Is the cost of replacement inks getting out of hand and spoiling the enjoyment of printing your own work
nope - I use a CIS £25 per 120ml lol
Yes the CIS is more cost effective, but for the hobbyist or small volume printing, these are not viable to many.
I just cant undertstand why inks are so expensive, and that they have gone up in price by almost 100% for the inks i use, and thats from 7 day shop within 2 years, but of course you could always change printers and get a free set each time as printers are getting as cheap as chips now
NikkiA said:Most printers don't come with *full* ink carts, but about 10% filled. Beyond that, I don't see how CIS is not viable to a small volume printer, a CIS will cost you around £30 for a consumer printer, and about £10-20 for a full set of 100-120ml ink refills, on top of that, unlike the 'ink spread on foam' cartridges, don't dry out as easily if you're not printing continuously. Modern printers tend to need to clean every print run if you're using them infrequently, and a modern printer can use up to 5% of it's ink reservoirs in a 'clean' cycle.
On a standard consumer level printer from any of the main companies, you're looking at about the equivalent of 2 sets of cartridges cost for about 20-50x the ink (most cartridges actually only have 2ml-5ml of ink inside) with a full refill costing less than a set of carts usually does.
If anything, because of the 'drying out' issue and the head cleaning, a medium volume user has less to benefit from CIS than a small volume user.
Most printers don't come with *full* ink carts, but about 10% filled. Beyond that, I don't see how CIS is not viable to a small volume printer, a CIS will cost you around £30 for a consumer printer, and about £10-20 for a full set of 100-120ml ink refills, on top of that, unlike the 'ink spread on foam' cartridges, don't dry out as easily if you're not printing continuously. Modern printers tend to need to clean every print run if you're using them infrequently, and a modern printer can use up to 5% of it's ink reservoirs in a 'clean' cycle.
On a standard consumer level printer from any of the main companies, you're looking at about the equivalent of 2 sets of cartridges cost for about 20-50x the ink (most cartridges actually only have 2ml-5ml of ink inside) with a full refill costing less than a set of carts usually does.
If anything, because of the 'drying out' issue and the head cleaning, a medium volume user has less to benefit from CIS than a small volume user.
With places like DSCL charging pence for prints I find it easier to get prints done else where and we have since sold our large format printer.
You have to remember it isn't just the prints that use up ink there's all the testing, colour profiling, nozzle cleaning etc. then if anything gets messed up in the process you're paying for more paper/ink.
To counter the "You don't have control of the process" arguments, there are plenty of higher end print labs about the country that can be used for those special prints, my local one (Onevision imaging) have always produced results as good or better than the ones I was getting from my large format printer at home.
Craikeybaby said:With places like DSCL charging pence for prints I find it easier to get prints done else where and we have since sold our large format printer.
You have to remember it isn't just the prints that use up ink there's all the testing, colour profiling, nozzle cleaning etc. then if anything gets messed up in the process you're paying for more paper/ink.
To counter the "You don't have control of the process" arguments, there are plenty of higher end print labs about the country that can be used for those special prints, my local one (Onevision imaging) have always produced results as good or better than the ones I was getting from my large format printer at home.
Once your printers warrantee has run out, get compatables. Never, ever, noticed any difference to the original.
AND saved a fortune.
All printers come with full carts they just have to fill the lines up hence why you appear to get less.
Have to disagree on that based on experience......
I've had a couple of Epson printers over the last 3 years (PX700/720W) which both take the same cartidges.
I used remanufactured carts in the former which lasted a little longer than the originals but when I got the PX720WD, I bought a CIS kit with re-fillable cartridges and put as much ink in them as possible.
After several months of using my printer more than I've ever done before, I've not managed to empty a cartridge yet.
Add to that a full CIS cartridge weighs considerably more than a brand new Epson original I'd say there's very little ink in the original cartridges and the figure I've heard of 5-6ml of ink would be about accurate.
I get all my ink from www.internet-ink.co.uk ,ok it's compatibles but this ink is top quality, there is no difference as the ink is from the same place ALL printer companies buy their ink from, remember printer manufacturers don't manufacture ink they buy it from a supplier.
Plus Internet-Ink give you a 10% discount code on your first order AND you won't find anywhere else cheaper !
thats a pretty big statment "as the ink is from the same place ALL printer companies buy their ink from"
If you click 'About' on their page there's a detailed paragraph which indicates that their ink is the same as top end consumables.
Yes, genuine inks are expensive but they do give much better and more consistent results than compatibles. Only ever used one cheapo compatible cart and the colour was way off from the start (yes, I could have reprofiled but couldn't be bothered - my time is more valuable to me than any saving I could have made!) and it faded a lot faster than even a print from my ancient HP (long since retired). The offending cart didn't stay in the printer long enough for any nozzle blockage to occur.
Yes, genuine inks are expensive but they do give much better and more consistent results than compatibles. Only ever used one cheapo compatible cart and the colour was way off from the start (yes, I could have reprofiled but couldn't be bothered - my time is more valuable to me than any saving I could have made!) and it faded a lot faster than even a print from my ancient HP (long since retired). The offending cart didn't stay in the printer long enough for any nozzle blockage to occur.
The inks used by the likes of Fotospeed or Permajet in their Cis or refillable cartridges are very good quality indeed & are not regarded as "cheapo compatibles" by the many people that use them, Anyone who buys no-name unbranded compatibles & expects the same quality as Epson or Canon will in most cases be disappointed with the results when photo printing but for non critical office jobs ie letters or spreadsheet printing might be ok.
Toonie
youhave to disagree that the printer hoses are empty and need to be filled![]()
No not at all but the printer hoses have to be filled up whether there's 5ml or 25ml of ink in the cartridge so please think twice before'ing at me
The point I was making is that the actual cartridges only contain a small amount of ink in comparison to the phyisical size of the cartridge.
Cartridge World and the like always say that most of their re-manufactured/refilled cartridges come with more ink than original cartridges.
epson carts for the R2400 have about 13ml in them - the ones that come with the printer have 13 ml in them. There is no difference in amount between them.
As a halfway house between compatibles and CIS systems you could do worse than a JetTek refill kit. It comes with a little drill to pierce the top of the cartridge, some rubber bungs to plug the hole once refilled, a syringe and a set of little bottles of ink. The ink seems to be good quality and there is enough to refill each cartridge about three times. Last time I looked the cost was about a tenner for a kit with four bottles.
I did a print with the original inks and one with the compatible ink and no one could tell the difference even with the prints side-by-side
I bet they will be able to after they have been the sunlight for a while.
I bet they will be able to after they have been the sunlight for a while.
POAH said:All printers come with full carts they just have to fill the lines up hence why you appear to get less
Have to disagree on that based on experience......
I have never once compared cartridges that "come with a new printer" to original cartridges, my point has always been that remanufactured cartridges generally hold more ink than originals and the CIS cartridges that I use are probably filled with more ink than remanufactured ones.
I don't understand why people by expensive cameras and produce some stunning images. Then buy a good printer and buy cheap ink! Makes no sense at all.
I don't understand why people by expensive cameras and produce some stunning images. Then buy a good printer and buy cheap ink! Makes no sense at all.
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