diyandsave$
Newbie to Printing
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- May 12, 2013
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Hi All, based on what I read here and elsewhere over the last few months I have started refilling. Canon CLI-8 OEM carts, German method, IS inks from Precision Colors. Here is my experience and observations. If I repeat information found elsewhere, please forgive me.
I started by gathering the supplies. Included was a few OEM carts from e_bay, just over 2 complete sets. I flushed and cut open one of the extra cartridge to see how it looked inside. The window that you have to pass the needle through is about 1/8" x 1/4" plus a shallow groove in the bottom. There are 3 parts to the sponge, the oval bottom pill/outlet, the soft center ink holding sponge and the top hard/coarse vent sponge (I'm guessing at the exact purposes). As I couldn't find the 2"+ needles for the method I have chosen, I made some. I measured the needles that PC sent me in my kit and ordered the hypodermic tubing that would fit inside, 21 gauge. 60" was about $12 from small parts via amazon. The tubing is hard and had to be cut with a dremel. I cut the larger needles shorter and glued the new tips in. The tips were pointed and then softened (rounded the keenness off) to aid in passing through the sponges. A hole was drilled through the end at an angle with a 1/32" drill and a pin vise. It was about the level of the split line between the 2 main sponges and aimed at the window into the holding tank. I flushed a set of carts and dried them by blowing through the vent and out the bottom, then wicked the sponges using the paper towel method and letting them sit in the sun. Then the carts were filled using the German method. I replaced 2 empty carts in my printer and refilled them also. All went well except for a couple of notes that follow.
Three things were observed during the refill. 1. the sponges were slow/resistant to absorb fresh ink. I believe this was because I over dried the sponges. As the conditioning fluid (by Pharm. I believe) was not on hand, I injected more ink as I withdrew the needle through the sponge. In hind sight, dripping ink onto the outlet sponge should also have worked. 2. If the needle isn't completely into the ink tank when you inject then part of the ink will go directly into the sponges. 3. One of the empty carts I pulled from the printer had just emptied the ink tank, this cart wanted to puke old ink out while being filled. This may have been from too much ink still in the sponges. In the future I will let the printer go for a few more prints after a cart shows empty to dry up the sponges a bit more. Maybe by using a paper towel to blotter test the outlet I can tell how dry the sponge is.
Any advise or comments would be appreciated.
Thank you for all the help nifty-stuff has been and will be, DIY.
I started by gathering the supplies. Included was a few OEM carts from e_bay, just over 2 complete sets. I flushed and cut open one of the extra cartridge to see how it looked inside. The window that you have to pass the needle through is about 1/8" x 1/4" plus a shallow groove in the bottom. There are 3 parts to the sponge, the oval bottom pill/outlet, the soft center ink holding sponge and the top hard/coarse vent sponge (I'm guessing at the exact purposes). As I couldn't find the 2"+ needles for the method I have chosen, I made some. I measured the needles that PC sent me in my kit and ordered the hypodermic tubing that would fit inside, 21 gauge. 60" was about $12 from small parts via amazon. The tubing is hard and had to be cut with a dremel. I cut the larger needles shorter and glued the new tips in. The tips were pointed and then softened (rounded the keenness off) to aid in passing through the sponges. A hole was drilled through the end at an angle with a 1/32" drill and a pin vise. It was about the level of the split line between the 2 main sponges and aimed at the window into the holding tank. I flushed a set of carts and dried them by blowing through the vent and out the bottom, then wicked the sponges using the paper towel method and letting them sit in the sun. Then the carts were filled using the German method. I replaced 2 empty carts in my printer and refilled them also. All went well except for a couple of notes that follow.
Three things were observed during the refill. 1. the sponges were slow/resistant to absorb fresh ink. I believe this was because I over dried the sponges. As the conditioning fluid (by Pharm. I believe) was not on hand, I injected more ink as I withdrew the needle through the sponge. In hind sight, dripping ink onto the outlet sponge should also have worked. 2. If the needle isn't completely into the ink tank when you inject then part of the ink will go directly into the sponges. 3. One of the empty carts I pulled from the printer had just emptied the ink tank, this cart wanted to puke old ink out while being filled. This may have been from too much ink still in the sponges. In the future I will let the printer go for a few more prints after a cart shows empty to dry up the sponges a bit more. Maybe by using a paper towel to blotter test the outlet I can tell how dry the sponge is.
Any advise or comments would be appreciated.
Thank you for all the help nifty-stuff has been and will be, DIY.