dasuess
Nikon Freak
I promised this followup quite awhile ago, but it has taken a loooong time for the Epson carts shipped with my R3000 to get low enough to swap out. I've had my R3000 in use for about three months, printing on average several prints a night and the carts just kept on going.
As for the InkSupply refill kit for the R3000, I paid $200 just over a month ago (it's gone up just a bit since then). What you get is 9 empty carts with chips, 9 syringes and adapters, plus 9 4oz bottles of ink (MK, PK, LK, LLK, VM, VLM, C, LC, Y).
The process of filling the cartridges was a bit fiddly, but with patience I was done, cleaned up and had the new carts installed in the printer in about 90 minutes.
Before I purchased the refill kit, I checked with InkSupply support and was told that I could use existing ICC paper curves. All I needed to do after installing the filled carts was to run a couple of purge prints to clear out the residual Epson ink.
I then ran several test prints to compare to the same image I had earlier printed on the same paper using the Epson inkset. So far, I have been unable to tell any difference in the prints using the Epson K3 inks vs the InkSupply K4 inks.
Each 4oz bottle of ink should provide approximately 4 cart refills. Additional 4oz bottles of K4 ink are $15 each, so a big savings over buying Epson cartridges for $25 or $30 each.
While there is no Wilhelm permanence data on the K4 inks, InkSupply does have some info on their website that indicates approximate equivalence to the Epson K3 inks.
As for the InkSupply refill kit for the R3000, I paid $200 just over a month ago (it's gone up just a bit since then). What you get is 9 empty carts with chips, 9 syringes and adapters, plus 9 4oz bottles of ink (MK, PK, LK, LLK, VM, VLM, C, LC, Y).
The process of filling the cartridges was a bit fiddly, but with patience I was done, cleaned up and had the new carts installed in the printer in about 90 minutes.
Before I purchased the refill kit, I checked with InkSupply support and was told that I could use existing ICC paper curves. All I needed to do after installing the filled carts was to run a couple of purge prints to clear out the residual Epson ink.
I then ran several test prints to compare to the same image I had earlier printed on the same paper using the Epson inkset. So far, I have been unable to tell any difference in the prints using the Epson K3 inks vs the InkSupply K4 inks.
Each 4oz bottle of ink should provide approximately 4 cart refills. Additional 4oz bottles of K4 ink are $15 each, so a big savings over buying Epson cartridges for $25 or $30 each.
While there is no Wilhelm permanence data on the K4 inks, InkSupply does have some info on their website that indicates approximate equivalence to the Epson K3 inks.