Jorik
Getting Fingers Dirty
- Joined
- Dec 25, 2016
- Messages
- 12
- Reaction score
- 12
- Points
- 45
- Location
- Eindhoven, Netherlands
- Printer Model
- Canon MX925 & Canon MG5450
Hi there,
I'm looking for some expert views on what is wrong with my printers. I'll first explain the situation and what I did. Then some scans of nozzle checks and finally my question(s).
In July 2013 I purchased 2 MG5450 printers/MFCs. One for myself and one for my parents. One of the reasons behind that was that if they had any questions on operating the printer, it would be easier for me to help them. I purchased the printers from a print shop via internet, but they have an actual store in a village close to where my parents live. That shop also sells lots of OEM and off-brand cartridges and I purchased their off-brand cartridges for use with our MG5450's.
Since then I've told my parents to regularly use the printer, preferably every other week, but at least once a month. If they would be away from home for a few months (they're retired..) I would visit their house every few weeks to water the plants, check the mail and print a few pages .
And while we've had some clogged nozzles now and then, we could clean it easily without deep cleaning and as such their printer has been working quite well.
For my own printer I didn't print quite as regularly. And after a while the printer didn't print any ink at all anymore. The print shop mentioned it could be the cartridges instead of the printer/print head so they sent some replacement cartridges for free. And indeed my printer worked again, first with a few nozzles clogged, but all nozzles seemed fine after a few cleaning cycles.
Fast forward a bit more and again my printer would not print anything at all. I bought a set of cleaning cartridges in the hope, that this could unclog the nozzles (if that was the problem) and the shop sent another replacement set of cartridges. Now here I probably tried cleaning the print head a bit too vigorously. I later read on this forum, that if you (deep) clean too often, you could overheat and destroy the print heads. I think this is what happened with my printer.
At this point I became quite frustrated, this was not my first printer that seemed to die as a result of clogged nozzles. So searching online I found some video's/howto's on how to remove the print head from the MG5450 and clean it with windex, distilled water or regular tap water. I did that and cleaned my print head with tap water (the water here is low on minerals) and put it back in the printer. I think it was quite dry, but I can't say that with 100% certainty: I did not wait for multiple hours before re-inserting the print head.
Now this cleaning didn't help, bit things didn't look worse either: the printer didn't give any errors, but it also wouldn't print any ink. So my next attempt to diagnose and eventually fix was to see if the print head from my parents MG5450 would work correctly in my printer. (After reading in this forum, I understand that a good print head in a faulty printer could kill the print head and when replacing it back into a good printer, it could then also break the good printer .)
Here is a nozzle check from the good MG5450 (parents) before I removed the print head to test it in my own printer:
Now a nozzle check with that same print head in my MG5450:
To me this looked quite promising: all colors seemed ok, only PGBK seemed a little distorted. In any case this gave me some confidence that the printer was actually not completely faulty and that a good print head might be able to restore my printer. I didn't quite understand why the good PGBK nozzle check didn't transfer to my printer.
When I put the good print head back into the good printer (my parents'), this is the nozzle check I received:
So this is the current situation: with my attempt to diagnose what's wrong with my printer, I sort of made my parents printer worse. The PGBK nozzles themselves seem ok, but there's something wrong with the PGBK printing. The text below the patterns also shows the same ghosting effect. Is this a timing issue and is this nozzle pattern a bi-directional printing or could this be the result of breaking the print head in a faulty printer and replacing the now faulty print head in a good printer? (Question 1)
Naturally my first priority now is to fix my parents printer.
I found that such issues could be related to the timing strip to be dirty. I don't think I touched the timing strip when removing and re-inserting the print head so I'm a little afraid I may make things worse trying to clean the timing strip. It seems not very easy to get to on the MG5450. So my second question is: next to the timing strip, are there other known causes for such a distortion? I could try to clean the timing strip with Isopropyl Alcohol, but if there are others things I can do to fix this, please let me know!
My lower priority (the original attempt) was to fix my own printer. From the above steps and the result of the "good print head" in my printer, would you consider my printer logic board dead? Or does the middle nozzle check seem like something that could still be fixed with a good print head?
On my own printer I performed the purge system test. After a few minutes, the water was still there so no leak and after a cleaning cycle, no traces could be seen of the test, so that seems to be ok.
In any case it seems all is not lost, with a good print head I could still have some good print outs with my printer, e.g. when not using PGBK.
Thanks for reading this far, any insight or advice you may have is highly appreciated!
Jorik
P.S. After writing this short story I found http://www.printerknowledge.com/thr...dlines-letters-and-barcodes-misaligned.10991/
This looks very similar to my problems, unfortunately...
I'm looking for some expert views on what is wrong with my printers. I'll first explain the situation and what I did. Then some scans of nozzle checks and finally my question(s).
In July 2013 I purchased 2 MG5450 printers/MFCs. One for myself and one for my parents. One of the reasons behind that was that if they had any questions on operating the printer, it would be easier for me to help them. I purchased the printers from a print shop via internet, but they have an actual store in a village close to where my parents live. That shop also sells lots of OEM and off-brand cartridges and I purchased their off-brand cartridges for use with our MG5450's.
Since then I've told my parents to regularly use the printer, preferably every other week, but at least once a month. If they would be away from home for a few months (they're retired..) I would visit their house every few weeks to water the plants, check the mail and print a few pages .
And while we've had some clogged nozzles now and then, we could clean it easily without deep cleaning and as such their printer has been working quite well.
For my own printer I didn't print quite as regularly. And after a while the printer didn't print any ink at all anymore. The print shop mentioned it could be the cartridges instead of the printer/print head so they sent some replacement cartridges for free. And indeed my printer worked again, first with a few nozzles clogged, but all nozzles seemed fine after a few cleaning cycles.
Fast forward a bit more and again my printer would not print anything at all. I bought a set of cleaning cartridges in the hope, that this could unclog the nozzles (if that was the problem) and the shop sent another replacement set of cartridges. Now here I probably tried cleaning the print head a bit too vigorously. I later read on this forum, that if you (deep) clean too often, you could overheat and destroy the print heads. I think this is what happened with my printer.
At this point I became quite frustrated, this was not my first printer that seemed to die as a result of clogged nozzles. So searching online I found some video's/howto's on how to remove the print head from the MG5450 and clean it with windex, distilled water or regular tap water. I did that and cleaned my print head with tap water (the water here is low on minerals) and put it back in the printer. I think it was quite dry, but I can't say that with 100% certainty: I did not wait for multiple hours before re-inserting the print head.
Now this cleaning didn't help, bit things didn't look worse either: the printer didn't give any errors, but it also wouldn't print any ink. So my next attempt to diagnose and eventually fix was to see if the print head from my parents MG5450 would work correctly in my printer. (After reading in this forum, I understand that a good print head in a faulty printer could kill the print head and when replacing it back into a good printer, it could then also break the good printer .)
Here is a nozzle check from the good MG5450 (parents) before I removed the print head to test it in my own printer:
Now a nozzle check with that same print head in my MG5450:
To me this looked quite promising: all colors seemed ok, only PGBK seemed a little distorted. In any case this gave me some confidence that the printer was actually not completely faulty and that a good print head might be able to restore my printer. I didn't quite understand why the good PGBK nozzle check didn't transfer to my printer.
When I put the good print head back into the good printer (my parents'), this is the nozzle check I received:
So this is the current situation: with my attempt to diagnose what's wrong with my printer, I sort of made my parents printer worse. The PGBK nozzles themselves seem ok, but there's something wrong with the PGBK printing. The text below the patterns also shows the same ghosting effect. Is this a timing issue and is this nozzle pattern a bi-directional printing or could this be the result of breaking the print head in a faulty printer and replacing the now faulty print head in a good printer? (Question 1)
Naturally my first priority now is to fix my parents printer.
I found that such issues could be related to the timing strip to be dirty. I don't think I touched the timing strip when removing and re-inserting the print head so I'm a little afraid I may make things worse trying to clean the timing strip. It seems not very easy to get to on the MG5450. So my second question is: next to the timing strip, are there other known causes for such a distortion? I could try to clean the timing strip with Isopropyl Alcohol, but if there are others things I can do to fix this, please let me know!
My lower priority (the original attempt) was to fix my own printer. From the above steps and the result of the "good print head" in my printer, would you consider my printer logic board dead? Or does the middle nozzle check seem like something that could still be fixed with a good print head?
On my own printer I performed the purge system test. After a few minutes, the water was still there so no leak and after a cleaning cycle, no traces could be seen of the test, so that seems to be ok.
In any case it seems all is not lost, with a good print head I could still have some good print outs with my printer, e.g. when not using PGBK.
Thanks for reading this far, any insight or advice you may have is highly appreciated!
Jorik
P.S. After writing this short story I found http://www.printerknowledge.com/thr...dlines-letters-and-barcodes-misaligned.10991/
This looks very similar to my problems, unfortunately...