sneezer2
Getting Fingers Dirty
- Joined
- Jul 31, 2009
- Messages
- 79
- Reaction score
- 10
- Points
- 36
- Location
- USA Pennsylvania
- Printer Model
- mp610
Well anyway, at least this one did!
In addition to the ip3000 that I've been working on I have an ip4200 that is about four years old.
It's been in storage most of that time with no special measures taken to preserve it. Prior to
putting it away, it just quit. All the warnings had been exhausted and I just was
not going to buy new carts for it. I had the ip3000 working OK so reverted to using it for
everything.
Now the ip3000 is having geriatric trouble and my work on it has not progressed much. I had ordered a
resetter, which just arrived in the mail today. When I tried it, it did nothing. Opened it up and found
one of the cells dead. Went to Walmart and got new LR44 cells. The resetter appeared to
successfully reset 3 of the 5 cartridges but the Yellow and Magenta would not respond. On the same
trip to Walmart, I had stopped at Office Depot and bought a set of their substitute cartridges.
Since the resetter did not work, I popped in the OD carts and - whadd'ya know - everything worked
as it should. Before leaving the house I had removed the print head and washed it out, then
put it in an "ultrasonic" bath for a couple of minutes. Plenty of ink was coming out of the jets so
I figured I had a good enough chance that I could "waste" the OD carts if necessary. Well, not a waste.
One low-level cleaning, one nozzle check and a few trial documents later I am going to install it for
full service.
This experience tells me a couple of things:
1) Be careful of the resetters. The one I got is blue although the picture on the website was red.
That doesn't matter but "Made in China" can mean many things. In this case it meant a dead cell.
Also, when the cells were replaced, it only worked partially. My suspicion here is that the makers
of this little thing probably haven't figured out the codes entirely, so it would work in some
circumstances but not in others. In other words, the chip on the cart may be in different states
and the resetter may not deal with all of them. Good idea but not yet fully functional.
2) These little printers are tougher than they look. I expected failure because I thought the ink would
be all caked and dried inside the head. It wasn't. A simple wash and buzz was all it needed after
four years in a box.
In addition to the ip3000 that I've been working on I have an ip4200 that is about four years old.
It's been in storage most of that time with no special measures taken to preserve it. Prior to
putting it away, it just quit. All the warnings had been exhausted and I just was
not going to buy new carts for it. I had the ip3000 working OK so reverted to using it for
everything.
Now the ip3000 is having geriatric trouble and my work on it has not progressed much. I had ordered a
resetter, which just arrived in the mail today. When I tried it, it did nothing. Opened it up and found
one of the cells dead. Went to Walmart and got new LR44 cells. The resetter appeared to
successfully reset 3 of the 5 cartridges but the Yellow and Magenta would not respond. On the same
trip to Walmart, I had stopped at Office Depot and bought a set of their substitute cartridges.
Since the resetter did not work, I popped in the OD carts and - whadd'ya know - everything worked
as it should. Before leaving the house I had removed the print head and washed it out, then
put it in an "ultrasonic" bath for a couple of minutes. Plenty of ink was coming out of the jets so
I figured I had a good enough chance that I could "waste" the OD carts if necessary. Well, not a waste.
One low-level cleaning, one nozzle check and a few trial documents later I am going to install it for
full service.
This experience tells me a couple of things:
1) Be careful of the resetters. The one I got is blue although the picture on the website was red.
That doesn't matter but "Made in China" can mean many things. In this case it meant a dead cell.
Also, when the cells were replaced, it only worked partially. My suspicion here is that the makers
of this little thing probably haven't figured out the codes entirely, so it would work in some
circumstances but not in others. In other words, the chip on the cart may be in different states
and the resetter may not deal with all of them. Good idea but not yet fully functional.
2) These little printers are tougher than they look. I expected failure because I thought the ink would
be all caked and dried inside the head. It wasn't. A simple wash and buzz was all it needed after
four years in a box.