ChemistryPrinter
Newbie to Printing
- Joined
- Jun 16, 2006
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- 2
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I am attempting to use an Epson Stylus Photo R800 to print chemicals on glass for chemistry research. Since the printer has 8 cartridges this method allows me to quickly mix 8 different chemicals in lots of combinations and proportions by simply printing gradients. However, I have quickly discovered that even when I print what seems to be a pure color (magenta), some ink from each cartridge is deposited including signficiant amounts of black and yellow ink. Is there a way for me to manually control which cartridge is used to print each pixel? For example, I would like to say that one spot should get 1.5 pL from the first cartridge and 3.0 pL from the second but nothing from he remaining cartridges. Then I would like to build up a gradient so that I can know how much of each chemical was deposited at any given point.
The problem is even more complex since this particular printer contains red and blue cartridges in addition to cyan, magenta, yellow. These seem to be redundant, so I don't understand how the printer or computer decides when to print red from the red cartridge and when to print it by mixing combinations of cyan, magenta, and yellow.
If anyone has any advice or ideas about how to gain complete control over the cartridges, please let me know.
The problem is even more complex since this particular printer contains red and blue cartridges in addition to cyan, magenta, yellow. These seem to be redundant, so I don't understand how the printer or computer decides when to print red from the red cartridge and when to print it by mixing combinations of cyan, magenta, and yellow.
If anyone has any advice or ideas about how to gain complete control over the cartridges, please let me know.