photix
Printing Apprentice
- Joined
- May 9, 2023
- Messages
- 3
- Reaction score
- 3
- Points
- 13
- Printer Model
- Epson SC-P600, Epson SC-P800
Hi,
a few days ago I tried to get rid of a few nasty clogged nozzles in the printhead of one of my two Epson P600 printers.
I removed the printhead and cleaned it using waterfall technique - push cleaning solution (20% isopropyl alcohol, 3% propyl glicol, 77% distilled water) through the ink inlet pins using a syringe. I basically used this technique:
This technique worked well for a few times before. However, this time, after assembling all parts and turning on the printer, the printer ran some initial cleaning by outputting some ink on the waste pad. At that moment everything stopped. The printer just turned off. I moved the printhead a bit and saw that it ejected a bit of yellow ink just before stopping. When I turned the printer on again, I got Error 0x44.
First I thought there must be something wrong with ribbon cable connections. I dismantled the printer again and then assembled it back to reconnect all ribbon cables. Unfortunately, that didn't make any difference. As soon as I turn the printer back on, I get 0x44 error.
Has anyone experienced 0x44 Error?
Have I killed the printhead, have I shorted the motherboard or might there be some other cause of this 0x44 Error?
Any hints welcome.
a few days ago I tried to get rid of a few nasty clogged nozzles in the printhead of one of my two Epson P600 printers.
I removed the printhead and cleaned it using waterfall technique - push cleaning solution (20% isopropyl alcohol, 3% propyl glicol, 77% distilled water) through the ink inlet pins using a syringe. I basically used this technique:
This technique worked well for a few times before. However, this time, after assembling all parts and turning on the printer, the printer ran some initial cleaning by outputting some ink on the waste pad. At that moment everything stopped. The printer just turned off. I moved the printhead a bit and saw that it ejected a bit of yellow ink just before stopping. When I turned the printer on again, I got Error 0x44.
First I thought there must be something wrong with ribbon cable connections. I dismantled the printer again and then assembled it back to reconnect all ribbon cables. Unfortunately, that didn't make any difference. As soon as I turn the printer back on, I get 0x44 error.
Has anyone experienced 0x44 Error?
Have I killed the printhead, have I shorted the motherboard or might there be some other cause of this 0x44 Error?
Any hints welcome.