Michael Markey
Veteran
Mike, if I get mine working I'll do you some prints. 😉
If you've got it up at the studio I'd like to see it running .
Mike, if I get mine working I'll do you some prints. 😉
If you've got it up at the studio I'd like to see it running .
Decades of Epson woes
I have had over time 3 Epson A3/A3+ printers. I spent about 1000 for each of them.
The last is the R3000. Before that (if memory helps) the 1280 and long time ago an A3 dye ink printer (750 may be?)
All three quickly failed miserably and I am right now on the verge of throwing the R3000 in the garbage can
All three in a row after a few months started staining the paper with black ink and became unusable.
Not a single review mention this problem!
Am I unlucky?
Read this: https://www.dpreview.com/forums/thread/3773605
And look at this: https://www.specialistinks.com/clean-printheads.php
(BTW I bought the kit and made the cleaning only to discover that the problem worsened)
I am asking for help and advice
I have two questions:
First question:
I noticed that the new P800 has a drawer where the excess ink that is removed from the printing head at each pass is collected.
Do you think that this (which is also a sort of tacit admission of the problem by Epson) will protect the user from the above kind of failure?
Second Question:
I mostly print setting the printer so that PS to manages colors. I noticed that this mode of printing produces malfunctions of all sorts. For example when one prints panoramic printing is never completed unless one changes settings, letting the printer manage colors.
Is it possible that this modality of printing, among the other malfunctions, also prevents the mechanism that cleans the print head at each pass to function properly?
On the other side what is certain is that Epson support does not answer question unless one let the printer manage colors.
Thank you all very much in advance for any help
I don't have an Epson but I have a friend that is also on his third. $1000 per printer in his case doesn't count the wasted ink trying to clean and solve those problems.
I don't have an Epson but I have a friend that is also on his third. $1000 per printer in his case doesn't count the wasted ink trying to clean and solve those problems.
The 7800 is kinda user serviceable. I downloaded the huge service manual for free. Used my work printer and paper from work to print it out.
The story of how I got my 7800 for only $100.00 was just good timing. At a NYC Meet-Up Chris had a friend Mike trying to sell his printer, the 7800 I now own. Mike was moving back to Japan and was not going to take his printer. Joe sitting next to me offered a ride to help me get the printer home. So everything fell into place.
When I did a nozzle check it just need a few power cleanings: no cloged nozzles. I went into the maintnance menue and discover it is a fresh printer that was hardly used, but used just enough not to be neglected. In the first 9 years of this printer's life it only made 1802 prints.
I loaded it with Piezoflush to freshen it up. This allows for storage as well as resolulizing any buildups in the dampers and ink feeds. It can even unclog a clogged printhead.
Also to be helpful on some of the newer printers that have 11 or 14 cart slots. If you can get one of these printers for free the printer can be "Mapped" and be used and recycled as a Piezography Printer for B&W printing. Matte printing K-7 only requires seven working channels. K-7 Glossy only eight. If you have 9 working channels then you can do both matte and glossy without an ink change.
Also this is good for digital negatives for contact printing. Likely the ultimate in IQ for B&W. I just subscribed to Piezography Pro. Pretty much a turnkey system that allows me to profile and calibrate my system. Also can do digital negatives for contact printing. Pretty much I can do a Salgado without the best lab in Paris.
Cal
The 7800 is a really good printer. I bought it new and never had any problems of any sort. I don't even remember getting a head clog.
I got into piezography back in the early days and converted a 1280 and a 7000 to Piezography pigments. Unfortunately those early inks clogged really badly and I wound up using more ink and time unclogging it that I used printing.
I wound up converting a 2200 to Sundance pigments after getting rid of the Piezography machines. I understand Sundance made the inks for Piezography but they seemed to get it down perfectly. I had a bulk feed system and I don't remember it ever clogging. Prints were stunning too and the cost was reasonable compared to piezography. I wound up selling the 2200 to a friend when I got my 7600 because the B&W out of the 7600 was so good. I'd consider Sundance agin but I think they're out of business.
The R3000 doesn't have a drawer for the ink, but you can add an external tank(printer potty), I have done this and it saves a lot of problem with a pad saturated in ink.
Suggest to not switch the printer off, but leave in stand-by and run a regular nozzle check to exercise the ink through the head
However I've had nothing but disappointment with my R3000.
My problem has been akin to a drifting profile, often adding a colour cast (green or magenta) depending on it's mood, I recently discussed with some else who had the same issue, they finally ditched, which is where I going.
Epson are not interested, their support seems quite poor