If you experienced the color change while using the same inks, then you have a mechanical issue.
If you experienced the color change after switching brands, then don't be surprised. You have to realize that not all inks are the same, even if they look identical. Canon genuine OEM inks are...
Can you post the actual scans without any tweaking? In general, you will get different results when you change the media setting because the printer driver adjusts the ink dispersion rate accordingly.
Top-fill for me as well. Easier to clean & purge, no risk of overfilling the carts, and most especially no risk of damaging the sponge.
Just to share my experience as well, I was previously using Hobbicolors UW-8 on my Pro9000 II but had to switch out due to 2 reasons: 1) Dave, although very...
Didn't mean to beat a dead horse. I once went through @reet's exact frustration and I wasted a lot of time, ink and paper heeding 'expert' advice on doing manual adjustments, nozzle checks, changing media settings, and reinstalling drivers. Some get acceptable results through manual tweaks, some...
I agree. But what advise to you give to those not happy with the results they're getting?
Calibrate. Everyone calibrates their monitor/printer to get their desired results. Some are happy doing it manually/visually through trial and error, some can afford to do it through custom profiling...
There's only one way to settle this - a (shootout) 'print-out'. In the red corner, the purists (stock profiles, manual monitor/printer adjustment). In the blue corner, the technicians (calibrated monitors and custom-profiled printers). Who will win? :D
Your experience is subjective, I can't dispute that. But @reet obviously isn't satisfied with the results he's getting, and you're misleading him by suggesting that the solution to his problem can be found through nozzle checks and software workarounds.
Calibration is not a spectre. It's a fact...
Your experience with HP printers may just have been a coincidence, in general no printer out-of-the-box will accurately print the colors you see on your screen.
You have to realize that the printer has no idea whatsover what colors you're seeing on your screen. Think about it - you can tweak...
I think you're confusing the total cost of their exploits with the actual cost per page. I highly doubt inkjets on refills can beat a color laser on refills on actual cost per page.
Yes, but your preference doesn't mean that inkjets are cheaper, unless you've actually owned a color laser...
My recommendation for mums with kids is still a colour laser printer because of overall printing cost per page, less maintenance, no fuss over refilling cartridges, good print quality for pictures and especially text, and longer printer life.
Don't mistake cheap inkjets and cheap ink refills as...
Contrary to this, the profiles were no good for me. It might just be me, but I'm confused as some claim the profiles were good for them.
Anyhow, I created my own profiles. Day and night difference.
Performing the backflush method with a syringe fitted to a tubing connected to the PC inlet port to suck up the windex the print head is sitting on, it is significantly harder to pull fluid up as compared with the other channels. Where as a light pull on the syringe immediately sucks up fluid...
No, IS-refilled OEM carts which I re-purged and treated with pharmacist's solution. Sponge saturation looked very good (much better than before I re-purged them). The head's currently soaking in Windex and I can see that fluid doesn't easily pass through the PC channel compared to the others...
After 3 full color A4 prints my PC channel started banding again while in the middle of a full color A3 print job. Performed several cleaning cycles and still can't clear it, though the banding pattern is different everytime I print a nozzle check after every clean. What could possibly be wrong...
You're lucky then. Making the sponges too dry (I only dried my in a fan-forced oven for 2 hours) was what caused my problem.
I'm completely skipping this step from now on. The paper towel is already enough to dry the sponge. The remaining moisture makes the sponge more absorbent than a 100% dry...