- Joined
- Jan 18, 2010
- Messages
- 15,828
- Reaction score
- 8,858
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- 453
- Location
- Residing in Wicklow Ireland
- Printer Model
- Canon/3D, CR-10, CR-10S, KP-3
I have not been printing as much as I would like to over the past few months or so but I do have a plethora of spare cartridge filled as back-up if and when I need them.
I have noticed with a fair few of the spares lately that when I go and installed them have given poor ink flow after only a dozen or so sheets and I was forced to change them till I got one that worked properly.
It would seem that when these spare cartridges are not used on a regular basis that they are inclined to fail to perform as expected, and I think I found the reason why !
Normally most of my cartridges get used up within 4 to 6 weeks after refilling so they don’t spend much time sitting round, till now that is and I reckon they are suffering from the ink drying out in the top half of the sponge which is then preventing the proper air circulation that’s needed.
On one of the cartridge that I had replaced with a new one which still had half the reservoir full of ink, when I removed the seal from the top refill hole, the ink began to replenish the sponge area and immediately emptied the reservoir.
So the only thing I could think of was that the cartridge must have been suffocating from lack of air but the air maze was completely clear of any obstruction so the problem had to be in the top sponge.
Most of the time when I fill my cartridges the ink tended to saturate both sponges and that has never caused any problem before but now it’s going to mean a new approach to both refilling and storage of all these cartridges.
I have only mention this just in case some others are having similar problems and were wondering what they were doing wrong, I usually purged these cartridges after a half dozen refills and that normally would cure any problems that might crop up but not this time.
I am going to have to do a complete rethink on my refilling technique or reduce the amount of spare cartridges that I’d keep ready for use; I’d normally have two sets of CLI-8 and two sets BCI-6 cartridges held in reserve..
Click to enlarge.
I have noticed with a fair few of the spares lately that when I go and installed them have given poor ink flow after only a dozen or so sheets and I was forced to change them till I got one that worked properly.
It would seem that when these spare cartridges are not used on a regular basis that they are inclined to fail to perform as expected, and I think I found the reason why !
Normally most of my cartridges get used up within 4 to 6 weeks after refilling so they don’t spend much time sitting round, till now that is and I reckon they are suffering from the ink drying out in the top half of the sponge which is then preventing the proper air circulation that’s needed.
On one of the cartridge that I had replaced with a new one which still had half the reservoir full of ink, when I removed the seal from the top refill hole, the ink began to replenish the sponge area and immediately emptied the reservoir.
So the only thing I could think of was that the cartridge must have been suffocating from lack of air but the air maze was completely clear of any obstruction so the problem had to be in the top sponge.
Most of the time when I fill my cartridges the ink tended to saturate both sponges and that has never caused any problem before but now it’s going to mean a new approach to both refilling and storage of all these cartridges.
I have only mention this just in case some others are having similar problems and were wondering what they were doing wrong, I usually purged these cartridges after a half dozen refills and that normally would cure any problems that might crop up but not this time.
I am going to have to do a complete rethink on my refilling technique or reduce the amount of spare cartridges that I’d keep ready for use; I’d normally have two sets of CLI-8 and two sets BCI-6 cartridges held in reserve..
Click to enlarge.