- Joined
- Apr 19, 2007
- Messages
- 8,712
- Reaction score
- 7,176
- Points
- 393
- Location
- USA
- Printer Model
- Canon MB5120, Pencil
The one hypothesized harm would be an air channel underneath the sponge (in the space created by the needle underneath the sponge) instead of a fluid ink channel, which has been theorized to stop ink flow from the spongeless side. Think of an air bubble in an hydraulic system, including a human's blood vessels, causing disruption of fluid flow and malfunction of the system.
I have had air bubbles underneath the sponge to varying degrees and may or may not had a problem with a couple cartridges due to it. After a flushing everything worked fine again. One can remove most or all of the air bubble(s) by inverting the cartridge (and maybe tapping the cartridge to help dislodge the bubble) and/or injecting more ink at that area or sucking out the air bubble.
I do not follow jimbo123's method but still have had perfect results for well over a year. I will either release pressure on the squeeze bottle while the tip is in the spongeless side, and then pull the needle out, OR, I will gently inject ink as the needle traverses the sponge and stop injecting just before the needle comes out of the cartridge. I fill cartridge to within 2-4 mm from the top of the spongeless side.
You will develop your own technique based on your skills and intuition.
I have had air bubbles underneath the sponge to varying degrees and may or may not had a problem with a couple cartridges due to it. After a flushing everything worked fine again. One can remove most or all of the air bubble(s) by inverting the cartridge (and maybe tapping the cartridge to help dislodge the bubble) and/or injecting more ink at that area or sucking out the air bubble.
I do not follow jimbo123's method but still have had perfect results for well over a year. I will either release pressure on the squeeze bottle while the tip is in the spongeless side, and then pull the needle out, OR, I will gently inject ink as the needle traverses the sponge and stop injecting just before the needle comes out of the cartridge. I fill cartridge to within 2-4 mm from the top of the spongeless side.
You will develop your own technique based on your skills and intuition.