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Peter
 
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"Arfa Daily" wrote in message ...

"Peter" wrote in message
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"Arfa Daily" wrote in message
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So, am I just being unlucky, or has anyone else had similar problems ?
This
one's close to being drop kicked down the garden ...


We've been running a half dozen newer Epsons (R300's, R800's
etc) and haven't had a single clog on any of them.

Are you shaking the ink cartridges several times before installing
them? If not, you're supposed to. That gets rid of air pockets
in the cartridges and settles the ink to the bottom.

Also, are you using a power strip to turn the printer off? If so,
you're bypassing the head seals, and that will cause a problem.


Hi Peter

Thanks for the advice. I haven't been shaking the cartridges prior to
fitting, but then I've never seen anything in the paperwork that suggested
you should, or in the " on screen " instructions that pop up when you start
replacing a cartridge. I've also never had to do this with any other printer
that I've owned, but I will give it a try on the next replacement ...


It depends on what model printer you have, and what kind of ink
it uses. It's clearly stated in our R800/R300/R200 manuals to
shake the cartridges downward several times right before installing
them. The insert that comes with the ink cartridges says the same
thing.

These printers use pigment-based inks, which are thicker than the
dye-based inks used in most of Epson's lower-end models. This
might account for the difference in instructions.

As far as turning off goes, it is basically never turned off, but it is used
pretty much daily, and I would have thought that there was seldom much more
than 12 hours between uses. As far as head sealing goes, I would have
thought that the standby " park " position was the same as the
printer-originated power down " park " position, thus sealing up the heads
during periods of non use but perhaps that's not so. What you're saying
would suggest that this is what you believe, and the heads get left in an '
out ' position if you just kill the power rather than allowing it to go
through a power down sequence. If not, then I would suggest that that's a
design oversight, and the heads should always be sealed when not actually
printing. Even if it is so, I would not have expected bulk ink to dry in the
nozzles that quickly, but perhaps I'm being over optimistic there. Comments
?


Epson printers do seal their heads after a certain amount of
inactivity. I was referring to turning the power off via a power
strip, whereby the printer couldn't engage its seals.

BTW are you using Epson or third-party inks? If the latter, all
bets are off with regard to clogging problems.

Perhaps these ' cartridge only ' printers don't sit well with my patterns of
useage. I do know that in future, I will be going back to an HP. Even though
the cartridges are more expensive, at least I'm getting a nice new head each
time, and if one does block up, the only thing that's scrap is the
cartridge, not the whole printer.


We've never found an HP inkjet that equals Epson's image
quality. A few of their most recent models come close though.

Thanks again, and if shaking and turning off seems to do any good, I'll post
again in a few months, and say so.

Arfa