- Joined
- Oct 27, 2005
- Messages
- 3,666
- Reaction score
- 1,349
- Points
- 337
- Location
- South Yorks, UK
- Printer Model
- Epson, Canon, HP... A "few"
Most likely dye ink... no confirmation but as they are budget printers and pigment ink is expensive it's unlikely Epson would put them in a CIS system. That and the clogging potential.Does anyone know that ink for Epson L series (all L series except L800, for ex. L3xx, L2xx, L1xx) is pigment or dye? I can't work that out in the specs of the printer on Epson website.
Presumably to flush out any air that might have acculumated as well as freshen things up with the new ink supply. Same process happens with new ink cartridges.Does anyone know what exactly "ink charging" do? Epson has that kind of things on their L series and are required to be run after each time refill.
There's always a significant amount of waste with Epson inkjet printers. Much of it is down to the technology being easy to clog and the way that users can foul things up so there's an element of "worst case scenario" that requires an extended priming routine to ensure there's minimal likelihood of air in the system causing "clog" like symptoms.I suppose that process wash out all the ink in all tube and print head, and replace them with new ink just be filled in tank. If so, then when we refill ink there is a significant amount of ink being waste!!