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#1
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Canon Users - Do You Believe????
How many people out their believe in using 3rd party inks? If so what
is your brand, printer, paper and your experience with them. How long have you been using them and how often do you print. How many of you have had problems with print clogging the head, fading, lower quality print results? How much of a mess is it to refill cartridges and how long does it take. How can you tell when the tank is running low without having to remove the cart and inspect is physically? If you only print every couple of weeks with you have a clogging problem with non factory ink? I have no problems now with my Canon Pixma IP4000 but spending half of what you paid for the printer for ink is high. Also spending $75 for a print head is out of line when I just saw the IP4000 for a net price of $100 at Frys after a $30 instant rebate plus a $20 mail in rebate. |
#2
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I use 3rd party ink in all four of our Canon printers with no more
problems than I found using Canon's brand. After using three sets of cartridges you will have saved enough to buy a new printer. Other than maybe the possibility of Canon ink providing more fade resistant prints I can't see any reason to pay their high prices. I get the cartridges for $1.70 each shipped to my door so for me it isn't worth the hassles to refill. measekite wrote: How many people out their believe in using 3rd party inks? If so what is your brand, printer, paper and your experience with them. How long have you been using them and how often do you print. How many of you have had problems with print clogging the head, fading, lower quality print results? How much of a mess is it to refill cartridges and how long does it take. How can you tell when the tank is running low without having to remove the cart and inspect is physically? If you only print every couple of weeks with you have a clogging problem with non factory ink? I have no problems now with my Canon Pixma IP4000 but spending half of what you paid for the printer for ink is high. Also spending $75 for a print head is out of line when I just saw the IP4000 for a net price of $100 at Frys after a $30 instant rebate plus a $20 mail in rebate. |
#3
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Can U pls furnish a link to ur supplier ?
cheers-Herb. Michael Johnson, PE wrote: I use 3rd party ink in all four of our Canon printers with no more problems than I found using Canon's brand. After using three sets of cartridges you will have saved enough to buy a new printer. Other than maybe the possibility of Canon ink providing more fade resistant prints I can't see any reason to pay their high prices. I get the cartridges for $1.70 each shipped to my door so for me it isn't worth the hassles to refill. measekite wrote: How many people out their believe in using 3rd party inks? If so what is your brand, printer, paper and your experience with them. How long have you been using them and how often do you print. How many of you have had problems with print clogging the head, fading, lower quality print results? How much of a mess is it to refill cartridges and how long does it take. How can you tell when the tank is running low without having to remove the cart and inspect is physically? If you only print every couple of weeks with you have a clogging problem with non factory ink? I have no problems now with my Canon Pixma IP4000 but spending half of what you paid for the printer for ink is high. Also spending $75 for a print head is out of line when I just saw the IP4000 for a net price of $100 at Frys after a $30 instant rebate plus a $20 mail in rebate. |
#4
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It is an ebay seller. I suggest sending them a message at
and placing an order for the exact number and color of cartridges you need. Also, you can still pay through Paypal. I rarely need the same number of each color since our photo printer use six ink tanks (i9100 & i960) and ordering this way allows me to mix and match quantities and colors. I got the best price by doing this instead of bidding through ebay. I order about 50 cartridges at once to keep the per unit cost low. Here's a link to their ebay listings for Canon compatible cartridges: http://tinyurl.com/52c6k Their cartridges have a 25% larger ink reservoir than most others so you get more prints per cartridge. I can personally confirm the reservoirs are noticeably larger than OEM Canon cartridges. As for the print quality, I can't see much, if any, difference from the Canon ink. Definitely not enough to justify six times the cost. herbzee wrote: Can U pls furnish a link to ur supplier ? cheers-Herb. Michael Johnson, PE wrote: I use 3rd party ink in all four of our Canon printers with no more problems than I found using Canon's brand. After using three sets of cartridges you will have saved enough to buy a new printer. Other than maybe the possibility of Canon ink providing more fade resistant prints I can't see any reason to pay their high prices. I get the cartridges for $1.70 each shipped to my door so for me it isn't worth the hassles to refill. measekite wrote: How many people out their believe in using 3rd party inks? If so what is your brand, printer, paper and your experience with them. How long have you been using them and how often do you print. How many of you have had problems with print clogging the head, fading, lower quality print results? How much of a mess is it to refill cartridges and how long does it take. How can you tell when the tank is running low without having to remove the cart and inspect is physically? If you only print every couple of weeks with you have a clogging problem with non factory ink? I have no problems now with my Canon Pixma IP4000 but spending half of what you paid for the printer for ink is high. Also spending $75 for a print head is out of line when I just saw the IP4000 for a net price of $100 at Frys after a $30 instant rebate plus a $20 mail in rebate. |
#5
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If you have any notion of color management why would you buy non-standard
inks? |
#6
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"bmoag" wrote in
news If you have any notion of color management why would you buy non-standard inks? Few people who buy inkjets have any use or need for precise color management or color science. For many of us, we can afford the printer but can't afford the Canon cartridges that hold "two spoonfuls" of ink and cost as much as the printer almost. The several non-Canon inks I've tried deviate infinitismally little from the so called "Canon standard", certainly not enough to justify me paying up to 20 times the price. Yes, 20 times. I can fill my own cartridges for under $5 - a set! Bring on the savings, and I'll deal with any color variations I may encounter. Not that I've had to. |
#7
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bmoag wrote:
If you have any notion of color management why would you buy non-standard inks? To save a boat load of money is a real good reason. In reality the color difference is negligable. Anyone that is that picky about color management can adjust the weighting of the individual ink tanks in the printer driver to produce the results they prefer. |
#8
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There is a very active yahoo group (see "Groups" from the Yahoo home page)
that deals exclusively with Canon inkjet printers. There are many, many archived posts there about 3rd part inks used in Canons, including reports and recommendations, and a few warnings. The general consensus, from what I've seen, is that refilling (or even just buying refilled cartridges) works very well for these printers and changes considerations of the price of ink from being THE dominant factor to being almost no factor at all. Go take a look. "measekite" wrote in message . .. How many people out their believe in using 3rd party inks? If so what is your brand, printer, paper and your experience with them. How long have you been using them and how often do you print. How many of you have had problems with print clogging the head, fading, lower quality print results? How much of a mess is it to refill cartridges and how long does it take. How can you tell when the tank is running low without having to remove the cart and inspect is physically? If you only print every couple of weeks with you have a clogging problem with non factory ink? I have no problems now with my Canon Pixma IP4000 but spending half of what you paid for the printer for ink is high. Also spending $75 for a print head is out of line when I just saw the IP4000 for a net price of $100 at Frys after a $30 instant rebate plus a $20 mail in rebate. |
#9
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Where do you buy them from?
What brand are they? How frequently do you print? Any problem at all with clogging? How long have you been using non Canon brand ink? Michael Johnson, PE wrote: I use 3rd party ink in all four of our Canon printers with no more problems than I found using Canon's brand. After using three sets of cartridges you will have saved enough to buy a new printer. Other than maybe the possibility of Canon ink providing more fade resistant prints I can't see any reason to pay their high prices. I get the cartridges for $1.70 each shipped to my door so for me it isn't worth the hassles to refill. measekite wrote: How many people out their believe in using 3rd party inks? If so what is your brand, printer, paper and your experience with them. How long have you been using them and how often do you print. How many of you have had problems with print clogging the head, fading, lower quality print results? How much of a mess is it to refill cartridges and how long does it take. How can you tell when the tank is running low without having to remove the cart and inspect is physically? If you only print every couple of weeks with you have a clogging problem with non factory ink? I have no problems now with my Canon Pixma IP4000 but spending half of what you paid for the printer for ink is high. Also spending $75 for a print head is out of line when I just saw the IP4000 for a net price of $100 at Frys after a $30 instant rebate plus a $20 mail in rebate. |
#10
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What about clogging? How often do you print?
AMcLean wrote: "bmoag" wrote in news If you have any notion of color management why would you buy non-standard inks? Few people who buy inkjets have any use or need for precise color management or color science. For many of us, we can afford the printer but can't afford the Canon cartridges that hold "two spoonfuls" of ink and cost as much as the printer almost. The several non-Canon inks I've tried deviate infinitismally little from the so called "Canon standard", certainly not enough to justify me paying up to 20 times the price. Yes, 20 times. I can fill my own cartridges for under $5 - a set! Bring on the savings, and I'll deal with any color variations I may encounter. Not that I've had to. |
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