An even easier way to Defeat The EPSON One Way Ink Valve!

CakeHole

Print Addict
Joined
Jun 25, 2014
Messages
615
Reaction score
455
Points
163
Location
United Kingdom
Printer Model
Canon MP610
Thats what i like to hear a negative into a positive, and if that way of thinking does not work you can always train them to answer phones and email while you relax :D
 

websnail

Printer VIP
Platinum Printer Member
Joined
Oct 27, 2005
Messages
3,661
Reaction score
1,345
Points
337
Location
South Yorks, UK
Printer Model
Epson, Canon, HP... A "few"
Thats what i like to hear a negative into a positive, and if that way of thinking does not work you can always train them to answer phones and email while you relax :D
That's great in theory... I find the practical implementations tend to disagree with theory around 99.9% of the time ;)
 

CakeHole

Print Addict
Joined
Jun 25, 2014
Messages
615
Reaction score
455
Points
163
Location
United Kingdom
Printer Model
Canon MP610
LOL you mean no child labour shed in the websnail house, i am disappointed ;)
 

Harry Briels

Printer Guru
Joined
Aug 10, 2014
Messages
181
Reaction score
104
Points
142
Location
Mechelen Belgium
Printer Model
EPSON Pro 3880 & Canon MX925
Joe, thank you for you new methode to simplyfying the modification of the one-way valve.
* Can you please convert for me the "fifty thousands diameter" in to metric?
* I also would like to know what the length is of the needle from the bend down to the blunt point.

I have two complete sets of Epson carts. One I did already modify and fill.
But later I had a problem of several carts with leaking valves.
I took these apart again and noticed that some very small matter which I could not identify, got stuck in the valve keeping it from closing.
I cleaned the valves and put them together again and the leaking was stopped.
It can be that some very small plastic parts came lose because of the action to push open the return valve and then gradually moved with the ink into the valve and then got stuck?
Harry
 

CakeHole

Print Addict
Joined
Jun 25, 2014
Messages
615
Reaction score
455
Points
163
Location
United Kingdom
Printer Model
Canon MP610
fifty thousandths of an inch is less than a half a millimetre, its basically needle size gauge wise.
length obviously the longer the better and id guess at least the length or height (depending how you equate things) of the cart.

The rest ill leave to joes expert hands.
 

PeterBJ

Printer VIP
Platinum Printer Member
Joined
Nov 27, 2010
Messages
5,060
Reaction score
4,905
Points
373
Location
Copenhagen Denmark
Printer Model
Canon MP990
No, one inch is 25.4 mm. Then fifty thousandths of an inch is 0.050 x 25.4 mm = 1.27 mm.

Here is an on-line converter for thousandths of an inch ("Thou") to millimetres.
 

CakeHole

Print Addict
Joined
Jun 25, 2014
Messages
615
Reaction score
455
Points
163
Location
United Kingdom
Printer Model
Canon MP610
You wouldn't want to know :gig, dunno how i forgot to move it in my calculations, mind you it was near 1am. The misses said good job this isn't some other forum with a different bunch of blokes measuring something else, that would had been vastly over estimating figures :eek:
 

jtoolman

Printer Master
Platinum Printer Member
Joined
May 7, 2011
Messages
1,949
Reaction score
940
Points
277
Location
United States
Printer Model
All of them! LOL
The needle of whatever you choose to use has to be about 050" or about 0.5mm diameter and at least a minimum of 1 inch in length. But this is a blind process it has to be blunt tipped to prevent accidental puncturing the ink bag.

Joe
 
Top