I have started to take apart the cartridges from these printers. The googled results of how these are refilled poses a key risk. The cartridge have a high chance of leakage.
The reason is that these cartridges are constructed with a bladder system very similar to the Canon PGI-9. Except that there are a few key refinements. The inclusion of an empty detect optical system, a valve system meant to reflate the bladder when it is empty thus restricting the ability to refill the cartridge. Gone are the secure and positive seals that Epson had used before. The flow of ink is handled by capillary action and surface tension. The cartridge to printhead interface is pure contact based.
The outlet covers seal in a similar fashion to the PGI-9. You should follow Epson's instructions and not dispose of these. These will come in handy when refilling but not for the reason you'd think.
http://www.precisioncolors.com/PGI-9_Internals.html
The first refillers of the PGI-9 were drilling holes and getting leaks at times. The same situation exists here as well. A digital scale will come in handy. I'll post further instructions as I develop and refine them. But I would caution to not drill if you can avoid it and no drilling is in fact necessary.
There are a couple ways of neutralizing the valve system so that an empty condition does not create the problems Epson envisioned.
The reason is that these cartridges are constructed with a bladder system very similar to the Canon PGI-9. Except that there are a few key refinements. The inclusion of an empty detect optical system, a valve system meant to reflate the bladder when it is empty thus restricting the ability to refill the cartridge. Gone are the secure and positive seals that Epson had used before. The flow of ink is handled by capillary action and surface tension. The cartridge to printhead interface is pure contact based.
The outlet covers seal in a similar fashion to the PGI-9. You should follow Epson's instructions and not dispose of these. These will come in handy when refilling but not for the reason you'd think.
http://www.precisioncolors.com/PGI-9_Internals.html
The first refillers of the PGI-9 were drilling holes and getting leaks at times. The same situation exists here as well. A digital scale will come in handy. I'll post further instructions as I develop and refine them. But I would caution to not drill if you can avoid it and no drilling is in fact necessary.
There are a couple ways of neutralizing the valve system so that an empty condition does not create the problems Epson envisioned.