Archive

Posts Tagged ‘Black Ink’

What well known printer manufacturer would have the cheapest black ink cartridges?

April 22nd, 2013 5 comments

We had a HP Deskjet and getting an Epson Stylus tomorrow. From what we can see Epson cartridges are cheaper than the HP ones? But what about all the others, how do they compare price wise? I’m talking genuine ink cartridges not cheaper "compatible" or refurbished ones. Thanks.

Kodak claims to have the cheapest ink cartridges for inkjet printers, my friend, though I have no personal experience of Kodak printers.

How to make printer print full black text?

April 18th, 2013 2 comments

Printer is HP deskjet 3500. Only black ink cartridge (c8727) is installed. I want to print a PDF where the text is medium gray. When it prints the text is too light to read. How can I get the printer to print the text as black so I can read it? Computer is a Dell 3000 with XP home.

Unless you can edit the PDF and change the font colour you can’t.

Is the manufacturer purposely designed the printer cartridge in such a way that prevents the refilling of it?

April 7th, 2013 8 comments

I am fed up. I had already tried to refill three HP deskjet D2560 black ink cartridges but each time was a complete failure.

For the last time, I really did it very carefully and delicately so as not to damage or dirty the structure and printhead (and follow the instruction thoroughly), but it seems like there are still problems occur.

Is it due to my unskillfulness or one really can’t refill cartridge but to buy a new one?

Thanks in advance.

Yes some manufacturers put a chip in their catridge that sense when it’s empty and tell the printer that it’s now useless, even if you refill it with more ink. I understand that a product is available which will reset this chip that can be used after refilling. I don’t have a reference for a source, but you can do an internet search.
P.S. I’m told that if you add ink before the sensor trips then you can refill them multiple times.

How to reset the ink level of HP Deskjet j210 peinter after refilling?

March 10th, 2013 2 comments

I have bought a hp deskjet j210 printer. When the black ink ended i refilled it from the shop. now when i put it on my printer it shows the previous ink level (not full). So how to reset the ink level? I have the (802 small) cartridges

that is your pc ink level is impty so you insert you deskjet paint than refiling ok

Where can I find a REASONABLY PRICED Ink cartridge?

February 7th, 2013 2 comments

Where ( which local retailer) can I find a REASONABLY priced black ink cartridge (#45 – black) for my HP Deskjet printer?
I find it ridiculous to have to pay over $30.00 for a small 42 ml cartridge of black ink. I browse a few local electronics retailers (Best Buy / Circuit City / Radio Shack) and office supply stores (Office Depot / Office Max) to find no prices anywhere near reasonable.
Thanks for all suggestions.

SOME walgreens will refill them for you. Its $10 for black and $15 for color.

Will a different kind of ink be compatible?

January 13th, 2013 2 comments

I have a HP 845c deskjet printer. The printer takes a 15 black ink cartage and a 17 tri-color cartage. However, this 17 cartage cannot be found in stores. You can find a 15 black 75 tri-color joint package at the local businesses. Would this 75 tri-color cartage be compatible for my 17 ink cartage.

These are the model printers that the no 75 will fit. HP Deskjet D4260, D4360 / HP Photosmart series C4240, C4250, C4280 , C4285, C4345, C4350, C4380, C4385, C4440, C4450, C4480, C4580, C5225, C5240, C5250, C5280, D5345, D5360, C5580 / HP Officejet J5750, J5780, J6480. So no the 75 is not compatible with your printer.

Will a different kind of ink be compatible?

December 28th, 2012 1 comment

I have a HP 845c deskjet printer. The printer takes a 15 black ink cartage and a 17 tri-color cartage. However, this 17 cartage cannot be found in stores. You can find a 15 black 78 tri-color joint package at the local businesses. Would this 78 tri-color cartage be compatible for my 17 ink cartage.

The 78 and 17 are not cross compatible.

However the good news is that Number 17 cartridges are very easy to find in a remanufactured brand.
The 17 can also be refilled fairly easily.

It is a great printer to hold onto, as far as I know HP is still making the number 17 cartridges, however they are very old printers and not very common so the cartridge will be difficult to find.

Inkjet Cartridges

October 24th, 2012 7 comments

An inkjet cartridge is a replaceable component of an inkjet printer that contains the ink that is spread on paper during printing and sometimes the print-head itself. Each inkjet cartridge contains one or more partitioned ink tanks (reservoirs), electronic contacts and a chip that communicates with the printer.

Inside each partition of the inkjet cartridge tank (reservoir), is a tiny metal plate. In response to a signal given by the inkjet printer, a tiny current flows through the metal causing it to warm up. The ink immediately surrounding the heated plate is vaporised. As a consequence, the total volume of the ink exceeds that of the inkjet cartridge. An ink droplet falls out of the cartridge onto the paper. This process takes place in a matter of milliseconds which equals to near 6,000 times per second.

Usually, two separate inkjet cartridges are inserted into an inkjet printer: one containing black ink and one with each of the three primary colors (cyan, magenta and yellow). Alternatively, each primary color may have a dedicated inkjet cartridge. Some inkjet cartridges are specifically designed for printing photographs. All printer suppliers produce their own type of inkjet cartridges. Inkjet cartridges for different printers may be incompatible – either physically or electrically. Since replacement inkjet cartridges from the original manufacturer of the printer are often very expensive, some other manufacturers produce “compatible” inkjet cartridges as cheaper alternatives. Some inkjet cartridges have incorporated the printer head (most Hewlett Packard inkjet printers use this system). Usually, they are more expensive, but the printers are cheaper. Others don’t include the print head, but they are more economical and the inkjet printers are more expensive (for example, most Epson inkjet printers).

Typically, inkjet cartridges are very expensive compared to the printer itself. Many people, therefore, use compatible inkjet cartridges (also called “generic” – those made by a company other than the OEM printer manufacturer) that give comparable quality, but with considerable savings. Another alternative involves modifications that allow the use of continuous ink systems that use external ink tanks. Some people choose to use inexpensive ink, knowing that, in the long term, it may damage the printer. However, the cost savings of 4 or 5 refilled inkjet cartridges may well be sufficient to pay for a new inkjet printer. If the printer lasts more than that, they have obtained the same result (economically speaking) at a lower cost than using original supplies.

Consumers are often surprised at the price of replacing their inkjet cartridges, especially when compared with that of purchasing a brand new inkjet printer. The major printer manufacturers, Hewlett Packard, Lexmark, Dell, Canon, Epson and Brother, often break even or lose money selling printers and expect to recoup their losses by selling inkjet cartridges over the life span of the printer. Since much of the printer manufacturers’ profits are made up of inkjet cartridges and toner sales, these companies have taken various actions to limit the options of consumers in using aftermarket inkjet cartridges.

However, many consumers have purchased remanufactured cartridges from alternative companies to save money over buying new inkjet cartridges. This is a much better use of resources, much cheaper, and a whole industry has grown up around this idea. Remanufacturing of inkjet cartridges and other printer supplies also reduces the amount of plastic that goes in the landfill and keeps the Earth a cleaner place.

Simon R.
http://www.articlesbase.com/hardware-articles/inkjet-cartridges-93324.html

Common Setting Options to Print More Pages & Faster on Your Printer

October 18th, 2012 No comments

Are you unhappy with your printer’s current performance? Do you want it to print faster so you can complete those print jobs in a hurry? After all, no one wants to stand over the printer waiting for those finished pages to come out. You may not realize it but there are ways to increase the speed and performance of your existing printer just by tweaking your own print options and settings.

Choosing Ink Darkness

When you are printing with either an inkjet or laser printer, you can adjust the settings to make the ink darker or lighter on the printed documents. The darker you choose to make the ink the longer it’s going to take the documents to print and the more ink cartridges or toner you are going to use during the jobs. There are a couple of ways to make these changes. If you have installed the printer driver, you should be able to access the printer’s options and can choose the correct level of darkness. With an inkjet cartridge, you’d want to choose draft quality for the fastest speeds.

Another Method to Adjust Darkness

If you did not install the printer driver, you can still access printer settings through your own computer. You can either select “Printers” from the Control Panel or select “Properties” from the printing screen. Once you’ve accessed the appropriate menu you’ll want to pick the “Paper Quality” tab. Now scroll down or let your eyes wander to the lower part of the dialog box until you find the button marked “Advanced.” Click on that and you’ll see a new dialog box with additional options available. From here, you’ll be able to adjust the printer’s toner/ink darkness settings. Remember to choose lower numbers or draft quality to maximize speed.

Monochrome Printing Only

Besides the darkness of your ink, another factor that can slow down the printing speed of your printer is the use of color ink cartridges. This should make sense. Remember that normally your black ink comes separate from the others. While their colors have to be combined to create the exact color for each portion of your document which takes times, the black ink is ready to go.

Connections

While not necessarily a setting issue, the connections you use for your printer can affect speed. USB connections are faster than the old-fashion parallel port methods, for example. You can also speed things up by directly connecting your printer into your network via a network server. Make sure all of your computers can connect to the server either through cables or wirelessly.

John C. Arkin
http://www.articlesbase.com/hardware-articles/common-setting-options-to-print-more-pages-faster-on-your-printer-689278.html