armars
Getting Fingers Dirty
Now I am in US.
yesterday my mx882 arrived
yesterday my mx882 arrived
I couldn't understand "are the worst one-color-per-cart inkjets Canon has ever made"* If you bought the 882 locally and there is a good return policy without an excessive restocking fee, I'd consider returning the 882, frankly. Sorry to be a "wet blanket". Let your conscience be your guide. My (admittedly uninformed) impression is that from a refilling perspective, the CLI-226 based printers are the worst one-color-per-cart inkjets Canon has ever made (the multi-color based printers like the CL41 are of course even worse). But if you do very little printing, perhaps doesn't matter?
yes some books. research papers. copies/ I am a studentl_d_allan said:Amars,
Unless you are expecting to only do a minimal amount of printing ... mostly text? ...
.
To my knowledge, every chipped cartridge printer allows one to disable ink level monitoring, which can then be returned to functioning for that color when a cartridge with a chip not marked as empty is inserted into the print head. If the resetter or arc-chips work for that specific chip/printer combination, then ink level monitoring will return to function.armars said:Thank you for detailed answer.
for now. if i disable ink monitoring for refilling without reseter. can than enable it again?
Yes there great value but look at what youre getting first.armars what you think. it's worth to buy?
There wont be a resetter for these US based cartridges for quite some time so get a set of clear windowed 220/221 cartridgesstratman First, the cartridges are opaque, so it is more difficult to determine how filled the cartridge is.
This does complicate the typical visual method of refilling.
Some workarounds for this are weighing the cartridge and comparing it to the weight of a new fully filled OEM cartridge.
Also, some people take the chip off and attach it to a 220/221 cartridge which has a see through cartridge.