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Printers survive 83 alone
I might have posted here 3 months ago looking for help on how to
schedule a print job for every month I was gone, so my inkjet printer heads wouldn't dry out. I spend over an hour the night before I left trying to write a bat file that woudl do this, but I failed^^. So I was very happy when I returned, printed a test pattern I'd downloaded 3 months ago, and it came out just about perfect. All the more strange since the black and yellow? heads on one of them had dried out in February and I had to soak them in alcohol with a paper towel slipped under the heads. (The process worked well. Details on request). You couldn't use either printer to forge Rembrandts, and the Epson was somewhat darker** than the Brother, but both showed good white, good black, good grey scale, good rainbow, and good darkness scale for every color. I can't imagine it was any better when it was new. And with bootleg ink in both printers. ***I had bought an all-in-one Epson Wi-Fi inkjet printer, and a year or two later I found on the grass next to the curb about a mile from my house a similar Brother printer. I talked to the guy who lives in the house which the printer was in front of and he really did throw it away^^^. I don't know why. Maybe he wanted a better one, but this one is between 150 and 200 dollars. At the time it had two empty of four ink cartridges but worked fine after I replaced them. ^^^Not only that, it had been on the curb for, if I can recall, I think he said 4, 6 hours, maybe a day, before I took it, which shows IMO how few people know good stuff when they see it. (Even I thought it must be broken.) And the Brother I found on the street is actually better than the Epson printer I bought because it can print straight from the cell phone and a couple things like that. OTOH, even though I have no reason to think they can't work, I haven't managed to set up either faxing or scanning to the PC on the Brother, so I have to keep the Epson. **I think with one or both printers, one can adjust saturation etc. I can't remember but they have complicated software that came with them. I didn't change anything because I'm visually stupid. ^^The .bat file would have to do three things: A) It would have to run on a schedule, and I did manage to put an entry in the Scheduler that would start it once a month (even though the PC appears not to be running in between. There is a separate checkbox if you want a scheduled item to run even if the computer is sleeping. Hibernation is one form of sleep.). I would have preferred every three weeks, and that can be done by scheduling the bat file for every week, and writing to an external file. Perhaps adding one every time: 1, 2, 3 and on 3, the third week, printing the test pages and resetting the counter to 1. (But plainly since it lasted 83 days, once a month is probably adequate.) B) It would have to print the file, and people on one of these ngs showed me how to print a file from a bat file, but only the printer's own test page. In the case of the Epson, that's all black with a little blue. It would have to print to both printeres, but that just requires a second line. C) It would have to put the computer back in hibernation. That's not hard with this line: C:\....\pstools\psshutdown.exe -h PSTools is a free set of utility programs from Mark Russinovich, https://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/.../bb842062.aspx I got all three steps, at least for the printer So: Echo on rem Meant to run monthly or more often to keep printers from drying out. rem Didn't work but I don't remember why, I think it wouldn't come fully out of hibernation. That might be why I didn't implement the whole thing. rem The next two lines only print the printer's own test page, which is black with a little blue and does not have enough color. rundll32 printui.dll,PrintUIEntry /k /n "Brother MFC-J625DW Printer (Copy 1)" rundll32 printui.dll,PrintUIEntry /k /n "WorkForce 645(Network)" rem This sets the abilitty to hibernate to on, just in case it was not on already. powercfg /hibernate on C:\Downloads\pstools\psshutdown.exe -h rem C:\data\pics\testprintcolor.png This was a good color test print, has all colors. rem C:\System32\rundll32.exe powrprof.dll,SetSuspendState I forget the purpose of this. |
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Printers survive 83 alone
micky wrote on 6/3/2017 11:03 AM:
I might have posted here 3 months ago looking for help on how to schedule a print job for every month I was gone, so my inkjet printer heads wouldn't dry out. I spend over an hour the night before I left trying to write a bat file that woudl do this, but I failed^^. So I was very happy when I returned, printed a test pattern I'd downloaded 3 months ago, and it came out just about perfect. All the more strange since the black and yellow? heads on one of them had dried out in February and I had to soak them in alcohol with a paper towel slipped under the heads. (The process worked well. Details on request). Requesting details, please. |
#3
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Printers survive 83 alone
In message , micky
writes: I might have posted here 3 months ago looking for help on how to schedule a print job for every month I was gone, so my inkjet printer heads wouldn't dry out. I spend over an hour the night before I left trying to write a bat file that woudl do this, but I failed^^. So I was very happy when I returned, printed a test pattern I'd downloaded 3 months ago, and it came out just about perfect. [] _Some_ printers, if you leave them powered, will start up, and clean the heads, at intervals - I think some of them once a day; people have come back after a _long_ time away and found that the printer has used up a complete set of cartridges doing this. Are you sure yours didn't just do that? -- J. P. Gilliver. UMRA: 1960/1985 MB++G()AL-IS-Ch++(p)Ar@T+H+Sh0!:`)DNAf "What happens if I press this button?" "I wouldn't ..." (pinggg!) "Oh!" "What happened?" "A sign lit up, saying `please do not press this button again'!"(s1f2) |
#4
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Printers survive 83 alone
micky wrote:
I might have posted here 3 months ago looking for help on how to schedule a print job for every month I was gone, so my inkjet printer heads wouldn't dry out. For long term storage, keep the cartridges humidified. Take the cartridges out of the printer, put them (nozzles up) in an airtight plastic tub that has a lid. Do NOT use a plastic bag. Put a damp cloth in the tub and attach lid. Store the tub out of sunlight, like in a drawer. While the cartridges are stored outside the printer, pull the power cord to the printer to prevent it from running a self-test or calibration at periodic intervals or when repowering (by you because you powered it off during non-use or after a power outage). My aunt complained about ink getting dumped into a waste tank (aka diaper aka spittoon) every time she powered up her Epson. Also, different printers waste different amounts of ink. Brothers seem to be frugal. HP Envy (that I have now) wastes less ink for maintenance than does HP Photosmart. I had a Canon Pixma (forget the model number) that wasted more than my HP. http://www.consumerreports.org/cro/m...-ink/index.htm When the heads gets clogged, use 99% isopropyl alcohol in a swiping motion that rotates the towel, like rotating a wetted towel-wrapped finger as you swipe across the head. The ink inside the cartridge does not dry out. It's the ink in the head that can dry out and clog the heads but most times an alcohol cleaning resolves the problem. I dislike printers that have the heads separate of the cartridges. I want new heads when I put in new cartridges. I print maybe once per week, like my grocery shopping list, so my print volume is low. I'd rather not deal with clogged heads that are part of the printer. Whether due to ink dried in the head, a defect in logic inside the cartridge, out of ink, or any cause of problem, replacing the cartridge also replaces the head. I have bought non-brand cartridges but from plants that buy new (virgin) cartridges to then fill them with their ink. Reused/recycled cartridges are too flaky, plus my print volume is too low to validate the small difference in price. http://wirthconsulting.org/2015/10/3...o-not-dry-out/ Cartridges that dry up and get clogged after storage for 3 to 6 months are also likely to clog up even if a print job is sent once per week. Crappy ink is, well, crappy ink. Cheap bulk ink ranges from $100/gallon for black or color down to $30/gallon for black and up to $130/gallon for color. High-quality ink costs more as do differing formulations for different printer brands, like $250/gallon for 3rd party bulk ink targeting HP printers. The cartridges cost under a dollar in large lots to a few pennies apiece in volume manufacture. Ink formulations are patented any why non-brand manufacturers have to use some different formulation or pay royalty to use someone else's. "printer ink must be formulated to withstand heating to 300 degrees, vaporization, and being squirted at 30 miles per hour, at a rate of 36,000 drops per second, through a nozzle one third the size of a human hair. After all that it must dry almost instantly on the paper.¡ (statement by HP). Another factor is archival quality: how well the ink will last on the paper. Ink is the other "black gold". |
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Printers survive 83 alone
In alt.comp.os.windows-10, on Sat, 3 Jun 2017 18:17:24 +0100, "J. P.
Gilliver (John)" wrote: In message , micky writes: I might have posted here 3 months ago looking for help on how to schedule a print job for every month I was gone, so my inkjet printer heads wouldn't dry out. I spend over an hour the night before I left trying to write a bat file that woudl do this, but I failed^^. So I was very happy when I returned, printed a test pattern I'd downloaded 3 months ago, and it came out just about perfect. [] _Some_ printers, if you leave them powered, will start up, and clean the heads, at intervals - I think some of them once a day; people have come back after a _long_ time away and found that the printer has used up a complete set of cartridges doing this. Are you sure yours didn't just do that? No, not sure at all! Wasn't even saying otherwise. I didnt' think of that, but that's probably it. I don't like it doing that once a day. Once a week or once every two or three weeks would be often enough, I would think. But it was better to do it however often than while I was away for 80 days than to have to buy a new printer. And I didn't check before but I see the Brother is almost out of cyan and magenta ink. I didn't think it was low before I left so that tends to confirm your idea. But wait, the Epson is ful of M and Y ink and at more than 80% black and more than 90% cyan. Can it clean the heads that many times and still have that much ink? --- This email has been checked for viruses by AVG. http://www.avg.com |
#6
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Printers survive 83 alone
In alt.comp.os.windows-10, on Sat, 3 Jun 2017 11:42:35 -0400, Alek
wrote: micky wrote on 6/3/2017 11:03 AM: I might have posted here 3 months ago looking for help on how to schedule a print job for every month I was gone, so my inkjet printer heads wouldn't dry out. I spend over an hour the night before I left trying to write a bat file that woudl do this, but I failed^^. So I was very happy when I returned, printed a test pattern I'd downloaded 3 months ago, and it came out just about perfect. All the more strange since the black and yellow? heads on one of them had dried out in February and I had to soak them in alcohol with a paper towel slipped under the heads. (The process worked well. Details on request). Requesting details, please. Newsgroups: comp.periphs.printers Subject: Alchohol flushes out clotted jet heads. Date: Tue, 07 Feb 2017 09:40:41 -0500 Lines: 130 Message-ID: There's more stuff at that location but here is the main part. Someone had suggested a recipe for cleaning fluid that included ammonia, 92% alcohol, and a little dishsoap. I explain why I didn't use any of those. But I did use his paper towel plan. This time it was an Epson but I think it would work for anything. I had tried head cleaning and the other thing several times with no improvement. I really hated the idea of buying a whole new printer, and sending it in to be repaired would probably cost as much, and I thought about disassembling it but some webpage said you need a calibration CD to get it right again. Now I have disassembled some precise things and gotten them back together by just noting the discolored area where the light hit part and not the assembled part, and better yet by scribing a scratch the whole length of the line where the two parts come together, to allign with. And by being careful about everything, but that was machinery and car stuff, nothing where the width of a pixel could make a difference. OTOH, it seems to me that as long as the box holding the 4 ink cartridges is square, if it's moved a couple pixels to the left or forward or back, that will just move the image on the paper a couple pixels but everything will look fine. ??? In this case I would scribe both on the front or back and the left or right of that box. And I can't believe I won't get the box square, at least on the second try. Are the screw-attachment holes elongated or extra large or are they just the right size? I also wondered if my use of bootleg ink had caused the problem. The first set of cartridges worked fine, but when I put in the the second black one and maybe one other color, it said that the cartidges weren't recognized. That's anti-bootlegger talk where I come from. I wondered how I got past the first ones. But when I googled, it said that Epson printers sometimes gave a Not Recognized message just because the cartridge was empty. I wonder if they do that on purpose to scare people like me. I also wondered why only the yellow came out when I did that test pattern print, since I had just replaced black, and black had been used frequently. OTOH, when I wasnt' printing at all, I was careful to print one picture in all colors every two months, but since I've been printing a lot of black and white, I pretty much stopped printing any color. How often do you folks think something in color should be printed to keep color jets to keep them from drying out?? I used part of a Bounty towel, because they really are the best. They hold more liquid. Hard to believe that their advertising is so accurate, but if there is a competitor that does as well, I haven't noticed it, and I do buy cheaper ones to use with more sludge and sediment than liquid, or with things that aren't very wet. . And ammonia was only 1.5 dollars but I didn't know what I would with a 16 oz. bottle after I used a quarter of an ounce (which I guess is what the recipe said) , so I skipped that. I have windex, but it's lost in the jungle that is my house. And dish soap didn't seem like a good idea to me, though maybe I'm wrong and in a worse situation I would have needed it. And somewhere, not here, I read that one had to use 92% alcohol, but that struck me as silly, so I used the 70% that I already had and which is quite a bit cheaper. I'm curious where 92% is really required? (Alcohol is hydrophilic and the process of detaching the water molecules from the alchohol is difficult, although I suppose the attached water of hydration weakens the effect of the alcohol, he said, arguing against his prior claim that it was silly.) I tore a strip as wide as the flat area where the heads went, folded it once over a piece of paper that I used to push everything under the heads. I should have measured the width of the heads and marked that on the paper towel, so I'd know when I had it in far enough, because it was hard to push it in. I will use slightly stiffer paper next time to better push in the towel, though of course it can't be very thick. I removed the pusher paper to allow more of the paper towel to soak up more alcohol, but it might have been better to at first leave the paper in to push the upper level of the towel closer to the ink head. Then it could be removed so that the lower layer of towel could free up its alchohol into the upper layer. I found a syringe-like thing that came with some universal ink that I never managed to use, and now I don't think it's powerful enough?? to get it in to those new fancy cartridges. At least I only paid half price, second-hand but never used, at a hamfest. I poured the alcohol into a cup which was shallow enough that the "needle" of the bellows thing would reach, then transferred enough alcohol to soak almost to overflowing the part of the paper towel that still stuck out, almost 2 inches. I also used the needle to try to put some alcohol into the nozzles from above, where the cartridges attached, for the two colors that were not working at all, but on this Epson Workforce 645, there is no hole at the end, rather there is an + shaped cut from the end going down 2 or 3 mm. So I was relying even more on capillary action to get any alcohol in there. I didn't see any alchohol running down the outside of the little black tube, so maybe much of it was getting sucked into the tube, like I wanted. I waited 20 minutes. The paper was still wet but I was certain a lot had evaporated and I added about 50% as much as before, or more. Then waited about 20 or 30 more minutes Then I put the two new cartridges for those same colors, because the others were listed as empty. Then I printed a page and it was mostly red and maybe some other color. So I used the Epson built-in procedure to clean the heads one more time, but then it worked! And it prints beautifully again. The previous ink came from Tinte, but Amazon no longer has it and I can't find it anywhere else. This time I bought something from Office World, but I haven't used any yet. Very cheap stuff but it seems to work. Yesterday for the first time, I used the automatic document feeder on a similar Brother machine and it worked 98% as well as on some big office machine. I should have been able to figure out without watching how a small machine makes two sided copies, but I didn't. Now I finally get it and it's simple. No magic involved. --- This email has been checked for viruses by AVG. http://www.avg.com |
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Printers survive 83 alone
In alt.comp.os.windows-10, on Sat, 3 Jun 2017 12:48:25 -0500, VanguardLH
wrote: I dislike printers that have the heads separate of the cartridges. I want new heads when I put in new cartridges. I print maybe once per week, like my grocery shopping list, so my print volume is low. I'd rather not deal with clogged heads that are part of the printer. I agree with you. I don't know why I bought the Epson, since it doesn't have that. I think I was impressed by all the features for only $100, and I kept thinking about it. Then one day the price rose in one step to $150, everywhere at once, in stores, multiple places online. So I rushed to Office Depot where it was also 150 and asked someone not a cashier if I could have one at the $100 price, and he said, Yes, if we have one. And he went in back and they did have one, and I never gave a thought to the heads. Oh well, so far so good. Of course, I coudlnt' be picky about the one I found on the street. Whether due to ink dried in the head, a defect in logic inside the cartridge, out of ink, or any cause of problem, replacing the cartridge also replaces the head. I have bought non-brand cartridges but from plants that buy new (virgin) cartridges to then fill them with their ink. Reused/recycled cartridges are too flaky, plus my print volume is too low to validate the small difference in price. Before my trip, I was printing 12 crossword puzzles a week and doing almost that many. I printed about 40 extra for the airplane trips, but I didn't do any of them, so that means no need to print in black and white now either. http://wirthconsulting.org/2015/10/3...o-not-dry-out/ Cartridges that dry up and get clogged after storage for 3 to 6 months are also likely to clog up even if a print job is sent once per week. Crappy ink is, well, crappy ink. Cheap bulk ink ranges from $100/gallon for black or color down to $30/gallon for black and up to $130/gallon for color. High-quality ink costs more as do differing formulations for different printer brands, like $250/gallon for 3rd party bulk ink targeting HP printers. The cartridges cost under a dollar in large lots to a few pennies apiece in volume manufacture. Ink formulations are patented any why non-brand manufacturers have to use some different formulation or pay royalty to use someone else's. "printer ink must be formulated to withstand heating to 300 degrees, vaporization, and being squirted at 30 miles per hour, at a rate of 36,000 drops per second, through a nozzle one third the size of a human hair. After all that it must dry almost instantly on the paper.¡ (statement by HP). Another Wow. So I can't make my own. factor is archival quality: how well the ink will last on the paper. Ink is the other "black gold". --- This email has been checked for viruses by AVG. http://www.avg.com |
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Printers survive 83 alone
In message , micky
writes: In alt.comp.os.windows-10, on Sat, 3 Jun 2017 18:17:24 +0100, "J. P. Gilliver (John)" wrote: [] _Some_ printers, if you leave them powered, will start up, and clean the heads, at intervals - I think some of them once a day; people have come back after a _long_ time away and found that the printer has used up a complete set of cartridges doing this. Are you sure yours didn't just do that? No, not sure at all! Wasn't even saying otherwise. I didnt' think of that, but that's probably it. I don't like it doing that once a day. Once a week or once every two or three weeks would be often enough, I would think. But it was better to do it however often than while I was away for 80 days than to have to buy a new printer. The "once a day" was just off the top of my head; I don't know if any do it that often. But I think I did have one printer that disconcertingly woke up and did something occasionally, if you left the power connected. [] --- This email has been checked for viruses by AVG. http://www.avg.com Someone'll be along shortly to remind us how to turn that off. (It isn't an email; that's not a proper .sig separator; and the "reassurance" isn't.) -- J. P. Gilliver. UMRA: 1960/1985 MB++G()AL-IS-Ch++(p)Ar@T+H+Sh0!:`)DNAf Some cause happiness wherever they go; others, whenever they go. - Oscar Wilde |
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Printers survive 83 alone
On Sat, 03 Jun 2017 17:06:42 -0400, micky
wrote: I agree with you. I don't know why I bought the Epson, since it doesn't have that. I think I was impressed by all the features for only $100, and I kept thinking about it. Ink jet printers are cheap to buy, but expensive to use, since the ink cartridges cost a lot. They're like razors--cheap to buy, but the company makes its money selling you blades. As far as I'm concerned, ink-jets are a bad bargain. Lasers are much better; they cost more in the short run, but less in the long run. |
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Printers survive 83 alone
micky wrote:
Wow. So I can't make my own [inkjet cartridges]. Sure you can. Buy a thousand virgin cartridges, buy the ink in bulk, get the syringes, and start filling up your own cartridges. Come up with a story at work as to why your fingers are ink stained (a roving gang of ink-staining vandals pinned you down and dipped your fingers). You won't save any money or much of it, though, to qualify all your work over buying the off-brand cartridges that use their own volume purchased cartridge blanks. They buy cartridges and ink in much larger volumes to get better discounts, and they have the equipment to do automated cartridge filling. http://www.ebay.com/sch/i.html?_nkw=...+ink+cartridge (no, you get huge volume discounts) http://www.ebay.com/sch/i.html?_nkw=...+ink+cartridge (no, you won't get the best quality ink) Do a search at eBay on your printer's model number of its cartridges. Not only will you see filled cartridges being sold but also refill kits. I've tried a few and maybe was unlucky to get those whose ink wasn't very good. You can also find unfilled cartridges; however, "empty" is not the same as "virgin". I suspect "empty" means recycled akd remanufactured and the condition in the auction might be truthful by saing "used" or "refurbished". I don't know if Office Depot still does cartridge filling. Back then they accepted used cartridges to apply as a $2 core refund against the ones they already filled and are on their shelves. However, they were recycling the cartridges instead of sacrificing virgins. I did that only once because their ink took too long to dry. Walgreens and Costco will do (or did) cartridge refills, too. If you're going through inkjet cartridges every week, yeah, it makes sense to buy cheaper ones or do the refills -- but it might make better sense to get a laser printer instead. I use up the cartridges in about a year so I'm only hit once for each cartridge in all that time with the price hike for a name-brand cartridge replacement. I still have reams of unopened paper that were bought many years ago (maybe 8 years ago). --- This email has been checked for viruses by AVG. h**p:// www. avg. c*m Turn off the spam component of your choice of anti-virus software, or uninstall the e-mail scanner since it effects to additional protection. Besides, no one is going to believe your posts are not infected just because you say so. It looks childish. They don't use a valid signature delimiter line (which is dash-dash-space-newline) because they know many recipients enable option to strip or hide true signatures. They are spamifying your messages. |
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Printers survive 83 alone
In message , VanguardLH
writes: micky wrote: I might have posted here 3 months ago looking for help on how to schedule a print job for every month I was gone, so my inkjet printer heads wouldn't dry out. For long term storage, keep the cartridges humidified. Take the cartridges out of the printer, put them (nozzles up) in an airtight plastic tub that has a lid. Do NOT use a plastic bag. Put a damp cloth in the tub and attach lid. Store the tub out of sunlight, like in a drawer. A long time ago, some printers used to come with a humidor for that purpose. I think mainly the ones that could use either a large black cartridge, or a small one with colour cartridges, and the humidor was for storing the one(s) you weren't using. While the cartridges are stored outside the printer, pull the power cord to the printer to prevent it from running a self-test or calibration at periodic intervals or when repowering (by you because you powered it off during non-use or after a power outage). My aunt complained about ink getting dumped into a waste tank (aka diaper aka spittoon) every time she powered up her Epson. Also, different printers waste different Some - I know at least one Brother model did - "count" how much goes into the waste tank/pad/whatever, and eventually refuse to work, on the basis that the level in it has reached the point where it is likely to cause smearing - even if it isn't actually doing so. For that particular model, we found at least one video on YouTube telling you how to reset that counter (it didn't involve doing anything with the hardware, just software actions); obviously it didn't actually empty the tank, so in theory the printer _would_ eventually start smearing. (Actually emptying the tank is I understand not too practical, involving breaking into parts of the printer it's beyond the home user to repair afterwards.) [] I dislike printers that have the heads separate of the cartridges. I want new heads when I put in new cartridges. I print maybe once per I'm in two minds about that: I know what you mean, but it does tend to make the cartridges more expensive. At least one make - I think it was Xerox - used to have a removable head that itself had removable tanks; that was the best of both worlds - you normally just replaced the inner tank, but could replace the outer container (which included the head) when necessary. I very much doubt any make/model still has that arrangement, though I'd like to be pleasantly surprised. [] formulation or pay royalty to use someone else's. "printer ink must be formulated to withstand heating to 300 degrees, vaporization, and being squirted at 30 miles per hour, at a rate of 36,000 drops per second, through a nozzle one third the size of a human hair. After all that it must dry almost instantly on the paper.¡ (statement by HP). Another factor is archival quality: how well the ink will last on the paper. Ink is the other "black gold". There are also the two ways of squirting the ink: piezoelectric and thermal. Piezo uses tiny crystals in the head - I don't think it involves heating at all, though I wouldn't be surprised if they _get_ at least warm; in thermal, the heads actually contain tiny resistors (heaters) that boil a bubble in the actual ink itself, the pressure of which forces the ink out. I am pretty certain that at one time, EPSON were the only ones using the piezo method (I think they had a patent on it); I don't know if that is still the case. The piezo heads are more expensive to make, so are usually part of the printer. If you have one of the resistive types of printer where the heads _are_ part of (and thus replaced with) the cartridge, you can experiment with refilling without too much concern, as if all else fails you just replace the cartridge (and thus head) as you would have done anyway; for piezo printers, you have to be more careful about using dubious ink, as if things go wrong you're stuck with replacing part of the printer. (For those wondering: piezoelectric materials are materials that actually change shape if you apply electricity to them, or generate electricity if you squeeze them; they used to have two common uses - microphones [and record-player cartridges], where the squeeze-to-make-electricity was used; and quartz [mainly] crystals, where both properties are used in an oscillator circuit to make something that works at a precise frequency related to the mechanical dimensions of the piece of quartz. Now piezo printers are another widespread use of these materials; you can also get desk fans that use them, instead of a motor, but such are more a novelty than a widespread use.) For inkjet printing, I've come across CISS - continuous ink supply systems; these use a set of four big bottles that stand beside the printer, feeding four tiny pipes that go to dummy cartridges (which presumably have some sort of electronics that keep the printer and/or driver software happy). I presume there must be _some_ snag with these, as I've rarely seen them in use - the cynic in me thinks it's subject to the continuing arms race between the manufacturers over the chips/firmware in the cartridges, but I suppose there could be practical reasons too. I once - probably ten or more years ago! - saw such a system operating at a computer fair: the owner had left the printer running, churning out high-density colour pictures, unattended, in a way nobody would ever have done with cartridges. _Maybe_ large-quantity users just all go to colour laser (which produces better, and certainly more durable, output anyway - just tends to be a more expensive [both to buy and to maintain] printer). -- J. P. Gilliver. UMRA: 1960/1985 MB++G()AL-IS-Ch++(p)Ar@T+H+Sh0!:`)DNAf Some cause happiness wherever they go; others, whenever they go. - Oscar Wilde |
#12
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Printers survive 83 alone
In comp.periphs.printers, on Sat, 3 Jun 2017 22:46:10 +0100, "J. P.
Gilliver (John)" wrote: In message , micky writes: In alt.comp.os.windows-10, on Sat, 3 Jun 2017 18:17:24 +0100, "J. P. Gilliver (John)" wrote: [] _Some_ printers, if you leave them powered, will start up, and clean the heads, at intervals - I think some of them once a day; people have come back after a _long_ time away and found that the printer has used up a complete set of cartridges doing this. Are you sure yours didn't just do that? No, not sure at all! Wasn't even saying otherwise. I didnt' think of that, but that's probably it. I don't like it doing that once a day. Once a week or once every two or three weeks would be often enough, I would think. But it was better to do it however often than while I was away for 80 days than to have to buy a new printer. BTW, was supposed to be titled Printers survive 83 days alone. The "once a day" was just off the top of my head; I don't know if any do Okay, thanks. I have to leave the printer plugged in. For a while the computer was in the basement and the pritner on the second floor, but even now it's in the next room. Too much trouble to get up and plug it in. But since I've been using the really cheap ink, the ink used in periodic cleaning** isn't a concern. I'll see how long my luck lasts with the really cheap ink. **It may still be annoying if I don't print for a month and I have to replace a carttridge that is empty anyhow. it that often. But I think I did have one printer that disconcertingly woke up and did something occasionally, if you left the power connected. [] --- This email has been checked for viruses by AVG. http://www.avg.com |
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Printers survive 83 alone
On Sat, 10 Jun 2017 11:03:42 +1200, Frank Williams
wrote: On Sat, 3 Jun 2017 11:42:35 -0400, Alek wrote: micky wrote on 3/6/2017 11:03 AM: I might have posted here 3 months ago looking for help on how to schedule a print job for every month I was gone, so my inkjet printer heads wouldn't dry out. I spend over an hour the night before I left trying to write a bat file that woudl do this, but I failed^^. So I was very happy when I returned, printed a test pattern I'd downloaded 3 months ago, and it came out just about perfect. All the more strange since the black and yellow? heads on one of them had dried out in February and I had to soak them in alcohol with a paper towel slipped under the heads. (The process worked well. Details on request). Requesting details, please. To stop your print heads from drying out make sure that the printer is OFF, not at the Wall at the printer, as this caps the pint heads. I brought a Epson R390 recently, had been stored for 2 years, replaced a faulty cartridge that was locking up the printer, the printer prints OK after 2 year in storage. Having the printer turned on causes the print heads to dry out, as they are not capped. I was given a nice ink jet printer with five ink cartridges. It had been stored so long even the unopened cartridges were useless. I suppose a laser printer could be stored forever due to not having any ink, or could the drum or toner be damaged? Can the toner absorb moisture? I just switched on my Brother Laser printer and the toner light is flashing even though it printed a test page OK and it shows 50% toner remaining. The weather has been very damp lately. |
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Printers survive 83 alone
On Sat, 10 Jun 2017 15:30:36 +1000, Lucifer Morningstar
wrote: On Sat, 10 Jun 2017 11:03:42 +1200, Frank Williams wrote: On Sat, 3 Jun 2017 11:42:35 -0400, Alek wrote: micky wrote on 3/6/2017 11:03 AM: I might have posted here 3 months ago looking for help on how to schedule a print job for every month I was gone, so my inkjet printer heads wouldn't dry out. I spend over an hour the night before I left trying to write a bat file that woudl do this, but I failed^^. So I was very happy when I returned, printed a test pattern I'd downloaded 3 months ago, and it came out just about perfect. All the more strange since the black and yellow? heads on one of them had dried out in February and I had to soak them in alcohol with a paper towel slipped under the heads. (The process worked well. Details on request). Requesting details, please. To stop your print heads from drying out make sure that the printer is OFF, not at the Wall at the printer, as this caps the pint heads. I brought a Epson R390 recently, had been stored for 2 years, replaced a faulty cartridge that was locking up the printer, the printer prints OK after 2 year in storage. Having the printer turned on causes the print heads to dry out, as they are not capped. I was given a nice ink jet printer with five ink cartridges. It had been stored so long even the unopened cartridges were useless. I suppose a laser printer could be stored forever due to not having any ink, or could the drum or toner be damaged? Can the toner absorb moisture? I just switched on my Brother Laser printer and the toner light is flashing even though it printed a test page OK and it shows 50% toner remaining. The weather has been very damp lately. Update. The toner light has gone out presumably due to the toner drying out. |
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Printers survive 83 alone
Lucifer Morningstar wrote:
On Sat, 10 Jun 2017 15:30:36 +1000, Lucifer Morningstar wrote: On Sat, 10 Jun 2017 11:03:42 +1200, Frank Williams wrote: On Sat, 3 Jun 2017 11:42:35 -0400, Alek wrote: micky wrote on 3/6/2017 11:03 AM: I might have posted here 3 months ago looking for help on how to schedule a print job for every month I was gone, so my inkjet printer heads wouldn't dry out. I spend over an hour the night before I left trying to write a bat file that woudl do this, but I failed^^. So I was very happy when I returned, printed a test pattern I'd downloaded 3 months ago, and it came out just about perfect. All the more strange since the black and yellow? heads on one of them had dried out in February and I had to soak them in alcohol with a paper towel slipped under the heads. (The process worked well. Details on request). Requesting details, please. To stop your print heads from drying out make sure that the printer is OFF, not at the Wall at the printer, as this caps the pint heads. I brought a Epson R390 recently, had been stored for 2 years, replaced a faulty cartridge that was locking up the printer, the printer prints OK after 2 year in storage. Having the printer turned on causes the print heads to dry out, as they are not capped. I was given a nice ink jet printer with five ink cartridges. It had been stored so long even the unopened cartridges were useless. I suppose a laser printer could be stored forever due to not having any ink, or could the drum or toner be damaged? Can the toner absorb moisture? I just switched on my Brother Laser printer and the toner light is flashing even though it printed a test page OK and it shows 50% toner remaining. The weather has been very damp lately. Update. The toner light has gone out presumably due to the toner drying out. ******* begin quote ******* a. Do not take a new toner cartridge out of the protective bag until it is ready to be used. b. When you take the toner cartridge out of the printer for servicing the printer or other purposes, place the toner cartridge into the original protective bag, or wrap it with a thick cloth immediately. [Light-sensitive belt...] c. Do not place it vertically or upside-down. Store the toner cartridge in the same orientation as when installed in the printer. [Toner leakage...] d. Do not store the toner cartridge in a place exposed to direct sunlight. [Light-sensitive belt...] e. Do not store cartridges in a hot or humid place, or a place where the temperature and humidity can change significantly. Storing environment temperatu 0 to 35°C (32 to 95°F) --- [pretty low temp limit!!!] Storing humidity range: 35 to 85 % RH (no condensation) f. Do not store the toner cartridge in a place where corrosive gases, such as ammonia, are generated, or where a considerable amount of salt is contained in the air, or where there is a lot of dust. [So no lasers at the seashore.] ******* end quote ******* The 85% RH is pretty generous, the temperature range, not so much. You can see in some of the text in this patent, which direction the design of toner is headed in. According to this, they're trying to push toner down to lower-temperature fusing, which may account for the low storage temperature in the above quoted text. http://www.freepatentsonline.com/y2017/0131652.html The patent content helps fill in some of the less-defined details in this article. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toner While the outside layer of the toner particle may be the same as in previous generations, the composition can be quite a bit more complex. Maybe it's the color toner that has all the technical innovation ? Paul |
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