Finally, refilling cartridges is a thing of the past!
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Thread: Finally, refilling cartridges is a thing of the past!

  1. #1
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    Finally, refilling cartridges is a thing of the past!

    Since I printed a lot of 100% ink covered labels for my software I got a HP business inkjet printer with cartridges that do about 2000 color prints each, but since I didn't use anywhere near the 10,000 page/month duty cycle I decided to offer a color printing service and am getting 500-3000 page orders since I can beat anyone's price while offering better print quality, but the ink cartridges had to be refilled often, so I bought medical grade tube and connected them to each cartridge, out the gap between the printer and scanner and to ink bottles (the photo shows 2 and 4oz bottles, but I have 16 and 32 oz bottles on their way).







    For $98 I got enough ink for 30 000 color prints or 60 000 black and white prints, toner for as many pages for a laser printer would cost around $5 000-10 000, that's the main reason why I prefer inkjets.

    My printing service is working so well I'm considering getting the business inkjet 3000 with a 30-50 000 page/month duty cycle and/or the business inket 2800 large format 13x19 printer since a few are requesting large format prints.

    I had seen ink kits like this with tubes connected to the cartridges but they are being sold for $340 US, it cost me $4 to build it myself, and the $98 of ink is many many times more than came with the kit. I can finally forget about refilling which I hated doing, rather than refill cartridges every 2000 prints, I will now replace ink bottles which is much easier and only every 30-60k prints.

  2. #2
    Geezer confus-ed's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by ClickHere2Surf.com
    ..I had seen ink kits like this with tubes connected to the cartridges but they are being sold for $340 US, it cost me $4 to build it myself..
    That is a considerable saving ! so all you've done is tape in some tubes & then shove them in some ink bottles ?

    Generally you come up with some 'whacky notions' .. but I actually like this one !

    (& I can't say I've seen anybody do this before either, as anybody using 'lots of ink' is generally using commercial grade printers which are much much more ecconimical than some 'crumby inkjet')

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    Registered User MobilePCPhysician's Avatar
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    What "pushes", or "pulls" the ink through the tubes to the cartridges?
    Sergeant WOTPP

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    Tech-To-Tech Mod kato2274's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by MobilePCPhysician
    What "pushes", or "pulls" the ink through the tubes to the cartridges?
    that's what I wondered too.
    Nonsense prevails, modesty fails
    Grace and virtue turn into stupidity - E. Costello

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    Laptops/Notebooks/PDA Mod 3fingersalute's Avatar
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    I've worked on a lot of plotters that use tubing for the ink delivery system, so I'm wondering what you did to get around the vaccum seal and how you get the ink to pump uphill like that??

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    Laptops/Notebooks/PDA Mod 3fingersalute's Avatar
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    I can tell you from experience that what might be going on here is that the ink in the cartridges is what you are printing from, and you will find once it runs out, that nothing is actually being "pulled" from the bottles.

    When a pump goes bad on a plotter, or a vaccum leak occurs, you don't notice right away as the printheads hold some ink, so until you deplete whats in them, you don't realize there is a problem.

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    That is a considerable saving ! so all you've done is tape in some tubes & then shove them in some ink bottles ?

    Generally you come up with some 'whacky notions' .. but I actually like this one !

    (& I can't say I've seen anybody do this before either, as anybody using 'lots of ink' is generally using commercial grade printers which are much much more ecconimical than some 'crumby inkjet')
    The cartridges for these printers are basically just a box with an ink bag inside and a spring loaded pump under the cartridge, inside the printer a sort of piston comes and presses the pump under the cartridge in and out to pump ink to the printheads, what I did was open the refill hole inside the cartridge and inserted a tube in each of the 4 cartridges and sealed them with hot glue, after being careful of getting all the air out, I connected the other ends to ink bottles in which I have made a very tiny hole (much smaller than a pinhole) to let air in the bottles as the printer pumps out the ink. This also answer how it gets the ink uphill, these HP business printers have inkpumps so it won't have any problem pumping the ink.

    This is a business/commercial inkjet printer, I've looked at other lasers but the toner cost doesn't make them an option for me when I can get better quality for much much cheaper with commercial inkjets.

    I can tell you from experience that what might be going on here is that the ink in the cartridges is what you are printing from, and you will find once it runs out, that nothing is actually being "pulled" from the bottles.

    When a pump goes bad on a plotter, or a vaccum leak occurs, you don't notice right away as the printheads hold some ink, so until you deplete whats in them, you don't realize there is a problem.
    These HP business models use ink pumps so it's be able to pump the ink uphill, the only thing is that the way it normally detects when it's out of ink is when the piston on the cartridge doesn't spring back out (meaning there's no more ink left to let it fill up), so I'll have to make sure I don't let the ink bottles run low or it'll start pumping in air which could damage my printheads if enough air gets in.

    This lets me print color pages at $0.004 (0.4 cents) a page, I don't know of any other printer type with costs anywhere near this low, but of course if I was buying cartridges the cost would be more, but still half the cost of laser. I will still have to replace the printheads but they are rated for 24,000 prints and the seller I buy my ink from is getting a lot more than this.
    Last edited by ClickHere2Surf.com; August 11th, 2005 at 01:25 PM.

  8. #8
    Laptops/Notebooks/PDA Mod 3fingersalute's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by ClickHere2Surf.com
    I've looked at other lasers but the toner cost doesn't make them an option for me when I can get better quality for much much cheaper with commercial inkjets.
    *sigh*

    We've had the inkjet/laserjet quality discussion so many times its not even worth bringing up any more.

  9. #9
    MegaMod DonJ's Avatar
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    Thumbs up

    I gotta admit that I'm impressed. I'm even moving this thread to the Printers Forum.

    Of course, I can see the potential of the average joe making a complete mess and possibly ruining his printer and everything around it. But I hope it works out well for you over an extended period of time. Keep us informed.
    Last edited by DonJ; August 11th, 2005 at 03:56 PM.

  10. #10
    Laptops/Notebooks/PDA Mod 3fingersalute's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by DonJ
    I gotta admit that I'm impressed. I'm even moving this thread to the Printers Forum.

    Of course, I can see the potential of the average joe making a complete mess and possibly ruining his printer and everything around it. But I hope it works out well for you over an extended period of time. Keep us informed.
    I'm impressed as well.

    I was confus-ed on the whole pump thing, but it makes sense now he mentioned the pump. I forgot that series has the separate tanks and printheads, so there would definitely be a pump involved somewhere!

    Just be careful, working with plotters for a while I ruined more than one set of clothes messing with those damn bulk inks!

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    Well I'm around page 300 of a 3000 page print job and the ink levels in the bottles are going down, I put a mark on the black ink bottle where it was before starting and it's 2-3 mm lower now, so it's working, I hopw I get my 2.5 liters of ink in soon because I'm running very low on black, I'm not sure there's enough left for the 3000 page job, it should have been here days ago but it got stuck at customs due to issing information but it's been sorted out.
    Last edited by ClickHere2Surf.com; August 12th, 2005 at 04:24 AM.

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    I got a "Black ink cartridge out of ink" error during the print job, I looked at it and everything was fine, so I pressed Enter on the printer to continue and it continued normally, maybe there was a bend or something in the hose preventing the ink from going to the cartirdge fast enough but it only did it once and I heard the ink pump running every 5-10 pages, don't know why it said that, maybe since the ink is going uphill and took more time to get pulled up, after all the black ink bottle is nearly empty so it has to pull it up from even lower, but it did make at least another few hundred pages after with no problem.

  13. #13
    Geezer confus-ed's Avatar
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    Wouldn't the bottles be better placed 'uphill' of the printer ? easier to pump downhill I'd have thought, & pressumably gravity might provide a little pressure thus reducing the need to pump quite as hard quite as often ?

  14. #14
    Laptops/Notebooks/PDA Mod 3fingersalute's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by confus-ed
    Wouldn't the bottles be better placed 'uphill' of the printer ? easier to pump downhill I'd have thought, & pressumably gravity might provide a little pressure thus reducing the need to pump quite as hard quite as often ?
    Exactly what I was getting ready to suggest.

    Build a small shelf above the printer, take some of the load off of the pump.

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    I was afraid that if I put them higher if ever a leak formed it would syphon all the ink into the printer, anyway with my bigger 16 and 32oz bottles the ink level will be much higher than these tiny 2 and 4oz bottles, and it only gave the out of ink message once while it was nearly empty, I'll wait until I get the bigger bottles and see.

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