No, the P600 is safe and has been stable. I am even testing a manual resetter for the P600 this current period ( resets ARCs as well) to see its effectiveness and where it can really be of use. So you can choose to run ARC chips or use ARC in combination with a resetter. The user is in TOTAL control of the chip situation in this model.Hi,
I know that the question was about replacement inks for the P600. I looked on Precision Colors site for inks to the P800 and they no longer deliver kits for this printer. They say:
"The P800 chips are no longer compatible with the later shipping P800 printers in North America and possibly worldwide. The intial set of chips were tested to be compatible with very early P800 machines in Asia. After shipping, they intially worked and stories surfaced about being unable to reset but my testing actually goes beyond that. Even replacement chips are not being accepted. The P800 is now equipped with a strong memory buffer system that appears to remember both the chip type and ink level and will not reaccept a similar chip even with a higher ink level. The reset process does not even come to play in this scenario. The chip designers are working to trying to get around the problem. When a solution appears, any previous purchaser should contact me for replacement chips which will be provided free of charge."
I don't know if it's the same for the P600
There is some sense of why Epson has targetted the 800 and not the 600. One sense of reasoning is that they want the P600 to be more friendly to the consumer and then they will upsize to a "nice" machine for 17" media. A sweet spot.