- Joined
- Oct 27, 2005
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- South Yorks, UK
- Printer Model
- Epson, Canon, HP... A "few"
Personally I think the main reason why such blanket statements need revisiting and reviewing is because what constituted a "dye" versus a "pigment" has changed enormously in the last 10+ years, particularly in the last 6 or so.
Dye inks are no longer the sole domain of plant/bio' based compounds and pigments are no longer a basic ground paste of minerals diluted in a chemical base. There has been considerable work gone into creating synthetic dyes made up of solvents, co-solvents and materials that earlier chemists probably only dreamed of. Similarly pigments have been refined with encapsulation, ionic charging and more... With that has come the ability to lock down the processes in intellectual property laws so that third parties (including competing OEMs) have had to take the left-overs that don't perform as well.
In laypersons terms though, when you speak of compatible inks it's still very much pigment = less fading, dye = more vibrancy and as has been mentioned you do indeed have to balance budget, need, etc... carefully before committing... but as ever there's no such thing as a free lunch.
Interesting though that we've now reached a point where refilling is far more feasible with OEM inks from the likes of wideformat carts, CIS based OEM printer (Ecotank, etc) and to be able to get the quality, longevity with it... Quite a lot to revisit and rethink I guess...
Dye inks are no longer the sole domain of plant/bio' based compounds and pigments are no longer a basic ground paste of minerals diluted in a chemical base. There has been considerable work gone into creating synthetic dyes made up of solvents, co-solvents and materials that earlier chemists probably only dreamed of. Similarly pigments have been refined with encapsulation, ionic charging and more... With that has come the ability to lock down the processes in intellectual property laws so that third parties (including competing OEMs) have had to take the left-overs that don't perform as well.
In laypersons terms though, when you speak of compatible inks it's still very much pigment = less fading, dye = more vibrancy and as has been mentioned you do indeed have to balance budget, need, etc... carefully before committing... but as ever there's no such thing as a free lunch.
Interesting though that we've now reached a point where refilling is far more feasible with OEM inks from the likes of wideformat carts, CIS based OEM printer (Ecotank, etc) and to be able to get the quality, longevity with it... Quite a lot to revisit and rethink I guess...