New Strategy with 4800
Making every effort to keep the 4800 ticking over for the last couple of months - printing most days - hasn't really lead to the hassle-free outcome I was hoping for. Too many clogging probs for how active the printer was in my view which has been equally disappointing, frustrating and bemusing.
As I would be offline for a couple of weeks over Christmas I thought I'd try a new approach with the 4800 - forget about trying to nurse it every day and just treat it like every other piece of hardware I own - just print when it make sense for me to print and expect it to work.
The printer has been switched off for close to three weeks over Christmas during which we've had a record hot weather, as well as being away on holidays with the house closed up - the printer has had ample time to bake away quietly in my office.
I turned the 4800 on today and no surprises it requested a Power Clean. I declined and did a manual nozzle check and pleasantly enough every bar was intact. Good sign, but what about the Auto Nozzle Check? It printed clear too!
So there you go - print every day, and have what seems to be too many problems with clogging. Leave the printer sit for a few weeks and it fires up ready to go - touchwood. Maybe it just needed a good holiday, like me :)
posted by Pete Walsh @ 11:43 AM 5 comments
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At 4:47 AM,
Anonymous said...
merci for all information
have nice day
At 9:08 AM,
Anonymous said...
Any comment about the 12-ink 17" Canon imagePROGRAF iPF5000 to be unveiled in IPEX (see press kit in http://www.canon-europe.com/ipex)? Will it be the Killer Printer?
Joe Beltran
At 2:32 PM,
Anonymous said...
Only is it uses pigment inks will it have a better chance of being better than the Epson X800 series printer, imo.
Scott
At 7:26 PM,
Anonymous said...
It will.
Joe
At 3:38 AM,
jagath (sri Lanka) said...
I bought epson 4800 pro. Am using it with Mac G5 and MacBook Pro. Prints are lowsy as ever. Can anyone help me to get out of this problem.
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