- Joined
- Dec 27, 2014
- Messages
- 6,062
- Reaction score
- 7,234
- Points
- 363
- Location
- Germany
- Printer Model
- L805, WF2010, ET8550
I'm running an Epson L800 printer since some months, a model with a ITS - integrated tank system - the first generation of an Epson CISS. The unit is actually a P50 A4 6 color photo printer which Epson upmodelled with their ITS CISS system. I have printed about 1000 A4 photos so far, with the Fujilfim DL dye inks. It's just a no frills photo printer, like the discontinued P50 - no special features - no WLAN, smartphone connectivity etc. The printer is not sold everywhere by Epson, not in Western Europe, or the US to my knowledge, but in Eastern Europe, South America, South East Asia, Korea . I got my printer from a Polish distributor without hassle. The main and great benefit of this L800 is the Epson CISS, the convenience, no hazzle with cartridges, refilling, firmware updates and rejected cartridges, frequent interruptions of print jobs for refills - that makes a pretty big difference when you run a job of 50 double sided A4 prints for an album - it runs unattended - except one turn of the paper pile. This just would be impossible like that with a P50, or a R265 with frequent refill stops, pages printed just half, problems of reprinting those and maintaining the print sequence for the double sided print. I'm running as well a R265 with a CISS with pigment inks, I have a direct comparison, the CISS does not eliminate the cartridge empty stops in between.
So after a while of usage I can say that I'm happy with the L800, and even the premium price is acceptable for me with the mentioned benefits. There are no other smaller or bigger problems with the L800 so far - no clogged printhead, no funny noise, no other strange behaviour whatever.
The ink bottles are coded , and the user is supposed to enter such unique bottle code into the driver whenever the firmware reports that an ink container is supposedly empty. You can continue for a few pages ignoring the ink empty warning, but that interrupts the print flow. There are listings of such ink codes on the internet, but even easier the WICReset utility let you reset the ink bottle counters to 100% for free, without ink bottle codes, so there is no limitation for refill with any ink with this L800 printer.
So after a while of usage I can say that I'm happy with the L800, and even the premium price is acceptable for me with the mentioned benefits. There are no other smaller or bigger problems with the L800 so far - no clogged printhead, no funny noise, no other strange behaviour whatever.
The ink bottles are coded , and the user is supposed to enter such unique bottle code into the driver whenever the firmware reports that an ink container is supposedly empty. You can continue for a few pages ignoring the ink empty warning, but that interrupts the print flow. There are listings of such ink codes on the internet, but even easier the WICReset utility let you reset the ink bottle counters to 100% for free, without ink bottle codes, so there is no limitation for refill with any ink with this L800 printer.
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