martin0reg
Printer Master
@russell
What sort of subjects you are printing, graphical subjects ("silouettes" --) which are like "two tone" design or b&w photography, with continous graduations of grey?
Your approach reminds me of "black only" (BO) mode with Epson 6-color dye printers. Some users at dpreview had found a setting, which makes the epson print with the black ink only. Similar to your setting for Canon. But Epson has no "Textblack" (PGI), so there is need to change inks, the printer will use the K channell only-
Very neutral and good looking prints can be made.. but there are two downsides:
- Using only one ink channell and nozzle row will reduce the resolution to a fraction of the whole nozzle count. It'sonly visible with a loupe or if you have young eyes and put your nose on the print...it looks kind of grainy, but with deep blacks, like a wet print from Kodak Tri.X...
I had an issue with banding or stripes, whenever only one nozzle of my R285 (P50) was not shooting (on Epson nozzle checks you can see the single nozzles as steps)
These issues, an even uniform grainyness (which can be pleasing) and an uneven banding were more visible when I tried BO with a Canon, which means the PGI channel
- 3rd party dye inks are less stable than OEM, and OEM dyes are less stable than pigment..
Therefor some users of the BO method changed the black dye ink the other way around, pigment instead of dye. [You can do this with a piezo head, but NOT with a Canon "bubble jet" head!]
Years ago, @mikling from Precisioncolors had a 4-channel B&W dye ink set, especially for Canon 5-channel printers, with 3 shades of grey at the C M and Y position. I used this a lot, but changed to a B&W set for the Epson 6-color printers. Best tonality, full resolution and best resistance against UV and ozone. Ink is called "Carbon" pigment, and you have to change MK and PK for matte and glossy paper, just like a color pigment printer.
What sort of subjects you are printing, graphical subjects ("silouettes" --) which are like "two tone" design or b&w photography, with continous graduations of grey?
Your approach reminds me of "black only" (BO) mode with Epson 6-color dye printers. Some users at dpreview had found a setting, which makes the epson print with the black ink only. Similar to your setting for Canon. But Epson has no "Textblack" (PGI), so there is need to change inks, the printer will use the K channell only-
Very neutral and good looking prints can be made.. but there are two downsides:
- Using only one ink channell and nozzle row will reduce the resolution to a fraction of the whole nozzle count. It'sonly visible with a loupe or if you have young eyes and put your nose on the print...it looks kind of grainy, but with deep blacks, like a wet print from Kodak Tri.X...
I had an issue with banding or stripes, whenever only one nozzle of my R285 (P50) was not shooting (on Epson nozzle checks you can see the single nozzles as steps)
These issues, an even uniform grainyness (which can be pleasing) and an uneven banding were more visible when I tried BO with a Canon, which means the PGI channel
- 3rd party dye inks are less stable than OEM, and OEM dyes are less stable than pigment..
Therefor some users of the BO method changed the black dye ink the other way around, pigment instead of dye. [You can do this with a piezo head, but NOT with a Canon "bubble jet" head!]
Years ago, @mikling from Precisioncolors had a 4-channel B&W dye ink set, especially for Canon 5-channel printers, with 3 shades of grey at the C M and Y position. I used this a lot, but changed to a B&W set for the Epson 6-color printers. Best tonality, full resolution and best resistance against UV and ozone. Ink is called "Carbon" pigment, and you have to change MK and PK for matte and glossy paper, just like a color pigment printer.