3dogs
Printer Master
- Joined
- May 13, 2012
- Messages
- 1,013
- Reaction score
- 996
- Points
- 263
- Location
- Fern Hill, Australia
- Printer Model
- Epson 3880. Canon Pro 9000,
Please don't get me wrong when I say that I am actually pleased to hear that it seems to be associated with Magenta. Although I seriously do not believe that it is attributed to the actual inks.
Everyone that is experiencing an incurable magenta head clog ( including three heads for me ) has to realize that we are all using Magentas from different source. SO either there is a really evil anti magenta demon covertly attacking out PRO 9000 MKII heads, or...... there is something going drastically wrong with out PRO 9000 MKII! Mikling suggested various theories as to what might be occurring.
But I am seriously leaning toward the printer acting up. I have tossed mine out and still have a new one but no head as I used that extra print head on my older machine which lasted about 1 month, a third head also died within a few weeks.
I might sell the headless new one for very cheap.
Joe
I am thinking that the magentas are all loaded with pigment, mike talks about cooking the ink/pigmennt and causing it to bake hard, then resisting rehydration.
Is it plausible for Canon to have heat resistant properties that are not shared by 3rd party inks yet?
It would be a minor tweek for an OEM to just lift the temp at the head by a fraction, causing a) significant erosion at the nozzle, baking in the port feeding the nozzle and b) premature wear.
Somewhere I read a thesis done on the canon print head and one of the observations was that once started degrneration and build up of pigment particles followed rapidly.........??????