J.Emmett Turner
Getting Fingers Dirty
- Joined
- Nov 29, 2017
- Messages
- 47
- Reaction score
- 33
- Points
- 46
- Printer Model
- Pro 3880; CR-10; C250DN; E809a
For sourcing ink from larger industrial printers, I’m trying to figure out which colors are the same between the different UltraChrome ink sets. Here’s the sum total of what I know so far, edited with contributions from Ink stained Fingers below:
Epson UltraChrome (UC) is Epson’s first pigment ink marketed for typical consumers. It is available in up to 7 pigment colors: Cyan (C), Light Cyan (LC), Magenta (M), Light Magenta (LM), Yellow (Y), Matte Black (MK), Photo Black (PK). The Yellow (Y) pigment is known for fading faster than others.
Epson UltraChrome K3 (UCK3) is the same but adds Light Black (LK) and Light Light Black (LLK). K3 = 3 blacks - get it? The rest of the colors are interchangeable with the previous generation.
Epson UltraChrome K3 Vivid Magenta (K3VM) replaces Magenta and Light Magenta with Vivid Magenta and Vivid Light Magenta. The rest of the colors are interchangeable with the previous and next generation.
Epson UltraChrome HDR (HDR) adds Green (G) and Orange (O) for decreased reliance on Y when reproducing the full color gamut. This also widens the gamut, thus, “High Dynamic Range.” The other colors are interchangeable with the previous generation. The packaging reinforces this by sometimes carrying both logos on the colors shared by both ink sets (never on G and O). Newer packages leave off all logos.
Epson UltraChrome HD (UCHD) changes MK and PK to a higher density MK and PK. It also slightly changes C, LC (?), VM, and VLM to even the gloss levels and reduce bronzing. Y has finally been changed in some way that resists fading better up to a point. Presumably only the LK and LLK remain unchanged and, thus, freely interchangeable without special equipment and profiling. I’m not sure that LC was changed based on Epson’s diagrams. Perhaps it was the reference that the gloss levels of the others were adjusted to so it didn’t need to be changed.
Epson UltraChrome HDX (HDX) adds Violet (V) but is presumably interchangeable with UCHD for the rest of the colors.
Epson UltraChrome GS/GSX/GSX+ These are solvent-based inks. I’ve seen stuff like clear (gloss optimizer?), white, and gold. I wouldn’t expect any of it to be interchangeable with UC, UCK3, K3VM, HDR, UCHD, and HDX.
So, if I’m refilling carts for an UCK3 printer like Epson Stylus Pro 3800 and I am not equipped to make ICC profiles, then it’s obvious that I should avoid VM from the K3VM and up but I can get all the other colors from UC, K3VM, and HDR. I can only get LK and LLK for UCHD.
If I’m refilling for an UCHD Epson SureColor P800 without profiling then my options are really limited. I would avoid C, LC (?), VM, VLM, M, LM, Y, MK, and PK from the previous generations. I could only get these from another UCHD or HDX printer.
If I’m refilling carts for a K3VM Epson Stylus Pro 3880 then I should avoid M and LM from a UCK3 and earlier and I should avoid C, VM, VLM, MK, Y, and PK from UCHD and later.
Just bought a 700ml VLM cart from an UltraChrome HDR ink set for my UltraChrome K3 w/VM printer and I’m hoping my understanding of the hierarchy is correct. Thanks!
Epson UltraChrome (UC) is Epson’s first pigment ink marketed for typical consumers. It is available in up to 7 pigment colors: Cyan (C), Light Cyan (LC), Magenta (M), Light Magenta (LM), Yellow (Y), Matte Black (MK), Photo Black (PK). The Yellow (Y) pigment is known for fading faster than others.
Epson UltraChrome K3 (UCK3) is the same but adds Light Black (LK) and Light Light Black (LLK). K3 = 3 blacks - get it? The rest of the colors are interchangeable with the previous generation.
Epson UltraChrome K3 Vivid Magenta (K3VM) replaces Magenta and Light Magenta with Vivid Magenta and Vivid Light Magenta. The rest of the colors are interchangeable with the previous and next generation.
Epson UltraChrome HDR (HDR) adds Green (G) and Orange (O) for decreased reliance on Y when reproducing the full color gamut. This also widens the gamut, thus, “High Dynamic Range.” The other colors are interchangeable with the previous generation. The packaging reinforces this by sometimes carrying both logos on the colors shared by both ink sets (never on G and O). Newer packages leave off all logos.
Epson UltraChrome HD (UCHD) changes MK and PK to a higher density MK and PK. It also slightly changes C, LC (?), VM, and VLM to even the gloss levels and reduce bronzing. Y has finally been changed in some way that resists fading better up to a point. Presumably only the LK and LLK remain unchanged and, thus, freely interchangeable without special equipment and profiling. I’m not sure that LC was changed based on Epson’s diagrams. Perhaps it was the reference that the gloss levels of the others were adjusted to so it didn’t need to be changed.
Epson UltraChrome HDX (HDX) adds Violet (V) but is presumably interchangeable with UCHD for the rest of the colors.
Epson UltraChrome GS/GSX/GSX+ These are solvent-based inks. I’ve seen stuff like clear (gloss optimizer?), white, and gold. I wouldn’t expect any of it to be interchangeable with UC, UCK3, K3VM, HDR, UCHD, and HDX.
So, if I’m refilling carts for an UCK3 printer like Epson Stylus Pro 3800 and I am not equipped to make ICC profiles, then it’s obvious that I should avoid VM from the K3VM and up but I can get all the other colors from UC, K3VM, and HDR. I can only get LK and LLK for UCHD.
If I’m refilling for an UCHD Epson SureColor P800 without profiling then my options are really limited. I would avoid C, LC (?), VM, VLM, M, LM, Y, MK, and PK from the previous generations. I could only get these from another UCHD or HDX printer.
If I’m refilling carts for a K3VM Epson Stylus Pro 3880 then I should avoid M and LM from a UCK3 and earlier and I should avoid C, VM, VLM, MK, Y, and PK from UCHD and later.
Just bought a 700ml VLM cart from an UltraChrome HDR ink set for my UltraChrome K3 w/VM printer and I’m hoping my understanding of the hierarchy is correct. Thanks!
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