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I'm reading quite frequently a statement that pigment inks perform better in regards to fading than dye inks. I consider such statement quite meaningless since no details at all are available - which inks are compared - 3rd party dye vs. OEM pigment ? - or any other combination of inks - which printer(s) have been used - which paper has been used in such test ? Is it based on personal observation - under which conditions ? the subject overall is more complex than the simple statement implies - part of the problem is non-availability of good evidence, and test reports - if they are available - do not make their way to those making that statement.
There are two sources of detailed test reports - the Wilhelm Research operation and the Aardenburg imaging organisation
http://www.wilhelm-research.com/ - WIR
https://www.aardenburg-imaging.com/
I'll stick to the WIR reports since they offer already comparative data, the Aardenburg tests are done for a specific ink/printer/paper combination, and you need to pull several reports together for a comparison.
Let me start with an OEM dye ink - Epson Claria - used on a wide range of desktop printers since more than 15 years. The Claria dye inkset is used on various printers like the Photo 1400, R280 and RX595 and more
http://www.wilhelm-research.com/epson/WIR_EpRX595_2008_06_16.pdf
http://www.wilhelm-research.com/epson/WIR_EpR280_2008_01_16.pdf
http://www.wilhelm-research.com/epson/WIR_Ep_Artisan800_2008_09_06.pdf
I'm only looking the the data on the first (few) pages, and here to the left column 'Displayed prints framed under glass', it lists the useful time for a print under particular conditions which are kept identical for various tests. The numbers vary just slightly for different papers around 100 years for this 'Display Permanence Rating'.
Several recent tests by @maxilian59 last year and myself show that the Canon Chromalife 100 inkset performs quite the same as the Claria inks, I just cannot find a corresponding WIR test. Both these OEM inks are very similar with their fading performance/longevity. And how do these dye inks compare to an OEM pigment ink - in this case the Lucia ink set for a Canon Pro9500 which is still in use by various forum members. There is a WIR test report
http://www.wilhelm-research.com/canon/WIR_Can9500_2007_12_28.pdf
with a permanence rating of 104 - 95 years - almost exactly the same as the Claria ink - or the dye Chromalife inks
This already shows that the opening statement about the better longevity of pigment inks needs some more backup of data - could it be that a poor 3rd party dye ink - one of those fast fade inks - get substituted by an OEM pigment ink with much better performance - nobody knows which makes this statement meaningless.
Let me go into a comparison of of longevity data for various OEM pigment inks in a next posting, lots of recent tests have shown that OEM dye inks are far superior to 3rd party dye inks, there is no need to repeat all that data and the competition for the fastest fading ink............And I won't address the fading of 3D prints at all - I leave that testing to WIR
http://www.wilhelm-research.com/WIR...of_3D_Printed_Objects_RA_HW_JL_2018-09-26.pdf
There are two sources of detailed test reports - the Wilhelm Research operation and the Aardenburg imaging organisation
http://www.wilhelm-research.com/ - WIR
https://www.aardenburg-imaging.com/
I'll stick to the WIR reports since they offer already comparative data, the Aardenburg tests are done for a specific ink/printer/paper combination, and you need to pull several reports together for a comparison.
Let me start with an OEM dye ink - Epson Claria - used on a wide range of desktop printers since more than 15 years. The Claria dye inkset is used on various printers like the Photo 1400, R280 and RX595 and more
http://www.wilhelm-research.com/epson/WIR_EpRX595_2008_06_16.pdf
http://www.wilhelm-research.com/epson/WIR_EpR280_2008_01_16.pdf
http://www.wilhelm-research.com/epson/WIR_Ep_Artisan800_2008_09_06.pdf
I'm only looking the the data on the first (few) pages, and here to the left column 'Displayed prints framed under glass', it lists the useful time for a print under particular conditions which are kept identical for various tests. The numbers vary just slightly for different papers around 100 years for this 'Display Permanence Rating'.
Several recent tests by @maxilian59 last year and myself show that the Canon Chromalife 100 inkset performs quite the same as the Claria inks, I just cannot find a corresponding WIR test. Both these OEM inks are very similar with their fading performance/longevity. And how do these dye inks compare to an OEM pigment ink - in this case the Lucia ink set for a Canon Pro9500 which is still in use by various forum members. There is a WIR test report
http://www.wilhelm-research.com/canon/WIR_Can9500_2007_12_28.pdf
with a permanence rating of 104 - 95 years - almost exactly the same as the Claria ink - or the dye Chromalife inks
This already shows that the opening statement about the better longevity of pigment inks needs some more backup of data - could it be that a poor 3rd party dye ink - one of those fast fade inks - get substituted by an OEM pigment ink with much better performance - nobody knows which makes this statement meaningless.
Let me go into a comparison of of longevity data for various OEM pigment inks in a next posting, lots of recent tests have shown that OEM dye inks are far superior to 3rd party dye inks, there is no need to repeat all that data and the competition for the fastest fading ink............And I won't address the fading of 3D prints at all - I leave that testing to WIR
http://www.wilhelm-research.com/WIR...of_3D_Printed_Objects_RA_HW_JL_2018-09-26.pdf
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