lemons
Newbie to Printing
- Joined
- Nov 8, 2024
- Messages
- 8
- Reaction score
- 3
- Points
- 8
- Printer Model
- Epson Surecolor SC-T2100
I've been happily printing with my SC-T2100, which is great for art prints sized A4 to A1 on matte paper. However, it's very expensive on ink, you can't print on media smaller than A4, and most photo prints on glossy or semi-gloss media are only average. So to plug the gap in the T2100 shortcomings, I purchased, used from Amazon, an ET-8550. It's a good match for the other printer due to it's low print costs and excellent performance on glossy media. However, the printer arrived with the ink tanks full. A nozzle check showed the printer had made 146 prints before being returned to Amazon. My basically ungrounded fear is that the original buyer may have filled the tank with compatible ink to sell the OEM ink. What if I print all my family photo's now and find the ink changing colour a few months or years down the line?
Can anyone think of a way I could establish with any confidence the authenticity of the ink in the reservoirs? By touching the top of the filling nozzle, I'm able to 'harvest' a tiny bit of ink, perhaps by dipping my finger into water after touching the black dye ink, the colour might give away it's origins? Any help from those of you with much more experience than me working with inks would be appreciated.
Can anyone think of a way I could establish with any confidence the authenticity of the ink in the reservoirs? By touching the top of the filling nozzle, I'm able to 'harvest' a tiny bit of ink, perhaps by dipping my finger into water after touching the black dye ink, the colour might give away it's origins? Any help from those of you with much more experience than me working with inks would be appreciated.