Here's a real world example of nozzle check after 2 weeks of use in 20-25% relative humidity in a P600.
View attachment 4937
#1, it the first nozzle check after two weeks. Throughout 2016, I never had to a bad nozzle check off the P600 even with 4-6 weeks of no use. This winter the 20-25% humidity is causing some issues. Notice the pattern and the type of distortion that dried ink is causing.....deflected and crooked steps. Non alignment of steps.
#2. One head cleaning, and it is good. Printed off at least 20 pages.
#3. Two days later. A small missing gap in Cyan. Forward,
#4. Cyan is cleared but the Magenta now has a gap.
#5. Look carefully and this is where you need to look PRECISELY the position of the gap verus #4. It is not the same nozzle. Measure it.
#6. Good again.
With Epsons, you need to have faith that your printhead is not a goner. You need to read the EXACT positions of gaps. Just looking at it casually is not good enough.
My other brother/sister/LGBT ( for equality) to this machine the R3000. Was worse in this low humidity.....in a totally different color. The R3000 is a lot more work relative to the P600 which is substantially more stable. OTOH, my R2880 performed perfectly needing only one head cleaning. Which is not bad for an Epson. The Pro3880 was perfect not one head cleaning was required. - The 3880 and 3800 have always been good performers because of their pressurized ink system. The R3000 needs a lot of babying compared to a P600...I saw this throughout the year.
The Canon Pro9500, Pro-10, Pro-1, and Pro-100 nozzle checks were all perfect requiring no head cleaning whatsoever. A reminder that if you print sporadically and if you've lost Epsons due to clogging from no use, the Canon alternative should be given serious thought. Night and day in terms of turning the machine on and being able to confidently finish a print.
View attachment 4937
#1, it the first nozzle check after two weeks. Throughout 2016, I never had to a bad nozzle check off the P600 even with 4-6 weeks of no use. This winter the 20-25% humidity is causing some issues. Notice the pattern and the type of distortion that dried ink is causing.....deflected and crooked steps. Non alignment of steps.
#2. One head cleaning, and it is good. Printed off at least 20 pages.
#3. Two days later. A small missing gap in Cyan. Forward,
#4. Cyan is cleared but the Magenta now has a gap.
#5. Look carefully and this is where you need to look PRECISELY the position of the gap verus #4. It is not the same nozzle. Measure it.
#6. Good again.
With Epsons, you need to have faith that your printhead is not a goner. You need to read the EXACT positions of gaps. Just looking at it casually is not good enough.
My other brother/sister/LGBT ( for equality) to this machine the R3000. Was worse in this low humidity.....in a totally different color. The R3000 is a lot more work relative to the P600 which is substantially more stable. OTOH, my R2880 performed perfectly needing only one head cleaning. Which is not bad for an Epson. The Pro3880 was perfect not one head cleaning was required. - The 3880 and 3800 have always been good performers because of their pressurized ink system. The R3000 needs a lot of babying compared to a P600...I saw this throughout the year.
The Canon Pro9500, Pro-10, Pro-1, and Pro-100 nozzle checks were all perfect requiring no head cleaning whatsoever. A reminder that if you print sporadically and if you've lost Epsons due to clogging from no use, the Canon alternative should be given serious thought. Night and day in terms of turning the machine on and being able to confidently finish a print.
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