marceltho
Getting Fingers Dirty
ghwellsjr wrote
So I emptied those carts, purged them and keep them like that, and I just refill the cart in the printer when the printer tells me it is running low, after all, it takes only 2 minutes. But when I refill, I look at other carts, and if there are carts almost empty ( no signal from the printer yet ) I refill them at the same time, reset them, and never had any problems with doing that.
panos, I appreciate your post. You didn't put up any rules...you just said out of your experience the DO'S and DON'Ts and for me, they were spot on.
I used the " rounded " depth probe of a cheap caliper to go UNDER the sponge, because you can actually see and guide the depth probe exactly to the middle of the wall of the ink chamber. This depth probe makes a rather " big hole ". the probe is 1,75mm or 0.07 inch thick, that was because I used a rather thick syringe to refill, but had never leaking problems, except for once, but that was because I did not hot-glue the purge-hole on top of the cartridge very well. BTW, I never use tape.As I pointed out, pharmacist has stated that "The best way is to go under the sponge." Maybe in his first set of instructions, he actually used a sharp needle and went through the sponge and then later was convinced that going under the sponge was better because you could use a blunt needle.
This is a VERY valid point, after I started with the Durchstich methode, I put ( full ) spare carts aside and left the refill hole open, and it is true, that in time ( moths ) almost all ink is gone.It wasn't ink drying out on the exit port that I'm concerned about--it's a reduction in the level of the ink in the reservoir that I'm concerned about. If you had noted the level of the ink in the reservoirs of your four cartridges before you turned your printer off and then noted the levels 9 months later, you would have seen that they all went down but the two that had uncovered refill holes would have gone down even more, probably three times as much. That's what happens when you don't cover your refill holes.
So I emptied those carts, purged them and keep them like that, and I just refill the cart in the printer when the printer tells me it is running low, after all, it takes only 2 minutes. But when I refill, I look at other carts, and if there are carts almost empty ( no signal from the printer yet ) I refill them at the same time, reset them, and never had any problems with doing that.
panos, I appreciate your post. You didn't put up any rules...you just said out of your experience the DO'S and DON'Ts and for me, they were spot on.