J.Emmett Turner
Getting Fingers Dirty
- Joined
- Nov 29, 2017
- Messages
- 47
- Reaction score
- 33
- Points
- 46
- Printer Model
- Pro 3880; CR-10; C250DN; E809a
TL;DR? Questions are in BOLD. Thanks!
Hi, guys. Despite being a techie I've been a bit of a printer-phobe most of my life due to some bad experiences in the '90s. I've always been a color laser guy. Anyway, I've got some projects coming up that are going to require a large-format professional photo printer. I've been researching and was considering the Canon Pro-100 since I saw it for $50 after rebate last year (several times) and $60 after rebate this year (a few times)... with $40 worth of paper every time! I still wasn't ready to pull the trigger without doing my due diligence. In my research, one other printer was frequently mentioned in the same breath as the Pro-100: The Epson Stylus Pro 3880. You can imagine my surprise when I saw one at Goodwill with four boxes of unopened ink. Only two boxes are even expired and one is only expired by a year. The installed carts ranged from 30-97% full except for Yellow (7%). The right peg on one of the output trays was broken so that the output tray cover would fall off when opened but that looks like an easy fix for my 3D printer (Creality CR-10; expect to see me in the 3D printing forum next!).
Of course, I expected the heads to be hopelessly clogged but a quick nozzle check showed all nozzles firing... or so I thought. It turns out that Photo Black was not printing at all. It is supposed to be the first color printed in the nozzle check so it just looked like a margin on the left. Not realizing this, I decided that things were looking good enough to buy. That's when I noticed that it didn't even have a price yet. The employee marked it $9.99, which was a GREAT deal, even just for the inks. I had moved it to a table for testing and had to walk away in order to grab a power cord. Of course, a vulture moved in the moment I stepped away and tried to nab it! I apologized and told him that they had only just priced it for me, which prompted me to step away for the power cord and a cart. Thankfully, he was a good sport and only said that it was a great deal. Whew! Seems I wasn't the only one who recognized this printer.
I was pleasantly surprised that it can print larger images than the Canon Pro-100 since I worried that the Pro-100 may not print large enough for all of my intended projects. "Bonus!" I was also pleasantly surprised that it had a flat path for thicker media, which was another thing I intended to print on and was worried that the Pro-100 couldn't handle. "Double bonus!" Of course, my enthusiasm was significantly reduced when I realized that I was not getting any Photo Black and the straight/flat-feed tray would not retract after deploying it.
The latching mechanism eventually freed after working it almost a hundred times so the flat/straight-feed tray works properly now. Regarding the missing black, I switched to Matte Black and I'm not getting that either. Per Jose Rodriguez's video ( https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M6Yw1f7o0YI ), I cleaned the purge pad and wiper blade then told it to switch back to Photo Black only to get the message that the Maintenance cartridge is now full. Drat! Now I'm going to have to spend money to find out if the cleaning even worked. I can't even look at the menu or open the cartridge door now. I guess I need to order Yellow along with that because it dropped to 3% after the head cleaning. It was already too low to reset and the others were still comfortably over the 20% threshold so I already expected to have to buy another Yellow.
Here's the thing though: I had every intention of getting a chip resetter and modifying my carts to be refillable for economical prints. I also intended to use a new Maint cart for getting it to forget my DIY refurbished and reset Maint cart. If I buy just the new Maint cart and use it during my testing then I can't resell it as open-box but unused. If I go ahead and get the chip resetter then I can potentially sell both if this doesn't work out. as for the Yellow cart, I'm wondering if I should order a cheap refillable cart instead.
I've now seen a lot of talk about failure of the switching valve but people seem to still be able to print one color or the other. I can't. Does that mean my problem is likely something else? Is there a fix for the issue? I actually stumbled on this forum through a thread that claims to have fixed the issue in another Epson printer that suffers from the same issue ( https://www.printerknowledge.com/threads/finally-fixed-the-r3880.10332/ ). Unfortunately, he links to his personal website and the link no longer links to the content of the post. It does now...
There are 9 tubes going into the printhead and the top-most tube appears to be empty (perhaps the top two). I thought the valve is closer to the ink source based on how it was described to me and so it would only have 8 ink tubes. Is that incorrect or is one is supposed to be for pressurization? Is it possible that the carts are empty even though the printer is reporting 55-64%? Jose mentions that it's possible to have 50% "set up" carts read as full in this video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fu0XM-PzflA
These carts are unmodified OEM and the print count is ~1,000 so I highly doubt these are setup carts with incorrectly reported ink levels. One does feel significantly heavier than the other despite being within 8% of each other's reported capacities.
The most important question: What would you do next? Also, are my black nozzles likely to be clogged beyond repair? I'm prepared to spend a bit of money to get this thing going but if my chances aren't great it may make sense just to cut my losses. At this point, actually, there won't be any losses since I still have unused Photo Black, Matte Black, and two Light Light Black carts to sell.
Edit:
Hi, guys. Despite being a techie I've been a bit of a printer-phobe most of my life due to some bad experiences in the '90s. I've always been a color laser guy. Anyway, I've got some projects coming up that are going to require a large-format professional photo printer. I've been researching and was considering the Canon Pro-100 since I saw it for $50 after rebate last year (several times) and $60 after rebate this year (a few times)... with $40 worth of paper every time! I still wasn't ready to pull the trigger without doing my due diligence. In my research, one other printer was frequently mentioned in the same breath as the Pro-100: The Epson Stylus Pro 3880. You can imagine my surprise when I saw one at Goodwill with four boxes of unopened ink. Only two boxes are even expired and one is only expired by a year. The installed carts ranged from 30-97% full except for Yellow (7%). The right peg on one of the output trays was broken so that the output tray cover would fall off when opened but that looks like an easy fix for my 3D printer (Creality CR-10; expect to see me in the 3D printing forum next!).
Of course, I expected the heads to be hopelessly clogged but a quick nozzle check showed all nozzles firing... or so I thought. It turns out that Photo Black was not printing at all. It is supposed to be the first color printed in the nozzle check so it just looked like a margin on the left. Not realizing this, I decided that things were looking good enough to buy. That's when I noticed that it didn't even have a price yet. The employee marked it $9.99, which was a GREAT deal, even just for the inks. I had moved it to a table for testing and had to walk away in order to grab a power cord. Of course, a vulture moved in the moment I stepped away and tried to nab it! I apologized and told him that they had only just priced it for me, which prompted me to step away for the power cord and a cart. Thankfully, he was a good sport and only said that it was a great deal. Whew! Seems I wasn't the only one who recognized this printer.
I was pleasantly surprised that it can print larger images than the Canon Pro-100 since I worried that the Pro-100 may not print large enough for all of my intended projects. "Bonus!" I was also pleasantly surprised that it had a flat path for thicker media, which was another thing I intended to print on and was worried that the Pro-100 couldn't handle. "Double bonus!" Of course, my enthusiasm was significantly reduced when I realized that I was not getting any Photo Black and the straight/flat-feed tray would not retract after deploying it.
The latching mechanism eventually freed after working it almost a hundred times so the flat/straight-feed tray works properly now. Regarding the missing black, I switched to Matte Black and I'm not getting that either. Per Jose Rodriguez's video ( https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M6Yw1f7o0YI ), I cleaned the purge pad and wiper blade then told it to switch back to Photo Black only to get the message that the Maintenance cartridge is now full. Drat! Now I'm going to have to spend money to find out if the cleaning even worked. I can't even look at the menu or open the cartridge door now. I guess I need to order Yellow along with that because it dropped to 3% after the head cleaning. It was already too low to reset and the others were still comfortably over the 20% threshold so I already expected to have to buy another Yellow.
Here's the thing though: I had every intention of getting a chip resetter and modifying my carts to be refillable for economical prints. I also intended to use a new Maint cart for getting it to forget my DIY refurbished and reset Maint cart. If I buy just the new Maint cart and use it during my testing then I can't resell it as open-box but unused. If I go ahead and get the chip resetter then I can potentially sell both if this doesn't work out. as for the Yellow cart, I'm wondering if I should order a cheap refillable cart instead.
I've now seen a lot of talk about failure of the switching valve but people seem to still be able to print one color or the other. I can't. Does that mean my problem is likely something else? Is there a fix for the issue? I actually stumbled on this forum through a thread that claims to have fixed the issue in another Epson printer that suffers from the same issue ( https://www.printerknowledge.com/threads/finally-fixed-the-r3880.10332/ ). Unfortunately, he links to his personal website and the link no longer links to the content of the post. It does now...
There are 9 tubes going into the printhead and the top-most tube appears to be empty (perhaps the top two). I thought the valve is closer to the ink source based on how it was described to me and so it would only have 8 ink tubes. Is that incorrect or is one is supposed to be for pressurization? Is it possible that the carts are empty even though the printer is reporting 55-64%? Jose mentions that it's possible to have 50% "set up" carts read as full in this video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fu0XM-PzflA
These carts are unmodified OEM and the print count is ~1,000 so I highly doubt these are setup carts with incorrectly reported ink levels. One does feel significantly heavier than the other despite being within 8% of each other's reported capacities.
The most important question: What would you do next? Also, are my black nozzles likely to be clogged beyond repair? I'm prepared to spend a bit of money to get this thing going but if my chances aren't great it may make sense just to cut my losses. At this point, actually, there won't be any losses since I still have unused Photo Black, Matte Black, and two Light Light Black carts to sell.
Edit: