canonfodder
Printer Guru
Grandad35 is correct about the air. Think about it. There sits the cart with a little ink in its tank side, and lots of air above it. If you push some ink in there through a sealed in needle, the ink has to go somewhere, but the air is captive and can't get out of the way, so the ink just goes into the sponge side and floods it, and probably the print head too. Maybe you could even get some ink out the sponge side air vent. Seal that vent, and now the ink HAS to go down to the print head. A successful mess for sure.Grandad35 said:You can buy the silicone rubber sheet that is used on insulin vial caps to allow a sharp needle to puncture it and then be pulled out without any leakage. However, without a way to pull out the air from the ink chamber at exactly the same rate as the ink is injected, the ink that you inject will just be pushed directly into the sponge. Your goose will develop a bad case of diarrhea.
In order to refill a cart while still in the printer, you need a little invention. You add that special seal like an insulin vial has, and you pierce it with the newly invented COAXIAL NEEDLE and DUAL SYRINGE. The coaxial needle provides a path for ink to go in and a path for air to come out. You could stop there, and just let the air come out, but you still have the risk of some dripping while you fill. To really do it correctly, you must PULL air out at the same rate as you PUSH ink in.
The new dual syringe has ink in one barrel and a suction function for air in the other barrel. Of course as the ink side plunger goes down toward the needle, injecting ink, the air plunger is in effect moving up the other barrel, sucking in air in equal volume.
How about that Grandad? We could do that, couldn't we?
Check out the crude sketch below.