- Joined
- Oct 27, 2005
- Messages
- 3,666
- Reaction score
- 1,349
- Points
- 337
- Location
- South Yorks, UK
- Printer Model
- Epson, Canon, HP... A "few"
Many of the really old printers (we're talking back 8 years now) were more than capable of being reset 2 or 3 times without flooding but the margin for error was considerable back then with bags of excess capacity. Now with more and more functionality such as networking, wireless, etc... being squeezed into an ever shrinking printer box, that excess has been shaved back considerably and in many cases you're lucky if you can reset more than once before problems with ink backflow soiling the underside of printheads, or the movement of a printer resulting in excess ink finding a leak point.OutOFtheinkwell said:Remember when chips didn't exist on cartridges? Printers worked just fine and I never heard of anyone destroying a printer for lack of a chip counter.
As for all the warnings about ink filling the ink tanks and spilling over onto the furniture, I never heard of that happened either!
I have seen posts lately from printer guys saying they did a reset of their printers more than 3 times and after thousands more printed pages still have had no ink spills coming out of the bottom of their printers.
Obviously I get to hear about this more because I'm selling the "really cool waste ink tanks" but to date I've had phone calls detailing ruined car seats (they were taking the printer to a service centre to be serviced after 3 resets), a ruined carpet (apparently the insurance excess was the cheapest cost with flowers, chocolates, etc... to placate the customers wife, much more expensive!) and the mundane stuff like gummed up printheads and ink puddles on desks.
Agreed... The only reason we get so many new releases of printers is to provide updated firmware, disable compatibility with alternative consumables and pander to the "New toy" lusting that folks have. That's changing with things like the firmware update tool from Epson probably to reduce the tooling costs from all those new releases and to cut down on the number of lines being produced but any way you cut it a printer that works for more than 18 months is by most OEMs standards a printer that has been working too long.Nope, No matter how they cut it, I see only one reason for chips that keep track of prints and that is to sell more printers and cartridges. They used to call that "Planned Obsolesce"