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- Dec 27, 2014
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- L805, WF2010, ET8550
I was reading ConeColor's posting about their new ultra black matte ink
https://shop.inkjetmall.com/blog/ink-on-paper-blog-2/post/inkjetmall-newsletter-11-23-2020-1508
and wondered how far away other inks are from the reported D=1.86, and this triggered me to do some testing.
I'm not a regular user of matte inks on FineArt matte papers, but I found a few sheets left from sample packs I tested some time ago - a Hahnemühle Fine Art Photo Rag Satin 310g and a farbenwerk Fine Art Bright Velvet 275g , and I'm using this advertised ConeColor Ultra black matte ink, the Epson 105 matte ink of the ET-7750 printer, the Epson 113 matte black of workforce/office type Ecotank printers with 4 pigment inks, the matte black of the P600, and the matte black of Canon PFI 105MBK. I printed all test sheets with a small WF2010W printer with refill cartridges, scanned the sheets with the i1io robot arm to run profiles and let it scan each spot 3x to get an average reading for a more reliable readout.
These are the results I'm getting from this test:
__________________________________Epson 105_______________________Conecolor_________________Epson P600MBK
Bright Velvet 275_____Lab=___13,34 0.54 1.09---D1.79___ 13.83 0.63 1.74---D1.77_____14.88 0.66 1.79---D1.72
Hahnemühle PhotoRag_______12.92 0.13 0.47---D1.81___ 13.49 0.01 -0.67--D1.79____ 21.14 0.45 -0.37---D1.48
These numbers are examplary for a few more numbers I'm not showing, the Epson 105 ink performs even slightly better than the ConeColor black, and I'm getting already here a D of 1.81, pretty close to Conecolor claims on an Epson paper of 1.86. This is quite possible since the black level depends very much on the paper in combination with the ink.
The values for the Epson 113 ink and the Canon PFI105MBK both are pretty close together and are in between the results for the Conecolor and the Epson P600MBK inks.
It is interesting to see that the Epson P600MBK is not state of the art anymore in terms of deep blacks, the Epson 105 does better in all cases, as well on some more papers. And it is remarkable that the Epson 105 ink is by far the cheapest one - it is bottled ink for an Ecotank printer and runs at about 15 Euros for the 140ml bottle, a bargain compared to the Conecolor pricing. The Epson 113 is priced similarly. Be aware that this is just a short snapshot, and I'm not measuring any other characteristics and potential benefits of a carbon based ink.
I'm posting above as well the 'a,b' color values , they are all pretty close to the neutral point of a,b=0,0 , you could use a few drops of cyan to tint the black closer to the neutral point but that's not subject of my measurements. And be aware that a different printer - with a different driver - may create more or less ink saturation overall, but I would expect that the relation between the inks would remain.
https://shop.inkjetmall.com/blog/ink-on-paper-blog-2/post/inkjetmall-newsletter-11-23-2020-1508
and wondered how far away other inks are from the reported D=1.86, and this triggered me to do some testing.
I'm not a regular user of matte inks on FineArt matte papers, but I found a few sheets left from sample packs I tested some time ago - a Hahnemühle Fine Art Photo Rag Satin 310g and a farbenwerk Fine Art Bright Velvet 275g , and I'm using this advertised ConeColor Ultra black matte ink, the Epson 105 matte ink of the ET-7750 printer, the Epson 113 matte black of workforce/office type Ecotank printers with 4 pigment inks, the matte black of the P600, and the matte black of Canon PFI 105MBK. I printed all test sheets with a small WF2010W printer with refill cartridges, scanned the sheets with the i1io robot arm to run profiles and let it scan each spot 3x to get an average reading for a more reliable readout.
These are the results I'm getting from this test:
__________________________________Epson 105_______________________Conecolor_________________Epson P600MBK
Bright Velvet 275_____Lab=___13,34 0.54 1.09---D1.79___ 13.83 0.63 1.74---D1.77_____14.88 0.66 1.79---D1.72
Hahnemühle PhotoRag_______12.92 0.13 0.47---D1.81___ 13.49 0.01 -0.67--D1.79____ 21.14 0.45 -0.37---D1.48
These numbers are examplary for a few more numbers I'm not showing, the Epson 105 ink performs even slightly better than the ConeColor black, and I'm getting already here a D of 1.81, pretty close to Conecolor claims on an Epson paper of 1.86. This is quite possible since the black level depends very much on the paper in combination with the ink.
The values for the Epson 113 ink and the Canon PFI105MBK both are pretty close together and are in between the results for the Conecolor and the Epson P600MBK inks.
It is interesting to see that the Epson P600MBK is not state of the art anymore in terms of deep blacks, the Epson 105 does better in all cases, as well on some more papers. And it is remarkable that the Epson 105 ink is by far the cheapest one - it is bottled ink for an Ecotank printer and runs at about 15 Euros for the 140ml bottle, a bargain compared to the Conecolor pricing. The Epson 113 is priced similarly. Be aware that this is just a short snapshot, and I'm not measuring any other characteristics and potential benefits of a carbon based ink.
I'm posting above as well the 'a,b' color values , they are all pretty close to the neutral point of a,b=0,0 , you could use a few drops of cyan to tint the black closer to the neutral point but that's not subject of my measurements. And be aware that a different printer - with a different driver - may create more or less ink saturation overall, but I would expect that the relation between the inks would remain.
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