Cli42 autoreset chips

The Hat

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Has anyone tried these?
No, but then again why would anyone want to, these chips are about the same price as a perfectly good Redsetter, and using that there is no need to be lifting and sticking down replacement chips, it’s a no brainer, just get a Redsetter...;)
P.S. Auto chips are not infinite, they may have a limited reset count.. :eek:
 

kdsdata

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I agree with @The Hat, I would not want to get into any prying of plastics on the cart. The least touching, the better. Anyway, my humble opinion.
 

SkedAddled

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This:
No, but then again why would anyone want to, these chips are about the same price as a perfectly good Redsetter, and using that there is no need to be lifting and sticking down replacement chips
A few dollars more obtains the Redsetter, and you can stay with all-original Canon, which has been repeatedly proven reliable by many.
 

Artur5

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Canon OEM chips are reliable but far from indestructible. A number of them failed on me after very few resets. To be fair, there’s a chance that the redsetter itself wasn’t working properly and damaged the chips. In fact, my first redsetter unit failed after one or two years and I had to buy another one.

Anyway, those OEM chips aren’t meant to be resetted at all, so we can’t complain to Canon ..:D
 

avolanche

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Canon OEM chips are reliable but far from indestructible. A number of them failed on me after very few resets. To be fair, there’s a chance that the redsetter itself wasn’t working properly and damaged the chips. In fact, my first redsetter unit failed after one or two years and I had to buy another one.

Anyway, those OEM chips aren’t meant to be resetted at all, so we can’t complain to Canon ..:D
I have never had a chip failure with a redsetter and Canon OEM cartridges. This is with over about 15 years of refilling with various printers and 4 different redsetters.
 

SkedAddled

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Canon OEM chips are reliable but far from indestructible. A number of them failed on me after very few resets. To be fair, there’s a chance that the redsetter itself wasn’t working properly and damaged the chips. In fact, my first redsetter unit failed after one or two years and I had to buy another one.

Anyway, those OEM chips aren’t meant to be resetted at all, so we can’t complain to Canon ..:D
I would be inclined to suspect battery-low resetters, if that's been your useage.

However, I will acknowledge that nothing in this world is a sure thing,
so there are a lot of variables which can factor into your experiences.

I myself may have troubles as well, and I'm new to the whole ballgame. ;)
 
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