- Thread starter
- #11
martincregg
Fan of Printing
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- Aug 30, 2016
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- Location
- Nashville, TN
- Printer Model
- Canon Pixma Pro-100
Get carts as clean as you can. No color is best, but doesn't seem to really matter. I use an air compressor to blow the clean water out of the carts. Use the new hole you put in the cart and it blows the water out of the sponge hole. Then I put carts over a floor heat register for a month to dry all the water out before i try putting in new ink. Been doing this for a couple years now. Works good.I have just received a set of used OEM CLI-42 un-flushed cartridges. I have flushed them with tap water using a syringe. A lot of ink came out, but the sponges still show some very slight colouration. Interestingly, the black one is the cleanest. How "clean" do the cartridges need to be? BTW - I didn't flush the yellow one yet - I will do this Windex that contains ammonia.
Yes, the same as I gave you in your drying time thread.View attachment 6848 View attachment 6849
First image is Cyan ink. Looks to have filled nicely. Second image is Photo Cyan. It seems to have stopped absorbing ink. Been like this for 20 minutes. Any advice?
View attachment 6848 View attachment 6849
First image is Cyan ink. Looks to have filled nicely. Second image is Photo Cyan. It seems to have stopped absorbing ink. Been like this for 20 minutes. Any advice?
A quick solution when waiting is not desired.
Forum consensus is to not let the cartridge go all the way to dry or else risk decreased or slow absorption time for ink in the sponge. If bone dry then some recommend Pharmacist's conditioning solution to help with speedy ink absorption.
How much flush liquid you want gone before refilling is your preference on what you think will be acceptable levels of ink dilution and therefore loss of color dynamics in the print. This is more important if you sell or compete with your printed images. Also, whatever fluid remains will eventually be insignificant with subsequent refills.
So, yes, how long is a piece of string. Your cartridges sound ready for refilling.
Using paper towels to wick away the moisture, I have flushed and refilled in 4-6 hours or so and been good with the results. If you want, you can speed up the equation by putting the cartridge inside an old sock and spinning the cartridge around like you are David against Goliath. Careful with potential splatter from the centrifugal forces on the fluid exiting the cartridges.