I'm not saying I would recommend this but thought I'd share. I vaguelly think I may have read it here.
I have an ip4500 and ip4600 (plus two brand new ip4500's in boxes waiting their turn and an old ip2000 gathering dust). I do a lot of printing (well a run of 500 full colour A4 photo sheets every month)
In the past I have had problems, mostly cyan, not printing properly, changed ink tank, ran cleaning cycles, tried all sorts of things including soaking in printhead cleaner but used to do that and wipe the printhead over which I later learnt was a nono so when my ip5200 did this I dumped it (which is when the ip4600 was reluctantly bought)
Anyway last night, part way thru this print job first the ip4500 magenta started to cause problems then later (when I had got fed up trying to sort the ip4500 so left it off and carried on with just the ip4600) the 4600 had problems with cyan. Cleaning cycles, changed cartridge, more cleaning but no, it wouldn't have it.
Having used these two for a good 12 months I was despondent about the thought of binning them both and using both my reserves in one move, but didn't see I had a choice. But thought I'd try one last desparate throw of the dice. I took the ink carts out of the ip4600 and took the printhead and rinsed it under the cold tap for some minutes!! I then carefully placed it on some kitchen paper towel on top of another towel on the radiator.
This afternoon (some 18 hours later) it all seemed dry so put it back in the printer and then took the plug out of the cyan cart and let the ink drip thru into the bottle for a while just in case there were air bubbles or anything in the sponge. Refilled and put stopper back in and put the ink carts back.
I ran a test page and all was perfect, and this evening have completed the print job without incident on the ip4600!!! I am repeating this with the ip4500 head tonight (It is sitting on the radiator now!)
I am sure I read this suggestion here last year? Or did I make it up myself?!
I think the not rubbing paper towel over the head probably made a difference (well you live and you learn!!) and also making sure it dried properly (I used to use hairdryer on them when I soaked them in printhead cleaner..... and they weren't usually properly dry when I retried them! Well it may have been a bit of luck or maybe you will all tell me what I did was what you
all do?!?!?
I've been away from here for a while but see you can get chip resetters now for the ip4600 carts? I'm assuming that ip4600 is therefore discontinued and they've bought out yet more different cartridges for another new printer range?! Just need to find some cheap ip4600's then. The ip4500's I got from a shop in South Wales (UK) last year for a bargain 49 ($75) plus a free pack of Canon very high quality A4 photo paper free with each!
I have an ip4500 and ip4600 (plus two brand new ip4500's in boxes waiting their turn and an old ip2000 gathering dust). I do a lot of printing (well a run of 500 full colour A4 photo sheets every month)
In the past I have had problems, mostly cyan, not printing properly, changed ink tank, ran cleaning cycles, tried all sorts of things including soaking in printhead cleaner but used to do that and wipe the printhead over which I later learnt was a nono so when my ip5200 did this I dumped it (which is when the ip4600 was reluctantly bought)
Anyway last night, part way thru this print job first the ip4500 magenta started to cause problems then later (when I had got fed up trying to sort the ip4500 so left it off and carried on with just the ip4600) the 4600 had problems with cyan. Cleaning cycles, changed cartridge, more cleaning but no, it wouldn't have it.
Having used these two for a good 12 months I was despondent about the thought of binning them both and using both my reserves in one move, but didn't see I had a choice. But thought I'd try one last desparate throw of the dice. I took the ink carts out of the ip4600 and took the printhead and rinsed it under the cold tap for some minutes!! I then carefully placed it on some kitchen paper towel on top of another towel on the radiator.
This afternoon (some 18 hours later) it all seemed dry so put it back in the printer and then took the plug out of the cyan cart and let the ink drip thru into the bottle for a while just in case there were air bubbles or anything in the sponge. Refilled and put stopper back in and put the ink carts back.
I ran a test page and all was perfect, and this evening have completed the print job without incident on the ip4600!!! I am repeating this with the ip4500 head tonight (It is sitting on the radiator now!)
I am sure I read this suggestion here last year? Or did I make it up myself?!
I think the not rubbing paper towel over the head probably made a difference (well you live and you learn!!) and also making sure it dried properly (I used to use hairdryer on them when I soaked them in printhead cleaner..... and they weren't usually properly dry when I retried them! Well it may have been a bit of luck or maybe you will all tell me what I did was what you
all do?!?!?
I've been away from here for a while but see you can get chip resetters now for the ip4600 carts? I'm assuming that ip4600 is therefore discontinued and they've bought out yet more different cartridges for another new printer range?! Just need to find some cheap ip4600's then. The ip4500's I got from a shop in South Wales (UK) last year for a bargain 49 ($75) plus a free pack of Canon very high quality A4 photo paper free with each!