ThrillaMozilla
Printer Master
- Joined
- Jan 18, 2011
- Messages
- 1,194
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So you've looked at the ink. That's quite a trick to design a dye that absorbs all colors, and I have to wonder how they did it. I'm guessing that all black ink, including this one, uses a mixture of dyes. I suppose you could experiment with mixing dyes yourself.
I also suspect it's difficult for any black dye to physically manage the trick of not producing a color shift regardless of the drop size. You have confirmed my suspicion. I think that's why they all use at least some colored dye to produce different colors on the gray scale. Some printers also have both a black and a gray, which probably helps a lot with color balance.
I'm still sceptical that Canon attempts this without using colored dye (or maybe they get away with just a black and a gray?). You could be right, but I would still have a look at a print with a magnifying glass, regardless of what the documentation says about a special mode.
I also suspect it's difficult for any black dye to physically manage the trick of not producing a color shift regardless of the drop size. You have confirmed my suspicion. I think that's why they all use at least some colored dye to produce different colors on the gray scale. Some printers also have both a black and a gray, which probably helps a lot with color balance.
I'm still sceptical that Canon attempts this without using colored dye (or maybe they get away with just a black and a gray?). You could be right, but I would still have a look at a print with a magnifying glass, regardless of what the documentation says about a special mode.