well continue to print in B/W as long as possible.
Do not forget that for Canon a printhead is a consumable, just as a set of carts.
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