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- Epson, Canon, HP... A "few"
Question... How are people applying any cleaning solution to their Canon (not touching Epson here) printheads?
As near as I can tell there seems to be a couple of standard approaches:
Oh and critical point... Ensure the solution is not an aggresive type likely to attack the electronics on the printhead. This last due to the need to seal the printhead into the unit and more importantly for health reasons as noted earlier (Thanks for the reminder on that point btw!)
The other approach I adopt from time to time is to use a silicon attachment (I'm trying to find out what the heck it is called and where it came from) which fits on a luer slip syringe, and use that to pull cleaning solution into the nozzles by pulling a little suction on the ink receiver. The silicon attachment produces a nice seal around the top of the receiver and allows you to reverse the flow such that any larger material has a better chance of being pulled out (gently!) through the receiver than pushed out through the nozzles.
As for Ultrasonic cleaning, that resulted in seeing the internals of a printhead fragmenting into a cloud of copper and other metals so I've remained VERY wary of that method. It's one that I would really appreciate some expert guidance on using, assuming it would be possible to apply to delicate components such as printheads.
Anyone got any other approaches when it comes to cleaning solution delivery?
As near as I can tell there seems to be a couple of standard approaches:
- Droplets to the ink receiver/inlet
- A bath of cleaning solution that the printhead sits in
- A pad of paper towel or similar, soaked in a cleaning solution which the printhead sits on
- Via a tight fitting PVC tube that fits on the inlet/receiver (solution then poured in and allowed to sit)
- Cartridge filled with cleaning solution
(on this last I don't rate this for trying to "print through" a clog, more as an alternative passive delivery system, to the PVC tube approach above)
- Bath head in solution (in a sealed container to avoid fumes and evaporation)
- Remove from bath then place on a pad soaked in same solution
- Gently press printhead down onto the pad. This forces solution into the nozzles and quickly indicates which ink channels are blocked.
- Apply droplets of solution to the inlets that have most issues
- Repeat press down then release
Again this indicates which channels will receive the cleaning solution - Return to bath (step 1.) and leave for some hours/overnight
- Repeat 2 through 5 to see if any improvement
Oh and critical point... Ensure the solution is not an aggresive type likely to attack the electronics on the printhead. This last due to the need to seal the printhead into the unit and more importantly for health reasons as noted earlier (Thanks for the reminder on that point btw!)
The other approach I adopt from time to time is to use a silicon attachment (I'm trying to find out what the heck it is called and where it came from) which fits on a luer slip syringe, and use that to pull cleaning solution into the nozzles by pulling a little suction on the ink receiver. The silicon attachment produces a nice seal around the top of the receiver and allows you to reverse the flow such that any larger material has a better chance of being pulled out (gently!) through the receiver than pushed out through the nozzles.
As for Ultrasonic cleaning, that resulted in seeing the internals of a printhead fragmenting into a cloud of copper and other metals so I've remained VERY wary of that method. It's one that I would really appreciate some expert guidance on using, assuming it would be possible to apply to delicate components such as printheads.
Anyone got any other approaches when it comes to cleaning solution delivery?