Keith, I wouldn't recommend using a leaf blower. Just wipe with a damp cloth where dust is visible and accessible. If you blow it, the dust can fly even deeper, where it definitely shouldn’t go. When using the printer for personal purposes, the pads of absorbent paint from cleaning the nozzles will last for 20 years or more. The chip does not read the amount of ink in the swab, but the printing and cleaning cycles. In my work for 18 months it turned out like this: 15 hours a day - 3 cartridges at the highest print quality. Refilled cartridges sequentially, cannot be used immediately, the paint must flow through the capillaries to the very nozzles (10 hours). An important note on storing spare new cartridges is to store them with the nozzles facing down. After 9-10 months the chip required service cleaning, I reset it programmatically. After two service cleaning requests, the pads of absorbent paint was filled and inflated. Easy to cut from similar material to replace the old one. After 1.5 years, the print head guide rod wore out. That's all, the printer is trash. Replacement or repair is not worth the expense. New printer models were already on the shop.. Maybe this will help someone. Bye, Keith. (Google Transletter) Eduard
Good points for people using the printer more heavily I use a [small] leaf blower quite intentionally, but carefully... and will continue to do so. I may even include it in a video some time ;-) I've used it for years, cleaning computer power supplies, boards and fan systems
Until you mentioned the Pro 200, I was continuously thinking "How similar is the 200?" If there are any significant differences in the maintenance regime, I would very much appreciate a Pro 200 specific video, but very useful nonetheless, thanks.
Sorry for commenting as a epson p700 user here on a canon topic... but thank you so much! Its about the general advice you give about spacing out in time cleaning cycles. Just had my first crisis. LGY not outputing anything. Made some cleaning cycles, nada, did a power cycle, nada, waited 6h did another power cycle, nada, 24h wait, power cycle, aha there is life! One basic cycle, better. Go to work, 8h later, basic cycle: nozle check perfect! Take your time seem essential!
Thanks - The problem is that I can only do a specific video when I have a printer here The printers are loans, I'd not be allowed to live in a printer warehouse, nor can I afford to buy them...
Great advice, Keith. I have a couple of queries. Am I right in thinking that removing excess ink with the towel doesn't prevent the Pro 300 from eventually coming to a halt from too much ink absorbed in the pad? I presume the machine wouldn't know you are cleaning it. Finally, do you happen to use a particular kitchen towel? I'd be worried about fibres getting in the printer. This may not be an issue.
Yes - the pad will eventually fill - or more precisely, the printer's own representation of 'fullness' will hit a limit. As to kitchen towel brand - that depends on which supermarket we most recently visited. Most are designed to be quite robust.
@@KeithCooper If the two printers are the same, just let us know that. I am just thinking about anything new or different between the 200 and the 300 from a maintenance or operational perspective. Thanks.
Thank you for this video. Very helpful down-to-Earth advice. Also reassuring. Something I thought of for blowing the dust out is my Giotto Rocket Blower. This is a small, inexpensive, manually powered tool originally designed for blowing dust off camera sensors (I think), and I’ve had one for many years. It has some filters to remove the air it takes in to then blow out when the bulb is squeezed, so it seems like it might be a safer, more controllable option than the leaf blower. Again, thanks for this video. I find your videos some of the most authoritative on RUclips.
Thanks - much appreciated. Yes, it doesn't need to be super powerful - I just have a battery leaf blower which comes out every so often for computers and printers ;-) [used outside!]
@@KeithCooper High end printers should have some means of blowing away the dust, maybe someone have? Seeing how fast the shiny surface of the p700 get dusty I am carefull only having the printer "open" when printing.
@@ArneHalvorsen63 They do - the P5300 I was testing recently has fans and a vacuum system for minimise dust buildup in the printer - the P700 is a consumer level printer, not 'high end' ;-)
@@KeithCooper Yea I know, was interesting if the bigger ones did address it. Followed your P5300 series, was thinking fans was for heat only and vacume for holding paper, but that is brilliant! If I "move up" actually don´t find the P5300 price (subtracting p900 price) so bad, it is more where would I place the darn thing :)
That's a tricky one - I last had a pro-1000 here in 2016, for my detailed review - only a loan, since I'm not allowed to live in a printer warehouse ;-) The general cleaning principles do apply apart from best usage times/periods
Thanks Keith for this video. I bought a Canon pro 300 2 yrs ago based on your researches and testing ! It’s a great printer but expensive on inks 😢. Quick question… which photo papers/makers creates more dust in a/this printer?
Thanks so much for a great video on the Canon PRO-300. Is there an alternate printer you would recommend of similar size for daily small business use? We print 10-20 prints daily (8x10 and 11x14) and I'd love to avoid the issue of non-replaceable waste ink receptacle, if possible.
On my Pro-300, the far left edge of the foam pad has become so full of ink that is was causing lines of ink on the underside of my prints. I used a tissue as you suggested to blot up most of it, did a bottom plate cleaning - and no more problem. After some 1250 prints, I'm wondering if tthe wate ink container is about full, and if I'm in for a big service bill, or a replacement printer. No idea if this is the case, but I'm annoyed that Canon did not design the printer with a replaceable ink waste container. Love the printer otherwise. Thanks for the info Keith.
It should take a lot more prints than that to 'fill' the pads. That end pad section often only partly dries, leaving thick gooey ink. The kitchen roll really does help clear it. The problem of the PRO-300 design is that it's fundamentally based on the PRO-10 and before that, the 9500ii - there is no way of 're-using' that basic design and adding a replaceable waste tank. The PRO-10 and 100 both lasted 8 years - the 200 and 300 are just shy of four years old Will Canon [or Epson for that matter] have the vision to bring out a higher end multi-ink inktank based printer, or are they too attached to the profit [and dare I say waste] of ink cartridges... ?
Thank you so much, I am in a bit of a panic as I am filling Christmas orders for my Etsy shop and have started to have an issue with one of the leading corners of my card stock sounding like it is "catching" on something, the tip of the paper corner is black and trying to peel a bit! I do alot of borderless printing and am going to have to stop as I didn't know it was bad. I am going to try these ink cleaning suggestions, this printer is only 1.5 years old and cost alot! Wish me luck, I may be back!
Thanks for video! I have a still relatively new Pro 200 (about 4-5 months), so love the information. Quick question, I’ve noticed that printing margins tend to be off consistently by about .25-.75mm, usually around .5mm. This isn’t very noticeable in a larger print like A3+, but easier to see on smaller prints like 5x7 or 4x6. Is this about the range of offset to expect and/or can this be fixed other than “manually” offsetting the margins while printing?
I have been subscribed to your channel for years now, Keith. Your channel is very informative and straight to the point. I can't understand why you don't have more subscribers than you do. After watching this last video of yours, want to ask you this, the ink pad inside the machine is full, does that mean the printer as at the end of it's life and you need a new printer? In your video, you say that when the machine thinks it's full that's it, you cannot do anything about it, it's not user replaceable. I only ask as I do have one of these machines and I do like it. I have never had an issue with it, even though sometimes it is left fir months, without use.
Thanks - still looking for ways of getting the channel 'known' ;-) It won't however start featuring music and other loud 'youtubey' attributes - but I do want to experiment with some outdoor stuff related to some of my architectural photography. I'm told that the internal pad lasts 'for years' even with quite heavy use, but I don't know for sure [I'll ask around] - there are fixes I'm told...
A few questions for you, Keith, Can a nozzle check be done without the printer being connected to a computer? I am going to buy myself a Pro 300, and in the event of being out of the country for an extended time, will cart it off to a mate for safekeeping. He has no computer. Secondly, printing with borders. I assumed that a border was unprinted paper. If this is so, why don't you get overspray on the border? And yet get overspray on the foam when printing borderless. I would have thought the printer would know when to stop spraying as it gets to the edge of a borderless picture. Cheers 👍
Yes - via the menu No, the printer only knows the specified width - you need to print over the edge, with an extended image, to get borderless. No printer I've ever seen detects the edge for such printing.
Keith, the Pro 1000 cleaning cycle that dumped so much ink could be thwarted by running a nozzle check within every 60 hours (if my memory serves). Is there such a period for the Pro 300 as even with a nozzle check every 3 weeks of non-use the ink disappears real fast? Thanks for that excess ink pad and kitchen roll tip.
I don't know specifically - the 300 seems much happier about being left alone than may printers, but this is a real concern. This si something I'd ask on the printing forum at dpreview, since my testing when doing the reviews is generally in quite concentrated bursts.
What printer would you recommend for someone who prints pretty much all day 5 days a week, I have 3 x pro-300's but they continually break down. Thanks for making these videos!
First suggestion would be the PRO-1100 BUT... it depends on just what you are printing Another option to consider is the P5300, but once again depends on what you are printing...
This is super helpful! Is there a video like this for the Canon Pro-1000? I recently purchased it! I do have one issue I'm trying to solve and was hoping you had a solution. I'm using Photoshop to print my art prints, and I tested it by printing a 8.5x11 image on a 8.5x11 paper, but the image printed slightly off-centered or scaled a little larger than 8.5x11 so that it is slightly cut off. I have my print settings and paper size all correct, so I'm not sure why it is doing this. Any idea? I would really appreciate any suggestions! Thank you!
The dust and foam strip are similar [my PRO-1000 review was years ago, when it first came out]. The 1000 is rather more picky about lack of use though. Did you print borderless? Printing an 8.5x11 image at that size is not easy without margins I've a bit more about this in my original review www.northlight-images.co.uk/canon-pro-1000-printer-review/ I'd also suggest trying the Canon PPL software.
Hi Keith. Watched your vid about getting the GFX, hope you really enjoy using it. Do you have any idea of the approximate cost of having the Pro 300 serviced for the waste ink pad? Thanks.
Hi Keith, great video as always. Really informative. I'm wondering if the Canon Pro 300 is coming to a some sort of it's end of life period. It seems that few large retailers such as Wex and Amazon UK are out of stock for some time now. Could this mean that a new model is coming soon alongside some of the big camera announcements from Canon in the next couple of months (R1 and R5 mk II). I'd love purchase the Pro 300, but if there's a new (even slightly) improved model on the horizon, perhaps I should wait until summer? What are your thoughts?
Thanks - The PRO-10 lasted 8 years, the 300 is not yet four. I don't know of anything coming, but I'm not expecting the end of the 300 for several years yet.
Hi, Interesting video. I have an on going issue re the pro 300. Just installed a new M cartridge and the next day to registers 1/2 full. Other issues is it's really quick to run too. Any Ideas.
Hi Keith I am a novice to the printing world so forgive my question if it is obvious I have the pro 300 but how can I set the resolution that is sent to the printer Also I have deleted the AirPrint drivers twice but they keep reappearing am I doing something wrong
It doesn't matter if the AP driver is there, if the 'proper' one is there too. The degree to which this happens seems to be system dependent See here for some more info www.colourphil.co.uk/printing-mac_colour_problems.shtml
As to the resolution - that depends on the editing/printing software you are using See www.northlight-images.co.uk/canon-pro-300-printer-review/ and especially www.northlight-images.co.uk/best-canon-pro-300-driver-settings/
So basically if you have a consumer-level printer, cover it when it’s not in use. If you use it a lot, make sure ink isn’t building up… got it. I do love your videos - just giving you a hard time on this one.
@@KeithCooper Sorry Keith - I have an "old" Canon (Pro 9000 Mark II) and was looking for maintenance tips. I got punchy. I really do love your channel, and Subscribed -- I should really make a rule for myself not to post before coffee. Thanks!
My Canon Pro-300 is printing A3+ B+W with a fade line about 2cm from the final edge and a ink bleed ( with cleaned foam as you suggested) . I printed two pictures and the fade line is in the same place both times ( not on image!). Sadly Canon were not much help... Any ideas would be appreciated. Regards.
Problem solved by the forum. The paper had a curl which I have flattened out. I was also suggested to tick the The Prevent Paper Abrasion Setting but this was not on my mac. By going to hard drive>library>printers>canon> BJPrinter>utilities>canon IJ Printer Utility2>Canon Pro-300 Series>custom settings> tick Disable Paper width detection when printing form computer Apply. This seems to be the same. I'm still waiting for Canon help to reply..Thank you for your assistance. Most appreciated. Regards.
Hello, I have a Canon Prograf 1000 and the ink levels for all my cartridges are all wrong except for the maintenance cartridge. It is because I removed each ink cartridges and put them back because I was looking for a problem. Do you know how I can do a reset to have the real level of ink in each cartridge. Because right now the printer tells me that my ink is low in each cartridge and it is not true.
i own 2 canon printers, Pro 1000 and Pro 6000s. i love both printer, the pro 1000 i use it every day, it gives me peace of mind because canon gives 3 yrs warranty or 30k prints which one reach first. at 10k print (mostly i prints 30,5 x 40,6 cm and yes we are metric system) the printhead died, and canon without no time send me a replacement without no time and no expense. and th pro 6000s we print not many prints, sometimes just 1 or 2 large format prints everyday, but for this printer i have more peace of mind because for large format pro printer series, here Canon gives lifetime printhead warrant for life as long we use original inks, and we buy from them. beforehand we use Epson printers, it was honeymoon at first but it was just living in hell when the printer reach high millages. Epson printehead more expensive than canon, and it need service operation just to replace them, buying new printhead is almost the same buying new printer, with epson we never change printhead, we changed printer...
Hi Keith, I bought this printer over a year ago after watching your detailed reviews, and I'm extremely happy with the quality but I noticed a very worrying behaviour when it comes to ink. I have just replaced some inks again, this time C0 and Y as they "run out". Out of curiosity, this time I weighed new full vs empty cartridges, and the difference was only 10g in both cases. I thought the C0 is just some light fluid but surely yellow pigment ink is heavier than pure water, so I'd expect the difference to be closer to 14g? Once I squeezed the "empty" yellow cartridge, quite a lot of ink came out, a literal puddle on paper towels that took a good moment to absorb. If I'm correct, that's at least 4ml, or 40% of ink I paid for going to the bin just because my printer says so. £60 per set of cartridges, that's a lot. I'd be interested if you notice the same with your cartridges, I print regularly but you must be using yours way more, so there would be no excuse for premature cartridge replacement due to drying out and other marketing nonsense.
When I tested this the carts really were virtually empty, so I've no idea why this would be so. I don't actually use this one very much at all, so I don't have much in the way of good test data
Top tips for myself and other Pro-300 users. Thanks Keith.
Thanks!
Keith, I wouldn't recommend using a leaf blower. Just wipe with a damp cloth where dust is visible and accessible. If you blow it, the dust can fly even deeper, where it definitely shouldn’t go.
When using the printer for personal purposes, the pads of absorbent paint from cleaning the nozzles will last for 20 years or more. The chip does not read the amount of ink in the swab, but the printing and cleaning cycles.
In my work for 18 months it turned out like this: 15 hours a day - 3 cartridges at the highest print quality. Refilled cartridges sequentially, cannot be used immediately, the paint must flow through the capillaries to the very nozzles (10 hours). An important note on storing spare new cartridges is to store them with the nozzles facing down.
After 9-10 months the chip required service cleaning, I reset it programmatically. After two service cleaning requests, the pads of absorbent paint was filled and inflated. Easy to cut from similar material to replace the old one. After 1.5 years, the print head guide rod wore out. That's all, the printer is trash. Replacement or repair is not worth the expense. New printer models were already on the shop..
Maybe this will help someone.
Bye, Keith. (Google Transletter) Eduard
Good points for people using the printer more heavily
I use a [small] leaf blower quite intentionally, but carefully... and will continue to do so. I may even include it in a video some time ;-)
I've used it for years, cleaning computer power supplies, boards and fan systems
@@KeithCooper I corrected the text, Google translated it in the wrong order.
Thank you so much for this video. As a relatively new Pro 300 owner, this is quite helpful.
Glad to help!
Until you mentioned the Pro 200, I was continuously thinking "How similar is the 200?" If there are any significant differences in the maintenance regime, I would very much appreciate a Pro 200 specific video, but very useful nonetheless, thanks.
Essentially the same - but I'll do a PRO-200 one when I've got one here, since the YT system seems to like ones like this :-)
Yes, please add a Pro-200 maintenance video to the when you have one in. It would be much appreciated.
@@connywickstrom9502 until then, just mentally replace every time I say '300' with '200' ;-) :-)
Another vote for a PRO-200 one
@@rogercave6435 on its way next week!
Sorry for commenting as a epson p700 user here on a canon topic... but thank you so much! Its about the general advice you give about spacing out in time cleaning cycles. Just had my first crisis. LGY not outputing anything. Made some cleaning cycles, nada, did a power cycle, nada, waited 6h did another power cycle, nada, 24h wait, power cycle, aha there is life! One basic cycle, better. Go to work, 8h later, basic cycle: nozle check perfect! Take your time seem essential!
Glad it was helpful!
I had an old epson some 20 yrs ago which took a clean every morning for over a week until it burst back into life...
@@KeithCooper Hope you do a p700 / 900 vesrion of this :)
Thanks - The problem is that I can only do a specific video when I have a printer here
The printers are loans, I'd not be allowed to live in a printer warehouse, nor can I afford to buy them...
thank you
Hope it was of help
Thanks so much for this super helpful video Keith from a loyal Pro-300 user!
Glad it was helpful!
Very helpful. Important advice for maintenance and cleaning. Thank you.
Thanks - regular is the key...
Great advice, Keith. I have a couple of queries. Am I right in thinking that removing excess ink with the towel doesn't prevent the Pro 300 from eventually coming to a halt from too much ink absorbed in the pad? I presume the machine wouldn't know you are cleaning it. Finally, do you happen to use a particular kitchen towel? I'd be worried about fibres getting in the printer. This may not be an issue.
Yes - the pad will eventually fill - or more precisely, the printer's own representation of 'fullness' will hit a limit.
As to kitchen towel brand - that depends on which supermarket we most recently visited. Most are designed to be quite robust.
As a future 300 user, thank you. Just trying to make my Pro 10 last until this Fall.
Thanks - they are very similar in some respects.
Excellent tips 👍👏🏻 and I shall definitely put a cloth over the printer to stop dust entering the interior 😊
Thanks - I was surprised at how dusty my house can be some times
Keith, yes, if possible, please do a similar video on the Pro-200. Thanks.
I'll see what I can sort out... [broadly similar, but I appreciate people want to see their printer in the title ;-) ]
@@KeithCooper If the two printers are the same, just let us know that. I am just thinking about anything new or different between the 200 and the 300 from a maintenance or operational perspective. Thanks.
I do need to check for sure, but in the mean time just mentally substitute '200' for every time I say '300' in this video ;-)
Another useful video on the 300, thank you Keith.
Thanks
Thank you for this video. Very helpful down-to-Earth advice. Also reassuring. Something I thought of for blowing the dust out is my Giotto Rocket Blower. This is a small, inexpensive, manually powered tool originally designed for blowing dust off camera sensors (I think), and I’ve had one for many years. It has some filters to remove the air it takes in to then blow out when the bulb is squeezed, so it seems like it might be a safer, more controllable option than the leaf blower. Again, thanks for this video. I find your videos some of the most authoritative on RUclips.
Thanks - much appreciated.
Yes, it doesn't need to be super powerful - I just have a battery leaf blower which comes out every so often for computers and printers ;-) [used outside!]
@@KeithCooper High end printers should have some means of blowing away the dust, maybe someone have? Seeing how fast the shiny surface of the p700 get dusty I am carefull only having the printer "open" when printing.
@@ArneHalvorsen63 They do - the P5300 I was testing recently has fans and a vacuum system for minimise dust buildup in the printer - the P700 is a consumer level printer, not 'high end' ;-)
@@KeithCooper Yea I know, was interesting if the bigger ones did address it. Followed your P5300 series, was thinking fans was for heat only and vacume for holding paper, but that is brilliant! If I "move up" actually don´t find the P5300 price (subtracting p900 price) so bad, it is more where would I place the darn thing :)
Great video, as always. Kind regards from Brazil!
Thanks!
I was nervouse because i hadnt printed in 2 months, did a nozzle check and printheads were ok thankfully 😅 wont do that again
The 300 is pretty good in this respect, but I do prefer to do a nozzle check at least every month
Answered all my questions! Thanks!
Happy to help!
Thank you for this. What is the old adage . . .? "An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure." A great deal less expensive, too!
Glad it was of interest!
Great video, thanks Keith! Can you please do one like this for the Pro-1000?
That's a tricky one - I last had a pro-1000 here in 2016, for my detailed review - only a loan, since I'm not allowed to live in a printer warehouse ;-)
The general cleaning principles do apply apart from best usage times/periods
Thanks Keith for this video. I bought a Canon pro 300 2 yrs ago based on your researches and testing ! It’s a great printer but expensive on inks 😢. Quick question… which photo papers/makers creates more dust in a/this printer?
Thanks - cotton rag papers tend to be the worst, but I don't have any real confidence in saying one is worse than another
Good tips Keith
Thanks!
Thanks so much for a great video on the Canon PRO-300. Is there an alternate printer you would recommend of similar size for daily small business use? We print 10-20 prints daily (8x10 and 11x14) and I'd love to avoid the issue of non-replaceable waste ink receptacle, if possible.
ET-8550 - ink tank printer?
On my Pro-300, the far left edge of the foam pad has become so full of ink that is was causing lines of ink on the underside of my prints. I used a tissue as you suggested to blot up most of it, did a bottom plate cleaning - and no more problem. After some 1250 prints, I'm wondering if tthe wate ink container is about full, and if I'm in for a big service bill, or a replacement printer. No idea if this is the case, but I'm annoyed that Canon did not design the printer with a replaceable ink waste container. Love the printer otherwise.
Thanks for the info Keith.
It should take a lot more prints than that to 'fill' the pads.
That end pad section often only partly dries, leaving thick gooey ink. The kitchen roll really does help clear it.
The problem of the PRO-300 design is that it's fundamentally based on the PRO-10 and before that, the 9500ii - there is no way of 're-using' that basic design and adding a replaceable waste tank.
The PRO-10 and 100 both lasted 8 years - the 200 and 300 are just shy of four years old
Will Canon [or Epson for that matter] have the vision to bring out a higher end multi-ink inktank based printer, or are they too attached to the profit [and dare I say waste] of ink cartridges... ?
Dear Mr Cooper. How to cleaning the waste ink. Thanks
No idea - it is a return for service option
Ask here:
www.printerknowledge.com
thanks, just what i needed
Thanks - glad it was of interest
Thank you so much, I am in a bit of a panic as I am filling Christmas orders for my Etsy shop and have started to have an issue with one of the leading corners of my card stock sounding like it is "catching" on something, the tip of the paper corner is black and trying to peel a bit! I do alot of borderless printing and am going to have to stop as I didn't know it was bad. I am going to try these ink cleaning suggestions, this printer is only 1.5 years old and cost alot! Wish me luck, I may be back!
Hope it works out...
A good place to search/ask about this is
www.printerknowledge.com
@ thank you!
Thanks for video! I have a still relatively new Pro 200 (about 4-5 months), so love the information. Quick question, I’ve noticed that printing margins tend to be off consistently by about .25-.75mm, usually around .5mm. This isn’t very noticeable in a larger print like A3+, but easier to see on smaller prints like 5x7 or 4x6. Is this about the range of offset to expect and/or can this be fixed other than “manually” offsetting the margins while printing?
Thanks - I don't know of an adjustment mechanism for the 200, but take care that the paper is the size you think it is ;-)
Thank you very much.
Glad it was of interest!
I have been subscribed to your channel for years now, Keith. Your channel is very informative and straight to the point. I can't understand why you don't have more subscribers than you do.
After watching this last video of yours, want to ask you this, the ink pad inside the machine is full, does that mean the printer as at the end of it's life and you need a new printer? In your video, you say that when the machine thinks it's full that's it, you cannot do anything about it, it's not user replaceable. I only ask as I do have one of these machines and I do like it. I have never had an issue with it, even though sometimes it is left fir months, without use.
Thanks - still looking for ways of getting the channel 'known' ;-) It won't however start featuring music and other loud 'youtubey' attributes - but I do want to experiment with some outdoor stuff related to some of my architectural photography.
I'm told that the internal pad lasts 'for years' even with quite heavy use, but I don't know for sure [I'll ask around] - there are fixes I'm told...
Great video thanks
Thanks
A few questions for you, Keith, Can a nozzle check be done without the printer being connected to a computer? I am going to buy myself a Pro 300, and in the event of being out of the country for an extended time, will cart it off to a mate for safekeeping. He has no computer. Secondly, printing with borders. I assumed that a border was unprinted paper. If this is so, why don't you get overspray on the border? And yet get overspray on the foam when printing borderless. I would have thought the printer would know when to stop spraying as it gets to the edge of a borderless picture. Cheers 👍
Yes - via the menu
No, the printer only knows the specified width - you need to print over the edge, with an extended image, to get borderless.
No printer I've ever seen detects the edge for such printing.
@@KeithCooper Cheers...enjoy the coffee...and maybe the odd doughnut 👍
Thanks!
Keith, the Pro 1000 cleaning cycle that dumped so much ink could be thwarted by running a nozzle check within every 60 hours (if my memory serves). Is there such a period for the Pro 300 as even with a nozzle check every 3 weeks of non-use the ink disappears real fast? Thanks for that excess ink pad and kitchen roll tip.
I don't know specifically - the 300 seems much happier about being left alone than may printers, but this is a real concern. This si something I'd ask on the printing forum at dpreview, since my testing when doing the reviews is generally in quite concentrated bursts.
What printer would you recommend for someone who prints pretty much all day 5 days a week, I have 3 x pro-300's but they continually break down. Thanks for making these videos!
fyi I am looking to move on from the pro-300 to something that can withstand more usage
First suggestion would be the PRO-1100
BUT... it depends on just what you are printing
Another option to consider is the P5300, but once again depends on what you are printing...
How about good night, how impressive would you recommend me, I am a photographer the pro300 or the pro1000 of canon
Depends on budget and the need for larger prints - I'd prefer the bigger 1000, but it is expensive to run if you don't use it a lot
This is super helpful! Is there a video like this for the Canon Pro-1000? I recently purchased it! I do have one issue I'm trying to solve and was hoping you had a solution. I'm using Photoshop to print my art prints, and I tested it by printing a 8.5x11 image on a 8.5x11 paper, but the image printed slightly off-centered or scaled a little larger than 8.5x11 so that it is slightly cut off. I have my print settings and paper size all correct, so I'm not sure why it is doing this. Any idea? I would really appreciate any suggestions! Thank you!
The dust and foam strip are similar [my PRO-1000 review was years ago, when it first came out]. The 1000 is rather more picky about lack of use though.
Did you print borderless? Printing an 8.5x11 image at that size is not easy without margins
I've a bit more about this in my original review
www.northlight-images.co.uk/canon-pro-1000-printer-review/
I'd also suggest trying the Canon PPL software.
Hi Keith. Watched your vid about getting the GFX, hope you really enjoy using it. Do you have any idea of the approximate cost of having the Pro 300 serviced for the waste ink pad? Thanks.
Yes thanks!
The only figure [unofficial] put it around the £100 mark
Hi Keith, great video as always. Really informative. I'm wondering if the Canon Pro 300 is coming to a some sort of it's end of life period. It seems that few large retailers such as Wex and Amazon UK are out of stock for some time now. Could this mean that a new model is coming soon alongside some of the big camera announcements from Canon in the next couple of months (R1 and R5 mk II). I'd love purchase the Pro 300, but if there's a new (even slightly) improved model on the horizon, perhaps I should wait until summer? What are your thoughts?
Thanks - The PRO-10 lasted 8 years, the 300 is not yet four. I don't know of anything coming, but I'm not expecting the end of the 300 for several years yet.
Also - I've rarely seen much interaction between the printer and camera part of Canon when it comes to marketing ;-)
Hi, Interesting video. I have an on going issue re the pro 300. Just installed a new M cartridge and the next day to registers 1/2 full. Other issues is it's really quick to run too. Any Ideas.
Thanks - I've not enough 300 usage experience I'm afraid...
Place to ask is:
www.printerknowledge.com
So the follow up question would be how is it for Epson? Does it differ?
Broadly similar, but I don't have one here at the moment
@@KeithCooper ok. Thanks
Hi Keith I am a novice to the printing world so forgive my question if it is obvious
I have the pro 300 but how can I set the resolution that is sent to the printer
Also I have deleted the AirPrint drivers twice but they keep reappearing am I doing something wrong
It doesn't matter if the AP driver is there, if the 'proper' one is there too.
The degree to which this happens seems to be system dependent
See here for some more info
www.colourphil.co.uk/printing-mac_colour_problems.shtml
As to the resolution - that depends on the editing/printing software you are using
See
www.northlight-images.co.uk/canon-pro-300-printer-review/
and especially
www.northlight-images.co.uk/best-canon-pro-300-driver-settings/
So basically if you have a consumer-level printer, cover it when it’s not in use. If you use it a lot, make sure ink isn’t building up… got it. I do love your videos - just giving you a hard time on this one.
Yes - that's it, but I've no real desire to do RUclips 'shorts' ;-)
@@KeithCooper Sorry Keith - I have an "old" Canon (Pro 9000 Mark II) and was looking for maintenance tips. I got punchy. I really do love your channel, and Subscribed -- I should really make a rule for myself not to post before coffee. Thanks!
My Canon Pro-300 is printing A3+ B+W with a fade line about 2cm from the final edge and a ink bleed ( with cleaned foam as you suggested) . I printed two pictures and the fade line is in the same place both times ( not on image!). Sadly Canon were not much help... Any ideas would be appreciated. Regards.
I've not seen that - My place to ask would be:
www.printerknowledge.com
@@KeithCooper Thanks very much. I'll give it a go
Problem solved by the forum. The paper had a curl which I have flattened out. I was also suggested to tick the The Prevent Paper Abrasion Setting but this was not on my mac. By going to hard drive>library>printers>canon> BJPrinter>utilities>canon IJ Printer Utility2>Canon Pro-300 Series>custom settings> tick Disable Paper width detection when printing form computer Apply. This seems to be the same. I'm still waiting for Canon help to reply..Thank you for your assistance. Most appreciated. Regards.
@@theblackandwhitefilmproject Thanks for mentioning the fix
Hello, I have a Canon Prograf 1000 and the ink levels for all my cartridges are all wrong except for the maintenance cartridge. It is because I removed each ink cartridges and put them back because I was looking for a problem. Do you know how I can do a reset to have the real level of ink in each cartridge. Because right now the printer tells me that my ink is low in each cartridge and it is not true.
I don't know of a mechanism this - the place I'd ask would be the Canon forum at
www.printerknowledge.com
@@KeithCooper Thank you for your answer.
i own 2 canon printers, Pro 1000 and Pro 6000s. i love both printer, the pro 1000 i use it every day, it gives me peace of mind because canon gives 3 yrs warranty or 30k prints which one reach first. at 10k print (mostly i prints 30,5 x 40,6 cm and yes we are metric system) the printhead died, and canon without no time send me a replacement without no time and no expense. and th pro 6000s we print not many prints, sometimes just 1 or 2 large format prints everyday, but for this printer i have more peace of mind because for large format pro printer series, here Canon gives lifetime printhead warrant for life as long we use original inks, and we buy from them. beforehand we use Epson printers, it was honeymoon at first but it was just living in hell when the printer reach high millages. Epson printehead more expensive than canon, and it need service operation just to replace them, buying new printhead is almost the same buying new printer, with epson we never change printhead, we changed printer...
That sounds good - there was no such lifetime warranties on heads here.
@@KeithCooper in deed, infact here only epson not offering contract services, other brand are offering contract services,
Hi Keith, I bought this printer over a year ago after watching your detailed reviews, and I'm extremely happy with the quality but I noticed a very worrying behaviour when it comes to ink. I have just replaced some inks again, this time C0 and Y as they "run out". Out of curiosity, this time I weighed new full vs empty cartridges, and the difference was only 10g in both cases. I thought the C0 is just some light fluid but surely yellow pigment ink is heavier than pure water, so I'd expect the difference to be closer to 14g? Once I squeezed the "empty" yellow cartridge, quite a lot of ink came out, a literal puddle on paper towels that took a good moment to absorb. If I'm correct, that's at least 4ml, or 40% of ink I paid for going to the bin just because my printer says so. £60 per set of cartridges, that's a lot. I'd be interested if you notice the same with your cartridges, I print regularly but you must be using yours way more, so there would be no excuse for premature cartridge replacement due to drying out and other marketing nonsense.
When I tested this the carts really were virtually empty, so I've no idea why this would be so.
I don't actually use this one very much at all, so I don't have much in the way of good test data