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June 26, 2010 at 9:39 AM #17630June 26, 2010 at 10:12 AM #571763CoronitaParticipant
Almost all inkjets type printers can be refillable.
People caught wind of it early, and started to buy bulk ink and pealing the cartridge stickers and putting ink back in the cartridge. (if you take apart a cartridge, most cartridges just have a sponge to hold the ink in side, and you soak the sponge to with new ink)…
Then…evil companies like HP started to get worried. Because the bulk of their print business is selling the supplies rather than the printer itself…(In fact, several printers they make are sold at loss, hoping that supplies sales will offset those losses….You think that $50 color printer from Fry’s HP is really making money on it, even if it’s made in China?)
These companies started to put a chip in the cartridges that would keep track of the date of when the cartridge was first loaded and/or the number of times a print was made. The chip would disable the cartridge after X uses or dates, rather than the ink running low. There were cases in which you bought a cartridge, put it in the printer, didn’t use your printer for a few months, and then when you did use it again, all the sudden your cartridge was “low on ink”…
These evil companies were sued… and lost…So now, all newer printers will only give you “warning” if you are “low on ink”, but if you take it out refill it, and put it back in, it *should* work.
However, if you are unfortunate enough have one of those printers made with the chip before all the lawsuits, chances are someone has figured out a way around those things via hacks…OR, another option is to buy third party “refillable cartridges”, like you see here :
….or convert the printer to a CISS system (continuous feed system) if you do a lot (and I mean A LOT ) of printing.
Actually, that’s the best way to totally screw companies like HP. But a $50 printer which you know costs more like $100+ to make, and then buy a third party refillable ink system for $20-30, and buy generic photo paper and find someone in the I.T. department to give you a free USB cable that HP will probably charge $20 for which most likely they did not include in with the printer…
For your specific printer:::
http://lazybuyer.com/inkjetprinter.php?printer=Brother+MFC-420CN
June 26, 2010 at 10:12 AM #572379CoronitaParticipantAlmost all inkjets type printers can be refillable.
People caught wind of it early, and started to buy bulk ink and pealing the cartridge stickers and putting ink back in the cartridge. (if you take apart a cartridge, most cartridges just have a sponge to hold the ink in side, and you soak the sponge to with new ink)…
Then…evil companies like HP started to get worried. Because the bulk of their print business is selling the supplies rather than the printer itself…(In fact, several printers they make are sold at loss, hoping that supplies sales will offset those losses….You think that $50 color printer from Fry’s HP is really making money on it, even if it’s made in China?)
These companies started to put a chip in the cartridges that would keep track of the date of when the cartridge was first loaded and/or the number of times a print was made. The chip would disable the cartridge after X uses or dates, rather than the ink running low. There were cases in which you bought a cartridge, put it in the printer, didn’t use your printer for a few months, and then when you did use it again, all the sudden your cartridge was “low on ink”…
These evil companies were sued… and lost…So now, all newer printers will only give you “warning” if you are “low on ink”, but if you take it out refill it, and put it back in, it *should* work.
However, if you are unfortunate enough have one of those printers made with the chip before all the lawsuits, chances are someone has figured out a way around those things via hacks…OR, another option is to buy third party “refillable cartridges”, like you see here :
….or convert the printer to a CISS system (continuous feed system) if you do a lot (and I mean A LOT ) of printing.
Actually, that’s the best way to totally screw companies like HP. But a $50 printer which you know costs more like $100+ to make, and then buy a third party refillable ink system for $20-30, and buy generic photo paper and find someone in the I.T. department to give you a free USB cable that HP will probably charge $20 for which most likely they did not include in with the printer…
For your specific printer:::
http://lazybuyer.com/inkjetprinter.php?printer=Brother+MFC-420CN
June 26, 2010 at 10:12 AM #572483CoronitaParticipantAlmost all inkjets type printers can be refillable.
People caught wind of it early, and started to buy bulk ink and pealing the cartridge stickers and putting ink back in the cartridge. (if you take apart a cartridge, most cartridges just have a sponge to hold the ink in side, and you soak the sponge to with new ink)…
Then…evil companies like HP started to get worried. Because the bulk of their print business is selling the supplies rather than the printer itself…(In fact, several printers they make are sold at loss, hoping that supplies sales will offset those losses….You think that $50 color printer from Fry’s HP is really making money on it, even if it’s made in China?)
These companies started to put a chip in the cartridges that would keep track of the date of when the cartridge was first loaded and/or the number of times a print was made. The chip would disable the cartridge after X uses or dates, rather than the ink running low. There were cases in which you bought a cartridge, put it in the printer, didn’t use your printer for a few months, and then when you did use it again, all the sudden your cartridge was “low on ink”…
These evil companies were sued… and lost…So now, all newer printers will only give you “warning” if you are “low on ink”, but if you take it out refill it, and put it back in, it *should* work.
However, if you are unfortunate enough have one of those printers made with the chip before all the lawsuits, chances are someone has figured out a way around those things via hacks…OR, another option is to buy third party “refillable cartridges”, like you see here :
….or convert the printer to a CISS system (continuous feed system) if you do a lot (and I mean A LOT ) of printing.
Actually, that’s the best way to totally screw companies like HP. But a $50 printer which you know costs more like $100+ to make, and then buy a third party refillable ink system for $20-30, and buy generic photo paper and find someone in the I.T. department to give you a free USB cable that HP will probably charge $20 for which most likely they did not include in with the printer…
For your specific printer:::
http://lazybuyer.com/inkjetprinter.php?printer=Brother+MFC-420CN
June 26, 2010 at 10:12 AM #572773CoronitaParticipantAlmost all inkjets type printers can be refillable.
People caught wind of it early, and started to buy bulk ink and pealing the cartridge stickers and putting ink back in the cartridge. (if you take apart a cartridge, most cartridges just have a sponge to hold the ink in side, and you soak the sponge to with new ink)…
Then…evil companies like HP started to get worried. Because the bulk of their print business is selling the supplies rather than the printer itself…(In fact, several printers they make are sold at loss, hoping that supplies sales will offset those losses….You think that $50 color printer from Fry’s HP is really making money on it, even if it’s made in China?)
These companies started to put a chip in the cartridges that would keep track of the date of when the cartridge was first loaded and/or the number of times a print was made. The chip would disable the cartridge after X uses or dates, rather than the ink running low. There were cases in which you bought a cartridge, put it in the printer, didn’t use your printer for a few months, and then when you did use it again, all the sudden your cartridge was “low on ink”…
These evil companies were sued… and lost…So now, all newer printers will only give you “warning” if you are “low on ink”, but if you take it out refill it, and put it back in, it *should* work.
However, if you are unfortunate enough have one of those printers made with the chip before all the lawsuits, chances are someone has figured out a way around those things via hacks…OR, another option is to buy third party “refillable cartridges”, like you see here :
….or convert the printer to a CISS system (continuous feed system) if you do a lot (and I mean A LOT ) of printing.
Actually, that’s the best way to totally screw companies like HP. But a $50 printer which you know costs more like $100+ to make, and then buy a third party refillable ink system for $20-30, and buy generic photo paper and find someone in the I.T. department to give you a free USB cable that HP will probably charge $20 for which most likely they did not include in with the printer…
For your specific printer:::
http://lazybuyer.com/inkjetprinter.php?printer=Brother+MFC-420CN
June 26, 2010 at 10:12 AM #571860CoronitaParticipantAlmost all inkjets type printers can be refillable.
People caught wind of it early, and started to buy bulk ink and pealing the cartridge stickers and putting ink back in the cartridge. (if you take apart a cartridge, most cartridges just have a sponge to hold the ink in side, and you soak the sponge to with new ink)…
Then…evil companies like HP started to get worried. Because the bulk of their print business is selling the supplies rather than the printer itself…(In fact, several printers they make are sold at loss, hoping that supplies sales will offset those losses….You think that $50 color printer from Fry’s HP is really making money on it, even if it’s made in China?)
These companies started to put a chip in the cartridges that would keep track of the date of when the cartridge was first loaded and/or the number of times a print was made. The chip would disable the cartridge after X uses or dates, rather than the ink running low. There were cases in which you bought a cartridge, put it in the printer, didn’t use your printer for a few months, and then when you did use it again, all the sudden your cartridge was “low on ink”…
These evil companies were sued… and lost…So now, all newer printers will only give you “warning” if you are “low on ink”, but if you take it out refill it, and put it back in, it *should* work.
However, if you are unfortunate enough have one of those printers made with the chip before all the lawsuits, chances are someone has figured out a way around those things via hacks…OR, another option is to buy third party “refillable cartridges”, like you see here :
….or convert the printer to a CISS system (continuous feed system) if you do a lot (and I mean A LOT ) of printing.
Actually, that’s the best way to totally screw companies like HP. But a $50 printer which you know costs more like $100+ to make, and then buy a third party refillable ink system for $20-30, and buy generic photo paper and find someone in the I.T. department to give you a free USB cable that HP will probably charge $20 for which most likely they did not include in with the printer…
For your specific printer:::
http://lazybuyer.com/inkjetprinter.php?printer=Brother+MFC-420CN
June 26, 2010 at 10:40 AM #571870briansd1GuestFor faxing you can use a fax to email service such as unityfax.
How about using a laser printer for general printing in black and white?
My networked HP laser printer has been working perfectly for more than 10 years. And I only rarely change the cartridge.
Need to print photos? Just upload to Costco/Snapfish for printing.
June 26, 2010 at 10:40 AM #572493briansd1GuestFor faxing you can use a fax to email service such as unityfax.
How about using a laser printer for general printing in black and white?
My networked HP laser printer has been working perfectly for more than 10 years. And I only rarely change the cartridge.
Need to print photos? Just upload to Costco/Snapfish for printing.
June 26, 2010 at 10:40 AM #571773briansd1GuestFor faxing you can use a fax to email service such as unityfax.
How about using a laser printer for general printing in black and white?
My networked HP laser printer has been working perfectly for more than 10 years. And I only rarely change the cartridge.
Need to print photos? Just upload to Costco/Snapfish for printing.
June 26, 2010 at 10:40 AM #572389briansd1GuestFor faxing you can use a fax to email service such as unityfax.
How about using a laser printer for general printing in black and white?
My networked HP laser printer has been working perfectly for more than 10 years. And I only rarely change the cartridge.
Need to print photos? Just upload to Costco/Snapfish for printing.
June 26, 2010 at 10:40 AM #572783briansd1GuestFor faxing you can use a fax to email service such as unityfax.
How about using a laser printer for general printing in black and white?
My networked HP laser printer has been working perfectly for more than 10 years. And I only rarely change the cartridge.
Need to print photos? Just upload to Costco/Snapfish for printing.
June 26, 2010 at 11:34 AM #572798joecParticipantIn a related question, anyone know good links to buy supplies to refill laser printer toner?
June 26, 2010 at 11:34 AM #571788joecParticipantIn a related question, anyone know good links to buy supplies to refill laser printer toner?
June 26, 2010 at 11:34 AM #572508joecParticipantIn a related question, anyone know good links to buy supplies to refill laser printer toner?
June 26, 2010 at 11:34 AM #572404joecParticipantIn a related question, anyone know good links to buy supplies to refill laser printer toner?
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