- Joined
- Apr 19, 2007
- Messages
- 8,712
- Reaction score
- 7,176
- Points
- 393
- Location
- USA
- Printer Model
- Canon MB5120, Pencil
@FireEmblem -- Thank you for the follow up. Sorry to hear that the print head showed no improvement.
Before you completely give up on the printer it might be worth having one more go. I had a similar, though less severe, problem that didn't resolve fully on first soaking. It took a second attempt to get results. If you have a significant amount of dried ink in the blocked nozzles it may take several soakings to break it all down enough for ink to flow again.
@FireEmblem, we appreciate you coming back with your update, unfortunately it wasn’t what we’d all hoped it would be and the head is now beyond saving, but it’s a good idea to keep it for text documents, at least until you run out of your current ink stock.
When you get your new printer, and you decide to refill your carts, always remember please, to refill your carts when they first show low ink, and don’t wait until it runs out, this procedure can prevent a similar thing happing again...
@FireEmblem I don't know your location but if it is the US then look out for a 50$ offer of the Canon Pro-100. It seems that these offers occur once or twice a year. Usually someone who spots a such offer posts a notice on the forum, like this.
The Pro-100 can be considered a modern version of your Pro9000 MKII. The cartridges are the same refill friendly type as the CLI-8 used in your printer, just with another name and chip. You will of course need a new resetter if you want to refill. If you buy the Pro-100 and want to refill then the yellow cartridge should not be refilled. instead a another cartridge that has been cleaned and with the yellow chip attached should be used. The reason is that remnants of the original yellow ink can react with refill ink or even with water used for cleaning and form a gel that clogs the print head.
But maybe you don't need an A3 dedicated photo printer? Maybe an A4/Letter size All-in one suits your needs better? The ideal printer doesn't exist but if you tell us what you want from a new printer, we might make some good suggestions for printers that meet your demands at a reasonable price.