Epson banding issues despite multiple nozzle cleans & windex

FinalProof

Getting Fingers Dirty
Joined
Sep 27, 2018
Messages
19
Reaction score
12
Points
35
Printer Model
Epson various
I run an arts prints business and open back up for business soon so really struggling to know what to do.

Can anyone please help?

Kind regards,

Hannah

View attachment 11272 First nozzle check after cleaning and leaving over night.




View attachment 11273 Second nozzle check after pressing 'clean nozzle heads' on epson printer.
Hannah I'm wondering what your market is, if it's the fine art or art reproduction market then you might consider moving up to a professional epson printer like the new Surecolor SC-P7500 24" printer, inks per ml are much cheaper and are available in 150ml, 350ml and 700ml carts and paper rolls become an option as well, in addition the inks are pigment based inks and have a much longer archival rating than dye based inks if print longevity is important for your customers.
Larger colour gamut is also possible with more inks and black and white images will benefit from the additional gray ink shades.
Maybe a larger printer might open new market opportunities for you, it all depends on your customer base.
 

robwignell

Getting Fingers Dirty
Joined
Dec 28, 2020
Messages
22
Reaction score
18
Points
33
Location
Canberra, Australia
Printer Model
Epson 7880
Hi Hannah.

I didn't catch which printer you are using and that can effect your options. I hope you have one with a replaceable/reusable waste ink tank. I have experienced the same deterioration with a number of different Epson printers (from an R800 to a 7880).

My analysis is that if you get a good Nozzle check, like the first one you showed, but get one with gaps after you have printed an image, this indicates that there is a blockage that is slowing the ink flow to the head. A perfect nozzle check at startup is always reassuring but, especially if you are unsure of your printer's performance, or if you detect that the colours aren't printing quite right, it pays to do a nozzle check after printing an image to give confidence that the printer has been working properly throughout.

On a printer with cartridges that sit on the printer head my first advice is to remove the cartridges and find a syringe and a piece of plastic tube to fit over the piece that goes into the printer cartridge of the colours giving you trouble. Fit some absorbent paper under the printer head, fill the syringe with warm water and gently apply some pressure to the syringe plunger. If you can move about 5 ml of water through the head this should clear any blockage on that channel.

On printers where the ink cartridges feed the ink to the head via tubes, the place that I look for blockages are the ink buffers in the printer head.

Epson recommends that these buffers be replaced every two years on a printer doing a reasonable amount of work (they are quite vague) but the problem is that if pigment ink sits unused for a while the pigment particles can settle and coagulate or worse. Also, if you are using the printer a lot then comparably large amounts of ink are passing through these buffers which have a very fine mesh filter inside them. This filter can also block from ink particles that are filtered out because they are too big for the printer head nozzles.

The buffers are incorporated into the printer head mechanism. On some printers (the 7880 and 9880 are examples) the buffers are relatively easily replaced. On the 38nn series the easiest way to replace the buffers involves buying a part that includes the buffers, some electronics, the ink lines and the ink cartridge housing. I recommend buying an Epson Maintenance Manual if you want to undertake any of this sort of work. The maintenance manuals are extremely well documented and give step by step instructions on disassembly and reassembly. I can highly recommend them.

Cheers

Rob
 
Top