elsofar, the printhead of your Canon I960 ( model QY6-0043 ) is impossible to find new anywhere. Yours must be one of the very few in the world still working OK. As the Hat said, don't kill it with generic ink and avoid aggressive cleaning methods ( i.e. using ammonia ).
You're right, quiet mode must be good for the lifespan of printheads, but I think your words 'a bit slower' are an understatement. On my Maxify quiet mode is very slow. It takes three times longer than normal mode to finish a print job.
This is pure masochism, I won't try. It would show too well the shortcomings of my skills and my printer. :rolleyes:
Nevertheless, if you or somebody else here is daring enough, I suggest using a very soft TPE filament. It would be even more fun. :D
@palombian, 'eternaly' is a drastic word..;). I'd say longtime enough, if you're careful. During the last years I had to discard two carts because of leaks. After disassembling, I saw that the bag was partially unglued from the plastic frame. Possibly my fault for pushing too hard the plunge...
I've using your PGI-72 inks for several years. Most colours (grey included ) never gave me problems. The only troublesome inks have been magenta and photomagenta. Now I use OEM ink extracted from larger PFI tanks on these two carts.
Yes, a really clever device, but not for me :
1- AFAIK Precision Colors doesn't ships to Europe.
2- I don't own a Pro-1000.
I agree with you. Keeping control of ink levels on a Pro-1000 isn't difficult, unless you're quite careless.
For one thing, 80ml last long and you can remove a tank...
I don’t think that Canon would make use of such devious methods. Suppose you need a printhead for a Pro-300 or a Pro-10 and the reference is the same. You order from a reseller a QY6-0085.
Do you think that they will know which serial numbers work for one printer but not for the other ?. Will...
Maxify and Pixma range of printers apparently are designed and manufactured by different divisions inside Canon. So, what applies for Pixmas it doesn't for the Maxifys and vice-versa.
The ARC on the cyan cart of my MB5150 refused to return to full condition after it was declared empty and...
It seems that photoblack is the only color with a bad nozzle test. If you perform cleaning cycles, do it only for the colors of group two. No need to waste the ink of group one because these are OK.
It' s not clear if the missing top part of the photoblack band is due to clogs or electrical...
Your Pro1000 and most modern Canon printers of medium-high level have an internal battery that stores basic data ( actual clock time and others). Leaving it off doesn't resets the time and the printer knows when the last cleaning was performed. Naturally, if it was long time ago, when you sent a...
@Paul Edmunds, that new printer is for you or for somebody else?
In the first case, maybe a pigment printer like the Canon Pro-300 would be a good complement to your Pro-100.
In the second case, there isn't much choice nowadays for A3+ printers in 'Canonland' : either the dye based Pro-200 or...
I’m quite sure that Canon printers do not perform purge/cleaning cycles by themselves. It wouldn’t make any sense,
Imagine the scenario: After refilling/replacing the cartridges you go on trip for several weeks leaving the printer ON.
If the machine performed cleanings automatically every time a...
Well, what do you know ?. My brother brought me yesterday his MG5750, because 90% of times it didn't feed the paper and then I remembered this thread. I tried, with some skepticism, the 'sponge fix' pointed by dublin123, and it worked ! :)
I don't believe for a moment that leaving a Canon printer always on saves any ink at all. My Maxify stays most of the time totally disconnected from the mains power. Instead, my Pro10 stays off, but connected by cable to the power outlet. The Maxify performs less cleanings than the Pro10 or any...
Definitively you‘ve had very bad luck with this Pro-10. giving error after error. As far as I can tell, this printer is usually very reliable, and I’m not speaking only for myself.
Of course I understand that you wouldn’t get another Pro-10 even if it were a terrific bargain.
Have you thought...
IF it's the timing strip, you might be able to fix it patching it with the left tip of a spare strip. The end with the slit that engages on the hook is blank so it won't matter if it's from a different printer.
See below the left end of my spare timing strips. The one on top is from a Pro-9000...
Even if the strips for the Pro10 and Pro-9500 are exactly the same length, which I doubt very much, in all likelihood the coding pattern is different. I suppose that your Pro-10 would have gone bonkers with a Pro-9500 timing strip, :D
Nevertheless it would be interesting if you printed a couple of sheets on HP paper, so we could see the differences of the same pigment inks on good quality paper vs. 'not that good' :rolleyes: paper.
Yes, handling big rolls is messy and with some papers almost impossible to flatten the sheet...