Posts tagged: Printer

Refillable cartridges for Epson photo stylus 1270 1280 1290 printer

Instruction for the refillable cartridges for Epson 900 1270 1280 1290
Step 1:Filling the cartridges

a. Remove the plugs from the Ink filling hole see picture above

b. Slowly insert ink into the ink cartridges though the ink filling hole, about 15ml for black and 10 ml for each color.

c. insert the plugs back to the ink filling hole.

Step 2: Install cartridges into the printer

Remove your original cartridges install the refillable cartridges. Note the refillable cartridges are not to be used or mixed with original cartridges at the same time.

Remove the rubber plugs out of the air hole for air flow.If these plugs are not remove, the cartridges will not work properly

Step 3: Nozzle Check

If it shows any breaks (it maybe caused by air bubbles in the printing head). Please do a nozzle clean for 1 or 2 times. If it is still showing little breaks, especially for only one color please turn the printer off. It is unnecessary to repeatedly clean the printer-head. Just keep the printer unused (turned off) for about few hours and then print the nozzle check again. nozzle check

Reset:

If the indicator light is flashing when printing, it suggests that you need to reset the chip to full status. Please turn off your printer for about 30 seconds and switch it back on. Ink meter bar should show full ink status. You can then start printing as usual.

Important: Please note that the refillable cartridges are not to be used or mixed with original cartridges at the same time.

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Printer, toner cartridges page yield

Page yield is the total number of pages that you can print with a given ink cartridge. Traditionally each printer manufacturer would run their own differing tests to determine page yields and customers ran the risk of comparing apples to oranges when determining the printer page yields from different manufacturers.

Now, fortunately printer manufacturers work with the International Organisation for Standardisation (ISO) and have developed a set of industry standard tests to measure inkjet cartridge page yields.

What is ISO?

ISO is a network of the national standards institutes of 156 countries, on the basis of one member per country, with a Central Secretariat in Geneva, Switzerland, that coordinates the system.

ISO is a non-governmental organization: its members are not delegations of national governments, as they are in the United Nations. Rather, ISO occupies a special position between the public and private sectors. Some of its member institutes are part of the governmental structure of their countries, or are mandated by their governments, while others represent national partnerships of private-sector industry associations.

Therefore, ISO is able to act as a bridging organization in which consensus can be reached on solutions that meet both the requirements of business and the broader needs of society, such as the needs of stakeholder groups like consumers and users.

These tests consist of printing a standard set of five pages, continuously, until the ink cartridge has reached the end of its life. This continuous method of testing is obviously less time consuming and expensive for the manufacturers to perform and whilst may allow an âapples to applesâ comparison, bears little resemblance to real life situations.

The five pages chosen for example are unlikely to be replicated in actual day to day print situations and industry experts estimate that ink printer users only print a few pages at a time and that hours, if not days can pass before an other print job is requisitioned. This type of start/stop printing can dramatically reduce the page yield obtained from a cartridge. Inkjet printers use some ink to keep the printhead nozzles clear to allow the ink to flow smoothly and most printers perform a maintenance operation on start up which also depletes the volume of ink in the cartridge.

Some page tests are measured on page coverage of only 5% for black print, the standard letter test, and areas of solid black or areas of greyscale on the page will have an effect.

Canon are now alone amongst the major printer manufacturers to continue to display the volume of ink contained in their cartridges and it is unlikely they will continue to do so if their competitors have abandoned the practice. HP and Epson until recently had this information available, however on the latest HP packaging only a page yield figure is given and the latest Epson packaging contains no information at all to aid the consumer in a choice. Lexmark have had a tradition of vagueness when it comes to page yield information on packaging and they have reached new levels of ambiguity with their latest XL cartridges, stating 2x More pages and in the small print telling you that the cartridge will last twice as long as another Lexmark cartridge.

It is true that different printer models would yield differing page yields with the same volume of ink, but it is clear this latest trend sheds little more light on the thorny question of how long an ink cartridge should last.

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