- Joined
- Oct 27, 2005
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- Location
- South Yorks, UK
- Printer Model
- Epson, Canon, HP... A "few"
The past couple of weeks I've been passing on my printhead cleaning experience to one of the team who turned out to have untapped talents in electronics so, with some 40+ printers about the workshop I figured it was time to let him loose.
What I hadn't counted on was the experience was going to be surprising, educational and seriously beneficial to me in ways I hadn't counted on, so I figured I'd pass some of the nuggets on.
The best bits included firing up an RX685 that had sat without cartridges in its box for near enough 3 years. No printing done, no reason to think it would be anything other than completely clogged, mashed and, in need of some serious head cleaning. We nearly went straight to passive head cleaning but Darren figured what the hey and went straight in with a set of refillables with IS Claria compatible ink in. I think his expression was something like "Well pluck me!" and he wasn't kidding. When he showed me the nozzle check it only had about 20 missing nozzles in the whole lot and all bar one of those was cleared after a single head clean and a 4 colour test sheet print. So lesson number 1 was never to assume, it may surprise you.
Next up was an R1900 where a LOT of time went into it, but again there was a whole year of non use, although it did have cartridges in. Two things we noted. First up, the cartridges had originally had a cleaning solution in, then been replaced with pigment inks. It seems this may have resulted in the ink separating out (although not immediately) and this in turn left the cartridges heavily clogged with pigment at the internal inlet segment.
Lesson 2, don't use cleaning cartridges as ink cartridges without flushing them out first, if at all.
With this resolved we used a mix of: installing cleaning cartridges (fresh ones) and passive head cleaning (the cleaning solution soaked pad under the head) to work its magic for over 2 weeks. In the intervening period there were single head cleans + nozzle checks then replacement of the passive pads. After the 2 weeks were up, we filled another set of refillable carts with IS inks and after a little basic colour printing, single head cleans and nozzle checks, everything came back beautifully.
Those were a couple of the wins... There were a couple of failures as well but still useful in their way.
An R2400 we had was expected to be akin to the R1900 but it seems that the waste pads had become clogged, which in turn had resulted in ink splashing back into the resting pad and presumably this is how some of it got into the ribbon cabling that connects to the printhead. Throw in some well meaning active head cleaning attempts that may well have splashed into the same cabling and we ended up with a mess. The exposed contacts on the cable along with the receiver on the heads circuit board were both found to be heavily corroded and at present we're not sure it'll come back without replacement parts. A timely reminder that we were dealing with chemicals in close proximity to electronics. Along the way we're rewriting missing guides on accessing and removing the printhead as it seems resources that once existed are no longer available with a lot of dead links. In that sense the lesson is never to rely on the Internet to always have old resources. Stuff is lost, deleted, or similar all the time.
Last one I'm going to write-up as a completely separate thread, as it's a real piece of work that really needs exploring further but just for brevity... So far we've hit this issue with PX710W, PX720WD and PX730WD models. Two customers with the same issue and we recreated it on Thursday. It seems something will bork the chip recognition in these models and stop the cartridges being recognised. Not found a solution yet, but we'll see what breaks loose once I've been able to share all we've worked out to date (Thread to follow once the write up has been completed).
All in all, been quite an interesting one... Oh and just one last nugget... If you hadn't realised already and have old Canon printer models. Canon have been retiring production of printheads for quite a few printers with the iP4200, iP4300, iP4500, MP800, MP830, MP500, and more all affected. If you need new ones then look out for spares ASAP. Time for a serious look at printhead resurrection for Canon printers maybe?
I'll update as we get into the other printers we still have sitting around. Doubtless there will be more to learn along the way..
What I hadn't counted on was the experience was going to be surprising, educational and seriously beneficial to me in ways I hadn't counted on, so I figured I'd pass some of the nuggets on.
The best bits included firing up an RX685 that had sat without cartridges in its box for near enough 3 years. No printing done, no reason to think it would be anything other than completely clogged, mashed and, in need of some serious head cleaning. We nearly went straight to passive head cleaning but Darren figured what the hey and went straight in with a set of refillables with IS Claria compatible ink in. I think his expression was something like "Well pluck me!" and he wasn't kidding. When he showed me the nozzle check it only had about 20 missing nozzles in the whole lot and all bar one of those was cleared after a single head clean and a 4 colour test sheet print. So lesson number 1 was never to assume, it may surprise you.
Next up was an R1900 where a LOT of time went into it, but again there was a whole year of non use, although it did have cartridges in. Two things we noted. First up, the cartridges had originally had a cleaning solution in, then been replaced with pigment inks. It seems this may have resulted in the ink separating out (although not immediately) and this in turn left the cartridges heavily clogged with pigment at the internal inlet segment.
Lesson 2, don't use cleaning cartridges as ink cartridges without flushing them out first, if at all.
With this resolved we used a mix of: installing cleaning cartridges (fresh ones) and passive head cleaning (the cleaning solution soaked pad under the head) to work its magic for over 2 weeks. In the intervening period there were single head cleans + nozzle checks then replacement of the passive pads. After the 2 weeks were up, we filled another set of refillable carts with IS inks and after a little basic colour printing, single head cleans and nozzle checks, everything came back beautifully.
Those were a couple of the wins... There were a couple of failures as well but still useful in their way.
An R2400 we had was expected to be akin to the R1900 but it seems that the waste pads had become clogged, which in turn had resulted in ink splashing back into the resting pad and presumably this is how some of it got into the ribbon cabling that connects to the printhead. Throw in some well meaning active head cleaning attempts that may well have splashed into the same cabling and we ended up with a mess. The exposed contacts on the cable along with the receiver on the heads circuit board were both found to be heavily corroded and at present we're not sure it'll come back without replacement parts. A timely reminder that we were dealing with chemicals in close proximity to electronics. Along the way we're rewriting missing guides on accessing and removing the printhead as it seems resources that once existed are no longer available with a lot of dead links. In that sense the lesson is never to rely on the Internet to always have old resources. Stuff is lost, deleted, or similar all the time.
Last one I'm going to write-up as a completely separate thread, as it's a real piece of work that really needs exploring further but just for brevity... So far we've hit this issue with PX710W, PX720WD and PX730WD models. Two customers with the same issue and we recreated it on Thursday. It seems something will bork the chip recognition in these models and stop the cartridges being recognised. Not found a solution yet, but we'll see what breaks loose once I've been able to share all we've worked out to date (Thread to follow once the write up has been completed).
All in all, been quite an interesting one... Oh and just one last nugget... If you hadn't realised already and have old Canon printer models. Canon have been retiring production of printheads for quite a few printers with the iP4200, iP4300, iP4500, MP800, MP830, MP500, and more all affected. If you need new ones then look out for spares ASAP. Time for a serious look at printhead resurrection for Canon printers maybe?
I'll update as we get into the other printers we still have sitting around. Doubtless there will be more to learn along the way..