- Joined
- Jan 18, 2010
- Messages
- 15,792
- Reaction score
- 8,824
- Points
- 453
- Location
- Residing in Wicklow Ireland
- Printer Model
- Canon/3D, CR-10, CR-10S, KP-3
joseph1949
I have found your refill methods very interesting and well taught out however, I also found them far too long winded
for most to take on board and therefore your good messages tend to get lost in all of your details.
Now this waiting period you speak of after you have filled a cartridge is just far too long also,
if everybody was to start using this method I reckon most would say to hell with refilling
and just switch over to using a CISS system or buy an Epson.
The science is inside the cartridge itself and not in the refilling, if one refills a cartridge by which ever method they choose
and it doesnt leak straight afterwards then its good to use in my eyes.
The only way a cartridge can truly leak is if the refill hole on the top of the reservoir is not air tight and waiting
will not resolve this problem, an hour, a day, a month, nothing will, except resealing.
By just removing the orange clip from the outlet hole after refilling is the best way to judge
whether the cartridge is safe to use or not, time is not a useful factor in this equasion.
I myself have had instances where my hot wax seal was rushed (not done correctly) and when I went to use the cartridge,
it dripped continuously which was a clear indicator to me that the seal was defective and needed redoing,
if I had waited for a longer Time.. Exactly the same outcome.
The point I am trying to make here is that if the cartridge is filled correctly using your method or anybody elses method for that matter
then it wont leak and all the precaution you talk about become redundant and are a total unnecessary waste of good printing time..
I have found your refill methods very interesting and well taught out however, I also found them far too long winded
for most to take on board and therefore your good messages tend to get lost in all of your details.
Now this waiting period you speak of after you have filled a cartridge is just far too long also,
if everybody was to start using this method I reckon most would say to hell with refilling
and just switch over to using a CISS system or buy an Epson.
The science is inside the cartridge itself and not in the refilling, if one refills a cartridge by which ever method they choose
and it doesnt leak straight afterwards then its good to use in my eyes.
The only way a cartridge can truly leak is if the refill hole on the top of the reservoir is not air tight and waiting
will not resolve this problem, an hour, a day, a month, nothing will, except resealing.
By just removing the orange clip from the outlet hole after refilling is the best way to judge
whether the cartridge is safe to use or not, time is not a useful factor in this equasion.
I myself have had instances where my hot wax seal was rushed (not done correctly) and when I went to use the cartridge,
it dripped continuously which was a clear indicator to me that the seal was defective and needed redoing,
if I had waited for a longer Time.. Exactly the same outcome.
The point I am trying to make here is that if the cartridge is filled correctly using your method or anybody elses method for that matter
then it wont leak and all the precaution you talk about become redundant and are a total unnecessary waste of good printing time..