Cli42 autoreset chips

The Hat

Printer VIP
Platinum Printer Member
Joined
Jan 18, 2010
Messages
15,792
Reaction score
8,824
Points
453
Location
Residing in Wicklow Ireland
Printer Model
Canon/3D, CR-10, CR-10S, KP-3
Has anyone tried these?
No, but then again why would anyone want to, these chips are about the same price as a perfectly good Redsetter, and using that there is no need to be lifting and sticking down replacement chips, it’s a no brainer, just get a Redsetter...;)
P.S. Auto chips are not infinite, they may have a limited reset count.. :eek:
 

kdsdata

Printer Guru
Joined
Feb 28, 2017
Messages
161
Reaction score
144
Points
148
Location
Calgary, AB Canada
Printer Model
Pro-100 & Brother-L8900
I agree with @The Hat, I would not want to get into any prying of plastics on the cart. The least touching, the better. Anyway, my humble opinion.
 

SkedAddled

Printer Guru
Joined
Jun 7, 2018
Messages
147
Reaction score
145
Points
137
Location
West Michigan
Printer Model
PRO-100, MG5320, Xerox 6027
This:
No, but then again why would anyone want to, these chips are about the same price as a perfectly good Redsetter, and using that there is no need to be lifting and sticking down replacement chips
A few dollars more obtains the Redsetter, and you can stay with all-original Canon, which has been repeatedly proven reliable by many.
 

Artur5

Printer Master
Joined
Jan 24, 2011
Messages
1,299
Reaction score
1,627
Points
278
Location
Kmt. 0.
Printer Model
MB5150,Pro10s,i3Mk3s+,Voron2.4
Canon OEM chips are reliable but far from indestructible. A number of them failed on me after very few resets. To be fair, there’s a chance that the redsetter itself wasn’t working properly and damaged the chips. In fact, my first redsetter unit failed after one or two years and I had to buy another one.

Anyway, those OEM chips aren’t meant to be resetted at all, so we can’t complain to Canon ..:D
 

avolanche

Print Addict
Joined
Jun 5, 2007
Messages
247
Reaction score
64
Points
178
Location
East Tennessee
Canon OEM chips are reliable but far from indestructible. A number of them failed on me after very few resets. To be fair, there’s a chance that the redsetter itself wasn’t working properly and damaged the chips. In fact, my first redsetter unit failed after one or two years and I had to buy another one.

Anyway, those OEM chips aren’t meant to be resetted at all, so we can’t complain to Canon ..:D
I have never had a chip failure with a redsetter and Canon OEM cartridges. This is with over about 15 years of refilling with various printers and 4 different redsetters.
 

SkedAddled

Printer Guru
Joined
Jun 7, 2018
Messages
147
Reaction score
145
Points
137
Location
West Michigan
Printer Model
PRO-100, MG5320, Xerox 6027
Canon OEM chips are reliable but far from indestructible. A number of them failed on me after very few resets. To be fair, there’s a chance that the redsetter itself wasn’t working properly and damaged the chips. In fact, my first redsetter unit failed after one or two years and I had to buy another one.

Anyway, those OEM chips aren’t meant to be resetted at all, so we can’t complain to Canon ..:D
I would be inclined to suspect battery-low resetters, if that's been your useage.

However, I will acknowledge that nothing in this world is a sure thing,
so there are a lot of variables which can factor into your experiences.

I myself may have troubles as well, and I'm new to the whole ballgame. ;)
 
Top