Canon's Megatank: Yet Another Inkjet Scam, Doomed to Fail Thanks to Ink Absorber/Error Code 5b00!

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  • Опубликовано: 1 июн 2024
  • FUN FACT: This is the most viewed video ever published on TBG!
    I typically spend my time reviewing tech products, but this time, I'm going to take one down, the Canon G3200 Megatank printer. There's not enough coverage on the 'net about how Canon's Megatank printers released between 2017 and 2019 are all designed to fail, and since most are still being sold, I thought it was important for me to air Canon's dirty laundry for them!
    The good news: Canon released several Megatank printers after 2020 that have a user-replaceable ink maintenance cartridge. Here are the ones I recommend:
    (1) Canon G3270 Megatank AIO Wireless Printer: amzn.to/33HY3mJ #ad
    This uses the MC G04 maintenance cartridge: amzn.to/46eOXIh
    (2) Canon Pixma G620 AIO Wireless Photo Printer (6-color ink): amzn.to/33VcqnT #ad
    This uses the MC G02 maintenance cartridge: amzn.to/3wFyajr #ad
    IMPORTANT TIP: even with these newer models, print a page every week, even if it's a test page. This allows you to flush the tubes, which cause the real problem in these Megatank printers (jammed nozzles are just the beginning!). Overall it will use less ink than unclogging a serious jam, and won't fill the ink absorber at all!
    Chapters
    00:00 Intro
    01:56 Trying the Ink Head Cleaning to Fix Missing Colors
    02:22 Deep Cleaning Makes it Worse!
    2:50 System Cleaning Bricks the Printer!
    04:06 Error Code 5b00: Canon's Dirty Diaper
    05:50 My Printer is Dead, and Yours Will Die Too!
    06:00 Just Another in a Long History of Inkjet Scams...
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Комментарии • 3,2 тыс.

  • @luisocamp2753
    @luisocamp2753 2 года назад +1931

    FOR ALL THE QUESTIONS PLEASE READ THIS. I LOVE PRINTERS AS MUCH AS INFORMING PEOPLE.
    1.) All other inkjet printers be it Epson, HP, have foam or sponges. Someway or the other all these inkjet printers will also show this absorber error issues. It is impossible for an inkjet to have no absorber foam/sponge.
    2.) Mind you that ink tank printers are designed for use not just for seasonal use. Trust me, here people have been doing third party ink tanks since the 2008's and even factory OEM ink tanks like this Canon Pixma ink tank are prone to air presence (contamination) in the tube line because of ink backflow to the tank because of lack of usage. You should print FULL PAGE COLORED at least once a week to avoid this.
    3.)Due to this absorber foam/sponge issue, CANON has released a new and improved ink tank printers lineup that overcomes this issues. These sponges/foam are now user replaceable in a form of a long cartridge, they call it now "Maintenance Cartridge." Users can just buy this in their local computer stores or online where it may be available and maybe buy bulk just to have some spare, who knows.
    -With the improved canon ink tank printers, users can just screw to remove with a penny the old maintenance cartridge (foam/sponge) and replace it with the new one. Right after that you can continue printing right away, no codes, no reset, no other software needed, no hassle. This new maintenance cartridge have microchips that get detected by the printer once replaced/installed so again no codes, no reset needed.
    -Printers that have this user replaceable cartridge are (variety of model codes depends on where you live)
    Canon Pixma G1020 G2020 G2060 G2260(usa) G3020 G3060 G3060 G3260(usa)
    G500 series, G520(usa) G540 G550 G570
    G600 series, G620(usa) G640 G650 G670
    and other models that has identical body style and design and other latter Canon ink tank models that are designed and released after 2020.
    4.) On the other hand, I still do not recommend Epson because it has a BUILT-IN print heads as oppose to Canon that has REPLACEABLE print heads. When your prints have lines or missing colors even though you run a lot of head cleaning or deep clean then that is a sign that the print heads needs replacing. The only way to acquire a genuine brand new Epson print heads is only via service centers and it is very expensive, trust me I've been there. Unlike canon, just type the code of your print head or printer model online it is available everywhere and replace it yourself. PLUS canon has better photo print output!
    Note:
    1.)This Maintenance Cartridge and Replaceable Print heads are advertised by Canon themselves,
    Here is the video of the advertisement (Asia model name is shown, it may just vary depends on where you live)
    ruclips.net/video/e5nmAJND6W4/видео.html
    2.)Replacement of Maintenance Cartridge and Print heads are other maintenance are well explained in this video
    ruclips.net/video/2Di-_NLMwvQ/видео.html
    I'm in no way affiliated to any printer brands whatsoever. I just like informing people.

    • @TheTechBuyersGuru
      @TheTechBuyersGuru  2 года назад +267

      Very helpful information. I am glad to hear that Canon printers released since 2020 have a user-replaceable sponge. Canon should advertise this feature and remove all prior models off the market.

    • @techwizpc4484
      @techwizpc4484 2 года назад +224

      "This new maintenance cartridge have microchips that get detected by the printer once replaced/installed so again no codes, no reset needed."
      It's another scam. Damn Canon and their stupid chips. They should just switch to a waste ink tank than a sponge. A tank is easier to empty like those modded printers. How much do those maintenance cartridge cost again?

    • @tk421tt
      @tk421tt 2 года назад +168

      They’re switching their tricks from chipped ink cartridges to chipped maintenance cartridges?

    • @no_peace
      @no_peace 2 года назад +69

      You have to consult with Canon to get print heads for some of their printers. I'm not sure which ones but I know the g6020 is only available through customer service BY PHONE!
      If the printers require weekly full page printing, the printers should be programmed to print weekly on their own if they haven't been used. I hate this printer so much

    • @janepool6929
      @janepool6929 2 года назад +38

      Sure wish I could print this out , but can't

  • @BillyTubememe
    @BillyTubememe 2 года назад +1705

    Props to you for having enough integrity to walk back and criticise something that you previously endorsed. Not everyone can do that. Thank you for this informative PSA

    • @TheTechBuyersGuru
      @TheTechBuyersGuru  2 года назад +78

      You're welcome! This was easy because I bought the Canon at retail. Once you have a relationship with a company, well, you can guess how this type of video would go over. But I'm still considering doing one like that for another product I've reviewed previously that has been a total bomb from a long term perspective.

    • @BillyTubememe
      @BillyTubememe 2 года назад +24

      @@TheTechBuyersGuru If you know that a product is behaving differently over long term, whether good or bad, you should actually do an updated review, or at least a PSA, like this video.

    • @robertbodnar8745
      @robertbodnar8745 Год назад

      absorber problem fixing by reflashing the rom... and taking out the drain into some bottle...
      The bigger problem of this series is lifetime & cost of the printheads!!!
      a much better lifetime have the HP tanks, but the absorber problem is a way more dissaster!!
      Epson only one is good to go (end Brother maybe, didn`t try, but it must be similar to Epson

    • @bluef1sh926
      @bluef1sh926 Год назад

      It's a truly rare thing.

    • @ThisOLmaan
      @ThisOLmaan Год назад

      @@robertbodnar8745 : How long will these Laser Printer cartridges last? i too have the Cannon 3200 Tanker I had it for a while and printed too many to count unlike the HP cartridge only printed 30-40 if lucky prints no Photo regular prints. But I don't like the idea that I have to use my printer to keep it in working condition.

  • @evo5dave
    @evo5dave Год назад +262

    After many years of many inkjets I came to the conclusion there is no such thing as a good inkjet. As someone who rarely needs colour anyway, I binned my last inkjet and bought a black laser. Sending something to print and just have it print without 5 minutes of whirring and without splodges or lines or a complete failure to print is a great feeling.

    • @Ass_Burgers_Syndrome
      @Ass_Burgers_Syndrome 9 месяцев назад +25

      Same here, I bought a 39 dollar Pantum wireless black laser printer 8 years ago and it still works fine ... on the original toner cart too! Granted we don't use it daily, or sometimes weeks go by but when we turn it on to use it it works every time. Inkjets are dead to me. If I need a photo or color print I'll go to Walgreens.

    • @langdons2848
      @langdons2848 9 месяцев назад +11

      @@Ass_Burgers_Syndrome same. I have had a cheap Brother A4 laser printer for 12 years. Put one new toner cartridge in it in that time. Colour prints I send out to a print shop. Cheaper in the end, better paper, and better results.

    • @Axeiaa
      @Axeiaa 9 месяцев назад +3

      Added bonus: If you run some kind of home (automation) server using a non-windows OS, support for laser printers tends to be a lot better than for inkjet printers.

    • @aristotle_4532
      @aristotle_4532 9 месяцев назад +4

      If you do your research and get a high end head and ink system in an affordable model, it is far better and more capable than any laser, and at much lower cost. I got 10 epson wf-5190 on an offer for 100 euro each. 3200 nozzles. 10 pages in normal quality duplex. Catridges stay fixed. Pigment inks. If you print a page every month it stays clean. I use them for different things, but the ones I have used all work fine. They are OK after many years in storage also. They are compatible with large refillable cartridges if you want to do that. The only way to get nozzle problems is to leave it off for many many months but that shouldn't be very hard to fix with the right liquid, and no, clean cycles do not reqlly clean nozzles .You can find tests for this class of injets that test paper feeding in heavy usage. Color lasers below 1000 euro are low quality high cost garbage and even business models are designed to scam businesses that cannot calculate total cost of ownership. Kyocera is a good brand if you want low cost mono and color, but only the expensive models.

    • @langdons2848
      @langdons2848 9 месяцев назад

      @@aristotle_4532 no one was talking about colour laser printers and you are still saying I have to print once a month or risk having to clean heads.
      I rarely print anything, but when I do I need it to work reliably. Which a laser will always do. As for "better" I'll always take a black laser print over a black ink jet print.
      And cost? I think my printer cost me about AUD $60. And replacement toner cartridges are perhaps $40 (which I've used one of in 12 years).
      Inkjets are great if you need colour and print regularly, otherwise they are a waste of time and money.

  • @engo8207
    @engo8207 9 месяцев назад +77

    I think the best way to handle this problem (and when you use the printer not so often) is buy a black laser printer for basic prints at home and print your photos at a printingstation (higher quality) in supermarket or so.

    • @lukaswolf3012
      @lukaswolf3012 8 месяцев назад +3

      but you must have luck with printer, accepting third party toner cartridges without chips, which is scarce now, so dont throw your Canon LBP 2900 or HP 1018 for lack of wifi, duplex, or other modern features, maybe its USB only, but it works since 2012, and with every toner you change drum (part responsible to print quality) too. I have them both in my repair shop, lending them as spare printers free of charge, until repair/replace customers original one.

    • @ereder1476
      @ereder1476 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@lukaswolf3012 just don't go with hp canon or epson. why would you got for brand that are known to eb scammer for inkect printer? why wouldn't they scam you on laser printer ?
      I juts use brother and i am not disapointed for now . but i'm sure other brand works fine

    • @claudiadillman427
      @claudiadillman427 5 месяцев назад +1

      Still using HP 1018 purchased refurbished for $100 in 2008 with NO Problems. Now on my 3rd all-in-one color inkjet printer. Really need scan function and the occasional color print for diagrams, greeting cards from original watercolor scans, photo not so much.

    • @brandonchutt312
      @brandonchutt312 17 дней назад +1

      I just buy the cheapest printer and instead of buying new cartridges, I get a new printer. That way I know these companies are losing money.

  • @sudo008
    @sudo008 9 месяцев назад +61

    I've been wary of these kinds of issues with ink printers - so I went with a Brother colour laser all-in-one *because* of how little printing I do. Sure, it's more expensive - but my reasons were two-fold: 1: Toner doesn't "dry out", and 2: It has good Linux support. 🙂

    • @typingcat
      @typingcat 6 месяцев назад

      Laser printers emit harmful particles.

    • @AWopBopaLoo
      @AWopBopaLoo 6 месяцев назад +2

      I've always liked Brother - I had a monochrome laser printer that worked faithfully for years. I'm in. I'll go to a print shop for my color!

    • @enigmamyth
      @enigmamyth 5 месяцев назад +1

      well if you don't have budget issue than laser printer is the way to go but otherwise inktank is mostly affordable for everyone

  • @zUltraXO
    @zUltraXO Год назад +574

    I honestly believe that the only way these types of inkjet printers can be fixed is if a law gets made against them

    • @itsourlife
      @itsourlife Год назад +6

      😂🤣👌

    • @itsourlife
      @itsourlife Год назад +35

      We are definitely need laws knowing what Apple did

    • @jllrue
      @jllrue Год назад +7

      Yeah we need more laws, nobody follows the ones we have now!

    • @Jsclet
      @Jsclet 11 месяцев назад

      Absolutely!! This should be criminal. Look they are shutting down our energy because of Global Warming, but then it’s ok for all these corporations to flood the United States wait planned obsolescence junk.

    • @leeg5678
      @leeg5678 10 месяцев назад

      apple and samsung has paid in dimes and nickles back and forth. nobody cares

  • @masterphoenixpraha
    @masterphoenixpraha Год назад +219

    All the inkjet scam was the reason i gave up on them... Got me a good colour laser printer for efficient and economical normal printing. And when I need a good photo print, i simply go out and pay for it - pay per print... It's much easier and i don't have to hate myself for making a poor buying decisions over time 🙂

    • @Jdbye
      @Jdbye Год назад +3

      You could even get one of those dedicated photo printers, the paper isn't cheap but they make damn nice prints and it's still probably cheaper than a printing service (and photo printing services are disappearing)

    • @ledsalesoz
      @ledsalesoz Год назад +8

      Just posted something similar and then saw your comment, spot on, colour laser all the way. But even then, you have to get the right one, have been using Kyocera ecosys units for a couple of decades now, they really are great and cheap to run.

    • @amacaddict
      @amacaddict Год назад +8

      I too gave up the inkjet and went to laser, tired of the scam. My printer prints pretty good photos.

    • @masterphoenixpraha
      @masterphoenixpraha Год назад

      @@Jdbye well, with such printer you are stuck with the given paper dimensions. And i don’t print my photos so often that I’d have usage for such a dedicated device.

    • @masterphoenixpraha
      @masterphoenixpraha Год назад

      @@ledsalesoz i got my HP some years ago, one of the first with AirPrint support. And pretty happy with it since than… one just have to ignore the low toner message for a while and gets to print many pages with that :)

  • @volundrfrey896
    @volundrfrey896 9 месяцев назад +16

    The only thing I miss from working at an office is that I could just use their printer that one time every year I need to print something. Luckily I've learned that I can print at my local library for just a few bucks so that's what I do now. It's gonna take me a decade at least to rack up the cost of a single set of toner cartridges.

  • @thegreatdeconstruction
    @thegreatdeconstruction 9 месяцев назад +51

    I recommend the Ecotank series for my consumer customers. The ink maintenance boxes are cheap (10-25$) and they aren't hard to manually flush if you absolutely must. I just recommend that my clients print at least 1 page a week in full color to keep the ink flowing properly.

    • @DeltaRana4
      @DeltaRana4 9 месяцев назад +11

      Ditto. I can fully recommend the Epson EcoTank series. I've had the ET-2500 for 7 years now and not had a problem. All the ink tanks have only been re-filled once in that time.

    • @ryan_9620
      @ryan_9620 9 месяцев назад +12

      Absolutely. I say the same thing for my customers. The issue he was experiencing is just a head clog due to inactivity. Isopropyl alcohol usually fixes it. Of course if he runs cleaning after cleaning he’ll saturate the sponge. That’s what it’s designed for. Running a print once a week prevents all of this.

    • @trym2121
      @trym2121 9 месяцев назад

      Epson also has these problems. Need a counter reset and sponge replacement. Just search it yourself, l5190 InkPad reset

    • @jeffskent
      @jeffskent 9 месяцев назад

      I have an Epson 2400 less than a year old that printed regularly and still stopped all color printing except black. Called Epson and installed new drivers and did a power cleaning and it works well now and I print a color print every week til the sponges fill up and then probably dump the machine and go back to cartridges and it is a shame. More expensive Epsons have user replaceable sponges but I don't want to pay $500 for a printer I rarely use as I am retired 12 years and love every minute of it.@@ryan_9620

    • @AbsoluteRandomnessYT
      @AbsoluteRandomnessYT 8 месяцев назад

      I have an Epson EcoTank L6170 all-in-one printer that has a removable maintenance box that an end user can do it without the hassle, and the maintenance box is fairly cheap. It may be a premium-priced printer, but it was worth the money for a hassle-free user experience.
      As for the budget oriented EcoTank models (ex. L121) though, the waste tank isn't "user installable/replaceable" as Epson states and must be serviced by authorized Epson service centers. But it doesn't mean it can't be possible for a user to install/replace with a 3rd party ink pad (in fact, it's stupid easy and you can find video tutorials on how to do it on youtube). And there's a free 3rd party utility app to reset the waste ink counter.

  • @doug8171
    @doug8171 2 года назад +306

    Canon G3260 megatank has replacable maintenance cartridge now for $10, perhaps in part due to videos like this. Good job, I think you have made a difference!

    • @Vinni-2K
      @Vinni-2K Год назад +3

      @@edhgsilva you did well, either way its made in china

    • @larrysteimle2004
      @larrysteimle2004 Год назад

      @@edhgsilva what and where is the chip? How about a photo?

    • @sunriseboy4837
      @sunriseboy4837 11 месяцев назад

      @@edhgsilva 👍👍

    • @sammygalaxo4715
      @sammygalaxo4715 2 месяца назад

      Indeet that's a very good solution. Unfortunately this series of printers doesn't support recto-verso-printing. And those, who do, do not have the maintenance cartridge. It's a shame.

    • @leswatson
      @leswatson 7 дней назад

      You still have to stop the continuous error message telling you the waste ink absorber is full. You can only do this by reprogramming the eeprom (firmware.) The web explains this is done by pressing the on/off button and the Ready button in a sequence that only works on your particular model, but this completely erases the eeprom and "bricks" the printer. Believe me I found this the hard way 😩

  • @juanpimentel5577
    @juanpimentel5577 Год назад +263

    An inkjet printer has tiny inkjets, so tiny they are prone to clog if you don't use the printer regularly, so my advice is: if you don't print at least once a day you're better off with a laser printer, period.

    • @Netlogic.
      @Netlogic. Год назад +25

      Yup, I have a Samsung laser printer that I bought sometime around 2010 still on its original toner cartridge. I print on average 1-2x per year and whenever I turn it on it just works, every time.

    • @Greneby1
      @Greneby1 Год назад +23

      It’s still a scam with the counter that stops it from printing.

    • @ChoongYeow
      @ChoongYeow Год назад +25

      the reason most invest in inkjet are to print photos at home, using high grade photo papers. Laser cant do that , still far behind for photo printing quality.

    • @pablopicaro7649
      @pablopicaro7649 Год назад +1

      @@Netlogic. Samsung was superb, but bought out by HP and all production sent to garbage dump, production lines sent to garbage dump

    • @chad134
      @chad134 Год назад +2

      This! Although photos won't be as good. I did this and my laser finally started leaking toner all over the page as it prints. But that was maybe after 15 years.

  • @christinekersting8898
    @christinekersting8898 5 месяцев назад +1

    I used HP printer for 30 years. Came along this one and thought this is it. Experiencing the same problems than you and I regret so much I bought this. Brings so often the weirdest error codes. Never another canon for me :) Thanks so much for your time to make this video.

  • @Grey_Duck
    @Grey_Duck 9 месяцев назад +27

    As someone who used to do large format printing professionally, the printers I used had a “waste tank” that basically looked like another ink cartridge. Those stupid things were expensive.

    • @KirranLewis
      @KirranLewis 7 месяцев назад

      Are Canon Arizona 6160 xts and 6170 xts printers have a waste tank with a tap that we drain out when its full.

  • @szaboistvan007
    @szaboistvan007 Год назад +83

    Let me share my experience about this printer: I rarely print anything, so printheads are regularly clogged up once I get to print something. Last time it was so bad as I couldn't unclog it with any maintenance option available, not even deep clean. I took out the printheads, got a syringe with warm water, and pushed the water through the printheads until it was just pure water coming out. Sucked out/drained the remaining water, put back the printheads, initiated a deep clean (or some kind of clean) and all colors started to work flawlessly. I don't remember the exact steps as I did it like a year ago. Just as an FYI, that you can unclog your printer this way as well, but if you do it this way, you must accept that you are doing it on your own risk.

    • @user-rn1br5tq5j
      @user-rn1br5tq5j Год назад +2

      Mine auto cleans if I leave it plugged in. If you pack it in storage then you're SOL

    • @dudmanjohn
      @dudmanjohn Год назад +1

      Yes, but that wasn't the problem.

    • @underwaterdick
      @underwaterdick Год назад

      Clogged heads are not his issue though.
      It's a full waste sponge.

    • @szaboistvan007
      @szaboistvan007 Год назад +1

      @@dudmanjohn yeah, but this way you can reduce the ink amount getting in the sponge. With this you cannot solve the obvious problem of course...

    • @itsourlife
      @itsourlife Год назад

      @@user-rn1br5tq5j What do you have?

  • @technics6215
    @technics6215 2 года назад +77

    Thank you for publishing this. All computer hardware related youtubers should publish videos like this. Maybe printer manufacturers will stop wasting our money (and environment with broken printers).

  • @olachus
    @olachus 9 месяцев назад +12

    I've paid $179 for the G7020 from Canon and it is their flagship for the ecotank printers. All the needed features and technologies included and it works great so far (1 year old now).

    • @dashcam3098
      @dashcam3098 3 месяца назад +3

      I'm at two years and nothing but problems with the same printer and the new heads are back ordered and you can't get them and the Canadian price is almost $500.00 for this junk.

    • @JimInNashville
      @JimInNashville 15 дней назад

      @@dashcam3098 Me too. Nothing but problems. Not to mention that when the waste ink pad is full, you can't replace it. You need to pay several hundred dollars for service!

  • @michaelclark6941
    @michaelclark6941 9 месяцев назад +2

    If only someone designed a printer that wasn't a scam...it's like they could wreck the market.

  • @kathychrzaszcz2352
    @kathychrzaszcz2352 Год назад +39

    Thank you so freaking much for this video. I have this issue right now and I'm absolutely screwed. Canon told me my prints started getting streaky because you need to use it everyday to prevent clogs. They don't tell you this of course. And they don't warn you that the deep clean will fill your ink absorber either. They are absolutely scamming.

  • @wstml555
    @wstml555 2 года назад +53

    I think its a lot more economical to go to anywhere that allows you to pay money to print / photocopy. Even if copying with color costs more, its still a lot better than buying a new printer / copier that starts to play up and becomes unusable. Many thanks for the video, you have saved me a lot of money.

    • @learner5090
      @learner5090 2 года назад +5

      Thats true, you pay for electricity, printer, ink ans paper...

  • @coldReactive
    @coldReactive 9 месяцев назад +1

    What all-in-one scanner/printer would you recommend for someone who doesn't need fax, but wants a paper tray so that they don't have to feed them from the back/top. But I also won't be using it much, since I only make copies/print pages once every 4-6 months? Note that I have to do at least 4-6 pages those times. I've been told to use laser printers, like the HP LaserJet MFP M140we. Wondering what you think.

  • @Gerald_Hunker
    @Gerald_Hunker 9 месяцев назад +1

    I've encountered many of those issues in approx. 15 years of inkjet printer use. When I finally was fed up and came up with the following solution: Buy a Color Laser Printer for 300 Euros and have my photos printed by a print service. OK, I want less than 50 photos to be printed out in 4 years, but this solution has perfectly worked out for me. No toner change in 5 years, no hassle, no scam.

  • @VidClips858
    @VidClips858 2 года назад +77

    I've been researching tank printers for a couple of months. This has to be the most informative video I've found yet. Thank you!

    • @muayyadalsadi
      @muayyadalsadi Год назад +2

      I've an "HP Smart Tank" for more than a year. So far so good. Just make sure to print something every couple of weeks so that it wount dry and jam.

  • @mychromebook9935
    @mychromebook9935 Год назад +123

    as others mentioned, if you own a color printer, you pretty much have to print a color page every week to keep the nozzle from drying up. The longer it sits, the more cleaning it will require. If it sits for a few months it may be too far dried and it won't come out the nozzle at all.

    • @Tom-ku8bu
      @Tom-ku8bu Год назад +19

      That's why we started to buy laser printer since they were more relayable or don't try out

    • @moiskyrie
      @moiskyrie Год назад +2

      My office inkjet printer, if no print in 1 week or more, sure will need initiate print head cleaning…
      But my canon maxify, I left it with out ink in the box for 2 year I think, after few flushing, can use again, but the ink expensive..

    • @Darkk6969
      @Darkk6969 Год назад +8

      @@Tom-ku8bu Yep, I have a small Xerox Phaser color printer that's well over 10 years old and only paid $199 for it. I've replaced the inks a few times with a 3rd party and it kept on printing without issues. Even I haven't used the printer for months it still works without going through the cleaning nonsense.

    • @stich1960
      @stich1960 Год назад +2

      But the cleaning process should fix it mine never did but my brother version is perfect and will self clean

    • @paulmichaelfreedman8334
      @paulmichaelfreedman8334 Год назад +3

      @@Tom-ku8bu plus a laser print is somewhat moist proof, one speck of water on an inkjet print and it's ruined as the ink starts dissolving again.

  • @sankijuhcphawa6583
    @sankijuhcphawa6583 9 месяцев назад +4

    I got 99800+ total prints from this printer and still working. During this time I had to replace only once the print head for black colour. Regarding the ink not coming, you have to open the ink tank lid during ink flush to let out the air and pressure that is stuck in the ink pipe. For the waste ink you have to use an external tank to prevent the waste pad full.
    You have to understand the basic functionality for each printer. Each printer is designed differently.

  • @PowNyTales
    @PowNyTales 10 месяцев назад +12

    Thank you, you came up with this! Can absolutely feel your disappointment. I bought the same printer. In my case he likes to chew the sheets… error 1300
    So that’s the way we go nowadays 😊

    • @nrich5127
      @nrich5127 9 месяцев назад +2

      Try a top quality Xerographic paper - don't store your paper in a humid basement.

    • @trekker683
      @trekker683 9 месяцев назад +1

      I just picked it up on clearance for 55$ the other day.

    • @PowNyTales
      @PowNyTales 9 месяцев назад

      @@nrich5127 hey thank you! That’s a good tip, to pay attention to a humidity 👍. Would never think about, that printer over 300€ would strike because of slight humidity changes. (No offence on you! 🍀)
      Storing my paper in my table. The humidity is the same as in the whole appartement.

  • @GR-cd2kx
    @GR-cd2kx 2 года назад +41

    I’ve basically given up with printers. I had an old Samsung laser printer I spent hours trying to get to print with no success. I Decided to buy the cheapest I can get especially since I print very little. I dislike that this will probably create more ewaste even though I will recycle at end of life. I wonder if the right to repair movement will have a positive effect on printers as well

    • @azizurrahaman2101
      @azizurrahaman2101 Год назад

      Never buy HP or Canon for basic printing. If you really need a printer buy Epson or Brother inktank printer. If you don't use your printer regularly, never shut down your printer. It will allow the printer to clean it's head when required. You also need a resetting software, which you can get from online for free. If everything goes wrong you still can physically clean the head. Just unscrew the head and flash mild warm water inside the head and reattach it after drying. I got more than one lakh colour prints from my Epson with 3rd party ink.

  • @DragonfireRC
    @DragonfireRC 2 года назад +38

    The new Canon PIXMA G620 Megatank printer has a user replaceable maintenance cartridge for $9.99 which solves this issue. As far as the clogging, inkjet printers will clog if not used, just print a color document once a week or so and you won't clog up. Luckily these Megatank printers use dye based inks, which are water based, which don't clog as easily as pigment ink printers. I own the new G620 and it is a fantastic 6 color photo printer for only $299 with a built in scanner too. So, far I have not had any problems with my unit, and it sips ink. Came with a full set of inks too, not a starter set. My ink tanks are still full after about 100 4x6 so far. Those sponges at the bottom were a hassle on all older inkjet printers, I had an Epson 2200 photo printer that filled up its non-replaceable sponge too, and that was an expensive printer. More of the modern ones have replaceable waste cartridges. So, when buying one, make sure the printer has a replaceable one, or the printer will be disposable...lol.

    • @TheTechBuyersGuru
      @TheTechBuyersGuru  2 года назад +2

      Awesome info. I will check out that model. I did look into whether canon had changed its ways since my 2017 model, and missed your model. It's brand new but sold out, so didn't come up in searches on Amazon. Here it is, can't be ordered: amzn.to/38GXlFn

    • @DragonfireRC
      @DragonfireRC 2 года назад +2

      @@TheTechBuyersGuru Yes, it is new and always sold out. Very popular. I got mine at Adorama. Had to wait a month on my order, but was able to get one. They don't charge until the unit is shipped. Like I said, I have been very pleased with it, photo output is very good with the 6 inks as opposed to the 4 in the old units.

    • @TheTechBuyersGuru
      @TheTechBuyersGuru  2 года назад +1

      Thanks for all this feedback. As much as I've been burned with photo printing so far, I am nearly convinced to buy the G620 anyway, thanks to you, LOL!

    • @DragonfireRC
      @DragonfireRC 2 года назад +1

      @@TheTechBuyersGuru Lol...so much pressure. Do I have to go into hiding if you have a problem?

    • @dijackson5455
      @dijackson5455 2 года назад

      @@TheTechBuyersGuru i got mine delivered from Canon yesterday. I am so excited to try it out.

  • @chrismcl6373
    @chrismcl6373 9 месяцев назад +11

    I literally just ditched my old Canon Pixma because it threw up the ink absorber error - I can’t believe I’d never heard of this before! And your description of it as a ‘diaper’ was exactly how I was describing it. I tried to full the printer apart to see if I could fix it, but the process was so convoluted and messy I gave up, dumped the whole thing at a recycling centre and came home with a cheap little laser. No mess, no fuss, and it prints like a dream

    • @johncoenraads9681
      @johncoenraads9681 9 месяцев назад +4

      When my Pixma showed the absorber error code I just set the printer in a small boot tray and decided to let it leak if it should overflow. Then I reset the error code. Now after two years, it's still running fine and still no leakage. Talk about crying wolf!
      And yes, replacing the absorber pads is ridiculously complicated.

    • @SK-lt1so
      @SK-lt1so 9 месяцев назад +1

      What laser printer did you get?

    • @chrismcl6373
      @chrismcl6373 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@SK-lt1so I need to check my messages more often. It’s a brother hl-l2350d which was the cheapest I could find ;-)

    • @chrismcl6373
      @chrismcl6373 8 месяцев назад

      @@johncoenraads9681 I gave up - the Pixma was getting elderly and cantankerous, and tbh we print so rarely it was using more ink to prime the nozzles than was being used to actually print. It was very cathartic to pull apart, though

  • @free_at_last8141
    @free_at_last8141 9 месяцев назад +1

    It's not design failure, it's blatantly designed to fail. What a horrible example of Corporate greed.

  • @SuperSatturno
    @SuperSatturno 2 года назад +54

    i was about to buy this efficient” printer but after this honest review, I just thank you so much for not letting me fall in such scam !!!!👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍

  • @b127_1
    @b127_1 Год назад +23

    I just have a black and white laser printer. It always fires right up and ive not even used all of the included toner. 10/10. For photos that actually matter, you can always go to a print shop.

    • @unitrader403
      @unitrader403 Год назад +2

      i have one too, has lasted 5 Years so far and the Printer lately mentoined the Cartridge might be empty soon, so we have a replacement at hand when that happens :D but this might be another year or two away, no idea. Also doesnt matter since the Powder doesnt dry up.

  • @benjaminwaldbaum4516
    @benjaminwaldbaum4516 2 месяца назад +1

    there is a fix for the problem if your error code is 5B00: First, put a few sheets of paper in back of printer. Then you need to reset the printers internal determination of the ink absorbers saturation. This is done by first turning the printer off. Then hold the stop button, and then hold the power button. then let go of the stop button. while continue to hold the power button, press the stop button 5 times and then let go of the power button. this will make the printer go into service mode. Once it is in service mode (screen will look black), push stop button 3 times, and then power button and information page will print. On the printed page, on the second line it should say D=100 which means the ink sponge is full. Now you can reset that to zero by hitting stop button 5 times and then hitting power button and then it will print a sheet of paper which will say D=0.000. Now to confirm, print another info sheet by hitting stop 3 times and then power button and you should see on second line that D=0.000 and now the printer thinks your sponge is empty. Turn the printer off by hitting the power button. When you turn it back on, it will back to normal. This link describe the first step: ruclips.net/video/UUMncb-vJPE/видео.html
    Next, you need to open up the back of the printer where the ink absorber sponge is usually kept, remove it, clean it in soapy water, dry it, and then reinstall the ink pad. Then you are good as new.
    Tech Guru, I think you should update your video to include this fix.

  • @songsan807
    @songsan807 9 месяцев назад +2

    Canon and Epson went through the route of the refillable ink tanks that were popular from gray market ink vendors since the 90s. The technology is very old. I remembered getting a pre-configured epson R200 printer with the ink tank kit for about $200. Printed over 10,000 pages for the next 5 years so it is worth the investment.
    Since you got the printer since 2017, it gave about 5 years of use. Unfortunately you only use it for 50 photos. Give you props for the courage to go back on your previous review.

  • @bradleyhurley6755
    @bradleyhurley6755 Год назад +17

    The biggest problem with Ink Jet printers is that they are made to be used. If you are just printing a single picture out once a month, a Printer at home isn't really ideal unless you go laser.

    • @Sashazur
      @Sashazur 9 месяцев назад +1

      I agree. But they are not marketed that way. Regular consumers have no idea that they’re intended for frequent use until they learn my painful and expensive experience.

    • @bradleyhurley6755
      @bradleyhurley6755 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@Sashazur I have found even using it once a week, the black ink has a habit of clogging. Interestingly, the color ink has been working fine for me.

  • @sysghost
    @sysghost Год назад +10

    It's not a fail. It all works as intended.
    You're supposed to hand the printer in for an expensive service or buy a new printer. (Most likely the latter)
    It is by design. It is how the manufacturer makes money.
    My tip:
    Never *ever* buy any kind of liquid/ink based printers.
    Go for laser/toner printers. They last a lot longer and don't clog up.

  • @tenkikun
    @tenkikun 9 месяцев назад +2

    My color laser printer came with cartridges and the first color said it was empty 150 pages ago, yet it prints fine. Right now 3 out of 4 cartriges say they are empty yet it prints fine.
    Not sure if Canon is saying its empty when 25% is actually left or something... annoying to have to tell the printer to keep printing every reboot etc.

  • @Eric-dh5pf
    @Eric-dh5pf 9 месяцев назад +2

    For those who just do occasional printings at home, I would suggest the Brother MFCL3750CDW, coloured print, Auto 1-travel-2-side ADF, auto 2-side printing, laser printer.
    The only downside is: genuine Brother toner cartridges and drumps are not cheap (but 3rd party cartridges are available and not rejected by the machine)

  • @RobertLeeAtYT
    @RobertLeeAtYT Год назад +17

    I love the Ecotank series. I have two. One is a 6 color model dedicated for photography. Color output quality is unbeatable; print cost is lower than high volume monochrome laser.
    1. Your printer must be an older model than mine. I have a ET-7550 that I've been using heavily for about 5 years now. On this printer, there's a removable exhaust ink box. It's good for maybe 20 thousand pages. I've replaced that maybe four or five times. It's ~$10 direct from Epson; Amazon prices are much higher.
    2. The print head does plug - no matter how regularly you print. The key thing to recognize is that the built in cleaning procedure just doesn't work well. Effective cleaning means a more manual (and undocumented) process. For my usage pattern, this manual deep clean is necessary maybe once every 5 reams of paper. That's around 2500 sheets.
    Okay, here's how to clean:
    1. Start printing something; the nozzle check is fine. The point is to pull power when the print head is near middle of the print carriage.
    2. Take a sheet of kitchen paper towel. Roll that into a strip of around 1.5in wide. Saturate it with Windex.
    3. Slip the strip under the print head. Hold both ends of the strip. Lift until you feel tension against the print head. Pull the strip back and forth along its length. You'll see thick blotches of ink bleed onto the towel strip. You're literally wiping dried ink off the print head.
    4. Repeat step 3 another once or twice more. Shove the print head back toward the right edge of the printer. Plug it back in.
    5. That's it. The print head is now cleared for another 2500 sheets.

    • @FrozenHaxor
      @FrozenHaxor Год назад +2

      You must be heavily confused here. You're talking about an Epson printer, his video is about a Canon printer.

    • @mistermartin82
      @mistermartin82 Год назад

      @@FrozenHaxor not sure its still the case, but Canon printers 20 years ago used Epson printheads, they were the first that I recall which didn't replace the head with the cartridge

    • @mchenri9683
      @mchenri9683 Год назад

      @@FrozenHaxor Yeah, seems like it. Nevertheless I would recommend to take a look at Epson’s line up. They have replaceable ink dumps if I remember correctly

    • @FrozenHaxor
      @FrozenHaxor Год назад

      @@mchenri9683 I have their L310 printer, the diaper is largely non-replaceable but if you don't run cleaning and purging cycles all the time like a lunatic, they won't get soaked. Head clogged? Use proper chemical to clean it. Works for 5 years now.

    • @FrozenHaxor
      @FrozenHaxor Год назад +1

      @@mistermartin82 It's not. Epson uses piezo heads and canon uses thermal.

  • @JCD87
    @JCD87 Год назад +86

    This is why i always recommend to get laserprinters, especially for people who rarely need to print. These issues what you describe were hidden away from the consumer for decades. But in Large Format Printing this is no new thing. The sponges are not always used in this way. Depending on print technology (latex, inkjet, solvent ect) mostly use a waste tank, that is basically a empty can that recieves all the ink, that gets flushed through the printheads to get all the nozzles open again. Problem is, inkheads are easy (in some printers) to replace. But these consumer things; they require to be taken apart entirely. And we all know, getting that junk together is not really realistic. I once owned a 'office' grade Lexmark, which occasionally did it's flushes... ran out of a full set of cardridges in a few months, without making a single print myself :)

    • @joergsonnenberger6836
      @joergsonnenberger6836 Год назад +9

      Depends on the printer design and age. Epson's Ecotanks had the same problems in the early models. Now it is a user-servicable part that just needs a screw driver and a ten buck replacement part. Same for newer Canon's, I think.

    • @Ryokath
      @Ryokath 9 месяцев назад +4

      Laser printers have their own planned obsolescence thing. There's a powder salvage tank in every laser printer that is often impossible to remove and / or disassemble to empty it out because it's sealed. A IR laser beams to a sensor, when the powder blocks the light hitting the sensor, the printer stop working. It's possible to make it work again but ultimately the error will reappear and one day you will not be able to get rid of this without buying an off brand powder salvage tank if you can find it.

    • @jmr5125
      @jmr5125 9 месяцев назад +5

      ​@Ryokath Irrelevant (but interesting nevertheless).
      Today, few people print more than a few pages per week -- and many print a few pages *a decade*. For this audience, the only thing that matters is that the mere passage of time won't damage the printer, and that's what a laser printer gives you.
      Buy the printer, buy a full set off toner cartridges, and the odds that the printer will work when you *need* to print a form a decade from now is good. With an ink jet printer, the odds of it working are close to zero -- even if you invested in a spare set of ink tanks.

    • @CasualTS
      @CasualTS 9 месяцев назад +4

      ​@@RyokathI wonder how common this powder salvage thing is? I've not run into a problem with my 2012 Xerox yet. Still works fine for the occasional print job

    • @EXE973
      @EXE973 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@CasualTS Because it's quite common for the "powder salvage" to be a part of the toner cartridge.

  • @user-fm3hd6pl5d
    @user-fm3hd6pl5d 9 месяцев назад +1

    I am COMPLETELY DISGUSTED with Canon. I have the same Canon. Have the same problem. I'm tired of the scams and dishonesty.

  • @rochiebee3905
    @rochiebee3905 4 месяца назад

    I have a pixma ix6820 that i use multiple times per week for my small business printing. I love canon because of the quality of print. However after 5yrs of printing mover hundreds of prints weekly, I have to constantly clean the head so the blk would print clear. Would this be a good replacement seeing i would be using it consistently weekly ?

  • @bigjd2k
    @bigjd2k Год назад +87

    Most inkjets have always had a sponge for this, it’s just really hard to print enough to fill it up. Saying that, every time you switch it on there’s a cleaning cycle which wastes ink (and puts it in the sponge). Some printers (Epson PictureMate) have the sponge built into the cartridge. So you can expire a cartridge just by switching the printer on and off to print one photo at a time, long before the actual ink runs out!

    • @Ussurin
      @Ussurin Год назад +8

      It's literal sponge, how hard is to make a plastic glass door to it's container and let people just exchange it? I guess it wouldn't be a scam then.

    • @ferrumignis
      @ferrumignis Год назад +5

      @@Ussurin It isn't "literal sponge" it's more like dense cotton fibre that has some kind of gel in it to lock the ink in. I tried washing one out previously, what a mess!

    • @Nikki.Penguin
      @Nikki.Penguin Год назад +12

      @@ferrumignis But they could sell these, so that they could be replaced.

    • @ZaHandle
      @ZaHandle Год назад +2

      @@Nikki.Penguin i think epson sell replacements not sure tho

    • @dmitripogosian5084
      @dmitripogosian5084 Год назад +3

      @@ferrumignis Ok, it is a diaper, should not be that hard to replace either :)

  • @magoid
    @magoid 2 года назад +12

    "Just when I thought I was out of the inkjet mafia, they just pull me back in".

  • @HondaaCBR
    @HondaaCBR 9 месяцев назад +2

    I've had an Epson L110 some years ago, bought from new, printed everyday with it. It had required some 'upgrades' in 4 years and some software available on the internet. But I managed to print 700,000 a4 pages and when I quit my job the printer was still working. I paid for it only 100 euros at that time. Had the same problem with the sponges but they were available on Aliexpress. Good equipment.

  • @alamofox1
    @alamofox1 9 месяцев назад +63

    I think this problem has been resolved in the canon GX series. All of those printers have a maintenance tray for the spent ink. A display graph shows how full it is. You get a warning before it’s completely full. It is very accessible and replaceable. I’m about to get the GX5020. I’ll let you know.

    • @MikeNHOC
      @MikeNHOC 9 месяцев назад +4

      I have a GX7021 and I love it! It is a great printer and feels solid and of good build quality. It came with a 3yr warranty out of the box.

    • @macavalli2619
      @macavalli2619 9 месяцев назад +30

      Planned obsolescence
      "We designed it poorly so you could buy a more expensive one"

    • @bunnywarren
      @bunnywarren 9 месяцев назад +2

      @@macavalli2619 Did you reply to the wrong comment? It says Canon now allows users to replace the part that was mentioned in this video as making the printer useable.

    • @dziewiatkom
      @dziewiatkom 9 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@bunnywarrenYet they released a printer in the past with a problem they were likely aware of in testing.

    • @ZealotOfSteal
      @ZealotOfSteal 9 месяцев назад +5

      Why make a "replaceable" tray when you could make a reusable one? Seems like just another way to milk customers, so nothing new really.

  • @michaelromeo5689
    @michaelromeo5689 2 года назад +17

    My prints looked exactly like yours. The green ones that is. This printer worked great for a couple of years but now I'm done with it. For people that only make 4x6 prints I recommend the Canon Selphy, It's a dye-sub printer. . . no ink. I used one for years in my photo studio for passport photos. It never failed. For large prints I switched from Epson to Canon because the heads were always needing cleaning. The cleaning worked good but the ink useage was excessive. It used 8 tanks at a cost of $100 each. The Canon printers needed cleaning as well but a lot less than the Epson. Love the concept of refillable ink tanks but there's always a hitch, isn't there! I hope you find a reliable home photo printer soon and pass it on.

  • @Indra-min
    @Indra-min Год назад +17

    This is an excellent printer IF you use it (almost) daily.
    If you don't, some of the ink will fall back because of gravity. This problem already existed 20 years ago with those large format inkjet printer.
    On the lastest Canon printer driver, already have "ink flush" feature in Printer Maintenance to address empty tube problem. They'll just need to add "reset absorber".
    But on the otherhand if user start to abuse "reset absorber" without changing the absorber, one day ink will leaks out.

  • @britinokinawa
    @britinokinawa 9 месяцев назад +1

    I have two of these canon printers and don't have much problem with them. We use them a lot and that may be the difference. I did have one problem with the issue you talked about, ran cleaning, then deep cleaning and finally fixed it with the Printer Flush. The biggest problem I have is the interface. Setting anything and running maintenance with completely unintuitive combinations of buttons is horrible. It ALWAYS forgets the settings and I have to click through a long list of printer settings almost everytime I use it. When it's working, however, it does a good job and hardly uses any ink at all.

  • @WhiteLionKindredSpir
    @WhiteLionKindredSpir 3 месяца назад

    After watching your video I was ready to give up on the printer. I figured out what to do! Open the printer, when the print head appears in the center hold it from going back to the right. Under the front push up on the blue button. It opens up and the print heads can be cleaned. I placed the heads in warm water only high enough to wet the bottom. Don’t wet the electrical contacts on the back. Carefully dry it and install it back into the printer. When the cover on the print heads is shut, push down the blue buttons on top. I restarted the printer and did a flush. It’s working perfectly again!

  • @ABrainrotAwayFromHeaven
    @ABrainrotAwayFromHeaven 2 года назад +22

    We need an open-source printer

    • @techwizpc4484
      @techwizpc4484 2 года назад

      Not necessarily, manufacturers just need to make their printers easy to maintain.

    • @arbit3r
      @arbit3r 2 года назад

      @@techwizpc4484 Yeah.. ok. Good luck with that proposal.

  • @ojofelixnm3608
    @ojofelixnm3608 2 года назад +11

    The G3260 has a replaceable maintenance cartridge with a sensor that determines when the cartridge needs to be replaced. It costs about $20.00, and the replacement procedure is easy. Our G3260 is now on month ten and so far no message the maintenance cartridge needs replacing.

    • @Ussurin
      @Ussurin Год назад

      The actuall required components of that cartridge for proper functioning cost less than dollar if you go to hardware store, you know? Paying 20 dollars every time you change a sponge is pretty huge scam.

    • @adamfilip
      @adamfilip Год назад

      @@Ussurin everything about printing is a scam

  • @TerryOtsubo
    @TerryOtsubo 9 месяцев назад +2

    I almost pulled the trigger on buying this printer. Glad I found your video. In the past, I would only print one or two times per year. My ink cartridges were all dried up by then. So, I switch to a separate B&W printer that use toner and another portable printer that printed color photos using heat transfer film. I now have a couple kids in elementary and am printing more often, but still not often enough. I guess I will stay put with my current two printer solution.

    • @psirvent8
      @psirvent8 7 месяцев назад

      Having a laser printer is actually one of the best possible choices as the ink doesn't dry up so it won't matter if you don't print often but also the cartriges are less of a scam than inkjet ones.
      Plus it prints faster and to me the hot and dry sheets coming out of a laser printer feel nicer than the ones coming out of a inkjet printer, it's only personal preference though.
      One of the few cons however is the fact it can't print good quality photos, unlike the dye sumbliation aka heat transfer film printers, again a good choice for you as it's literally the best way to print digital photos you can possibly get.

  • @billykuan
    @billykuan 9 месяцев назад +2

    You can't trust businesses not to lie cheat and steal to make a profit. It is in their dna. Yet we allow the same businesses access to our consumer laws.

  • @gentlepersuader
    @gentlepersuader Год назад +54

    This "feature" has been around for a long time. One of my clients had a little Canon bubblejet printer (probably close to 20 years ago now) and I remember her contacting me saying she couldn't print anything any more, even with new ink installed. When she contacted Canon here in Australia she was told the ink absorber was full and that was the end of its operational life. She had printed a lot with it, and was told to purchase a larger model with a higher rated print yield.
    I guess some things never change!

    • @motog-rocks6544
      @motog-rocks6544 Год назад +3

      Same here. 20 years ago, then Canon offered to send me a new inkjet printer at the cost of a new set of cartridges when the ink absorber filled up.

    • @ge2719
      @ge2719 Год назад +4

      Exactly. Theres no reason these printers couldn't have had a waste ink tank built in, with an accurate full measurement sensor that means the printer never disables itself forever with nothing the users can do except hack the firmware.

    • @johne6081
      @johne6081 Год назад +1

      @@ge2719 There is no reason Canon can't make the ink counter easily resettable. They won't even tell consumers how to do it, and none of the procedures recommended on line work on mine. I can get it into service mode easily enough (hold down Stop, turn on Power, then flash Stop 5 times with Power held on), but then what???

    • @ge2719
      @ge2719 Год назад +1

      @@johne6081 i had to buy a seeingoy dodge poeceof software for resetting a specific printer i had.
      Tested it in a locked off virtual machine and it didnt doathing malocious and the i ran it on a mini pc with a fresh windows with no network access, then reinstaled windows, just incase.
      It reset it fine. I cant remember the name of it though. Let me see if i can find it again.

  • @gpturner0924
    @gpturner0924 Год назад +91

    Epson Ecotank absorber sponges are easily replaceable. They are the only high capacity inkjet line that has such a feature. The ink is slightly more expensive than both Canon and HP at about $40-$50 for a 4 color set of refills instead of $20-$30, but the tanks are overall larger and the printer itself tends to provide better performance and more consistent prints.

    • @cyrilthefish
      @cyrilthefish Год назад +7

      Thats good to know.
      I have an Ecotank printer and i do believe it even came with a spare maintenance box for waste ink included.

    • @mVic8
      @mVic8 Год назад +8

      Thank you Glenn!
      I also have an Epson Ecotank ET-4850 that I spent nearly $500 on in January 2022. I saw this video and was concerned that the Epson would have the same flaw as Canon.
      I spent the extra $ on the Ecotank in the hopes it would be better engineered vs cheaper inkjet printers.
      It’s relieving to know Epson took the time to implement a solution for this issue.

    • @edubbs3528
      @edubbs3528 Год назад +5

      Was not my experience at all. Perhaps you have a more "Deluxe" model. Mine simply told me the sponge was full and it was game over.

    • @mVic8
      @mVic8 Год назад

      @@edubbs3528 Oh, that’s interesting. Perhaps there are variance in the models. Like more expensive models have more maintenance features built-in, whereas less expensive models have things non-user replaceable sponges. That would be a crappy thing for Epson to do though. Getting good reviews on the fancy models, misleading people to think all of them have the same robustness.

    • @kovalenkoihor4325
      @kovalenkoihor4325 Год назад +4

      @@edubbs3528 Maybe you had to just cut out the tube to the sponge and put it somewhere to drain the ink from the very new state. But it would work if we know, that the "full sponge" detected by some "wet sensor". And I don't know, whether there is a moisture sensor at all. Maybe there is just a counter...

  • @anniewilliams6502
    @anniewilliams6502 3 месяца назад

    I bought this printer for all the same reasons that you did. I researched it, and thought, “Wow, a printer that won't cost my body parts to run - AND it is backed by a reputable name”.
    How wrong I was! The first time my printer “Nappy” (sorry, I'm English :) ) filled up, the printer was still under warranty, so I sent it away and it was fixed. Now it has run out of warranty and the stupid thing thinks it has no ink in it, and will not re-set, no matter what I do to it.
    You are completely right, Canon have Scammed us. I will NEVER buy another Canon product of any kind again.
    I now have to try to find another printer, which means taking loads of time to read reviews and praying that it will work ok.
    I have been told to go onto a laser printer. I was advised that the outlay is more, but that they are more reliable. Unfortunately, I do like the advantage of colour printing.
    Do you have any advice please?
    Thank you for reading,
    Regards,
    Lilliput

  • @HiddenBlessingsHomestead
    @HiddenBlessingsHomestead 10 месяцев назад

    A few years ago I had the same problem with the Epson Eco tank, I believe I got the largest Staples had to offer? because it had the best photo printing and I was doing a book with lots of photos. The quality was great but in no time the waste tank (sponge thing) filled up and it was hard to find them at the time. It hadn't been too long since I bought it so I went back to the store and returned it and bought the smaller model, it did much better with the waste tank, but then it stopped printing properly, lines missing, colours off....ugh. Now here I am trying to find another solution to printing books with colour photos at home. I would love any advice. To answer the question of occasional use being the problem, I was printing lots of books so no I don't think it was that.

  • @kenc.824
    @kenc.824 2 года назад +18

    I have a G4210, that suffered the same malady as described in the video. Upon discovering what the error code indicated, I searched the web to no avail looking for replacement ink pads. My next resort was to call Canon USA, where-upon I was told ( by a very nice lady, whom I cannot fault as she was only the messenger ) that: 1. "Canon has no service centers, and the factory will do no service past warranty". 2. "This product is not field serviceable". 3. "Canon will not provide replacement ink pads". 4. "Canon will not provide the error re-set key". However, she did offer info about a discount on a new printer. So, figuring that I couldn't hurt a "dead" machine, I set-out to prove Canon wrong on point #2 above. A couple of DIY videos later I had the machine open enough ( quite easy ) to remove the offending ink filled pads ( fairly easy with a large tweezers ). Note though, that one pad is locked in position behind the "power entry box" and will come out not undamaged unless much more disassembly is undertaken.
    As my wife washed the pads that I could get out ( it took her about 45 mins. - solving most of point #3 ), I pulled and tugged on the last pad till I accepted the "locked-in" assessment. Again thinking what can it hurt, I decided to flush the pad in-place with a squirt bulb using hot water. It was labor and paper towel intensive ( but I was on a mission about point #2 ), and I probably achieved 80-90% success ( this pad could be left alone as the others are probably 75-80% of the overall capacity ). After blow-drying the machine and re-inserting the cleaned pads, re-assembly was just reverse dis-assembly ( One caution, take care to mark the position of the ink flush tubes in their deflectors above the pads. If you push the tubes in too far during re-assembly, it puts a strain on the movement of the mechanisms at the other end. Do the marking, however you chose to do it, BEFORE you pull them out in the beginning. I learned this the hard way! ). Once back together, I used a FREE on-line error code reset key to bypass point #4 above. The "dead toss-away" is back in service. Sorry Canon ....... nah, not really.

    • @TheTechBuyersGuru
      @TheTechBuyersGuru  2 года назад +1

      Heroic effort! Very interesting to hear Canon's official position on this.

    • @TheLukasz032
      @TheLukasz032 Год назад +3

      About the point #4, there is always a rule about this: "if someone has physical access to your machine, it's no longer your machine". And it's of great use here.
      It boils down to the logical "and" of all of these truisms:
      - Printers have firmware.
      - Firmware is stored in flash chips on the motherboard.
      - Motherboards can be taken out of the device.
      - Flash chips are soldered, so they can be desoldered and put in a programmer again.
      - Firmware is written in a machine language.
      - For every compiled program, there is a possibility to translate it back into assembly, and then disassemble and analyze.
      - A service center should have an option to reset non-user-resettable parts of the memory, and it shouldn't involve soldering.
      So, basically: there is always a factory service mode (FSM for short), and so, there is always a method to access FSM. And, in the FSM, there are operations that can be performed from there.
      Taking this further:
      - Any method to access FSM will sooner or later be discovered and published.
      - Any FSM opcodes will sooner or later be documented independently of the NDA-gatekeeped service centers.
      Taking the G3x10 series:
      - FSM entry sequence is already known (printer OFF -> hold power button, press stop 5 times, release power).
      - FSM opcodes are three-digit, no "0" can exist in them, you enter digits using stop button (as many times as the target digit states) and confirm with a single press of a power button.
      - "Reset waste ink pad utilization and recalibrate print head movement" is already known to be opcode 435.

    • @cabletie69
      @cabletie69 Год назад

      Beautiful.

    • @td5272
      @td5272 Год назад

      Ken, was your error code the same, or was it something else? I have your model and am getting a 5200 when i try to deep clean. Also what's he equiv of "system clean" for this one? Flush? The online manual suggests a "system clean" but I find nothing labeled such in the mtc menu.

    • @kenc.824
      @kenc.824 Год назад

      I do remember it as being 5200 - but it's been a while now and I've since moved on to another machine/brand as the canon developed a hit and miss printing style that I didn't want to mess with. "Rest in pieces Canons everywhere!"

  • @andyfreestone7616
    @andyfreestone7616 Год назад +30

    The best investment I ever made was for a second hand colour laser printer. It always works and never needs cleaning. The toner cartridges are good for 1000's if not 10000's of prints. I've had it now for 6 years and I'm still on the original toner cartridges which are still at 50%. I only paid £200 for it.

    • @LunarNoire
      @LunarNoire Год назад

      I'm looking to switch over to laser because I'm just done with inkjet printers all together. I'm hoping that the laser printer will work well with making bookmarks on cardstock and can pick up texture and print as close to what's on the screen as possible

    • @Peter-rp4xn
      @Peter-rp4xn Год назад

      What model is that?

    • @imadish5356
      @imadish5356 Год назад +1

      @@LunarNoire Did you buy yet? Be sure to research any printer you're considering, because laser printers don't generally do heavy cardstock well. It bonds toner to paper with heat, and if the cardstock is too thick for the printer it will flake off. That said, I LOVE my color laser printer, but def buy after-market toner or it's like paying for ink cartridges. Good luck!

    • @LunarNoire
      @LunarNoire Год назад

      @@imadish5356 I ended up getting a laser printer, but I want to get this one too to replace my ecotank since I'm using both for different purposes. So far the laser printer that I have has been pretty good with heavy cardstock. I'm going to try cover cardstock next to see if it will go through and pray I don't break the the printer lolz. The colors came out really nice and accurate so I am pleased with the laser printer thus far, but still want an inkjet as well.
      I got the Canon ImageCLASS MF644Cdw

    • @imadish5356
      @imadish5356 Год назад

      @@LunarNoire Congrats! That looks like a really nice printer. I'm jealous.😉I have (old!!) HP M251nw. Have done up to 271 gsm/100 lb. It made it through, but toner "just" sticks -can flake it off in places. Depending on project, I sticky laminate or spray w/Crystal Clear. Page curl is a major prob for me --my printer can't load from the back. PLEASE let me know how it goes with your new Canon! I'm shopping -this poor old thing is gonna quit soon. Good luck!

  • @learnlanguage5580
    @learnlanguage5580 10 месяцев назад

    I feel for you! I had a brand new Canon Mg2540 for a few years, but the error appeared (some of the electronics were not functioning). Yes, we were refilling the cartridges ourselves.
    Then: We in our family bought a brand new Epson XP-352 with handmade ink flow system, it is more or less not that bad, but the absorber problem appears ANNUALLY. I buy codes (about $5) for re-coding the brains of my MPF, and it works. To add, for last two years I manually wash the sponge with water, let it dry and reinstall it.
    I was so upset that bought a used colour laser Xerox 6110MPF in a bad shape, payed for fixing (MPF+service 25+25=$50) and it prints good. And fee for toner replacement+chip reinstall is about $10. I like it.
    Even if my laser printer is over 10 years now, it is good, I ask everybody not to throw away such things if they are repairable. Let them second chance.
    Greetings from Kyiv

  • @andrevanstaden1984
    @andrevanstaden1984 3 месяца назад +1

    I have the same printer. Over 7000 prints already. Only filled up the 1st time the other day. Im happy with mine.

  • @kenlee224
    @kenlee224 2 года назад +8

    I had the same feeling as yours but was gladly seeing a lot of RUclips videos teaching us how to fix the problems you mentioned in your video. But there is a lot of work that you couldn't do it without making your hands dirty. I fully agree that all the printer manufacturers have collectively decided to design some maintenance-heavy printers or ink cartridges so that you would regularly replace the cartridges or the printers itself.

  • @karmakh
    @karmakh Год назад +13

    This was exactly the reason that made me make a choice of never buying a home printer unless I absolutely am forced to. I was also excited about the refillable inkjets, but that feeling came crashing down when I learned about the software locked absorber counter. I was a day away from buying this exact printer. I will utilize the printers at work and if needed, printing services. Much better value.

    • @MalawisLilleKanal
      @MalawisLilleKanal 9 месяцев назад +1

      If you do not print enough to *need* a printer at home, you are much better off with a laser. Stick it away in a closet for a year or two if you want to, and it still works when you need it.

  • @tephwilliams
    @tephwilliams 8 месяцев назад +1

    As other people have said, if you don’t use a ink printer a lot the ink will start to dry up and cause quality issues. I print at least 1-2x per week and still have to do print head cleanings in my Epson Ecotank printers a few times a year. As to the sponge, Epson Ecotank printers have replaceable “maintenance boxes” that cost around $10 each and take 5 minutes to swap out. I think the newer Canon models do this now too, but always double check if the printer you’re getting lets you replace the sponge/maintenance box/whatever.

  • @AWopBopaLoo
    @AWopBopaLoo 5 месяцев назад +1

    I have a G3060 - and after just over a year of minimal use - the cyan ran out. I added more ink but it was still not printing correctly. After two hours on hold with Canon, he suggested a print flush. It did the trick - the printing resumed. However, after your video on the saturated sponge, I ordered and replaced the cartridge - easy. Cost $9.99 on the Canon site. Back to loving this inkjet. Another thing I like is the low price per colour bottle compared to $$$ Epson.

  • @SchwaAlien
    @SchwaAlien Год назад +13

    Yeah, this is basically why I went with color laser a couple printers ago, they don’t have the same picture quality but make up for it in not having any issues with being used infrequently. I’m surprised there hasn’t been more development of home digital photographic paper prints, I’m sure anyone really dedicated to the true top quality wouldn’t mind loading some photo chemicals instead of ink... I was always impressed by the prints I obtained from my local electronics shop, that tech just needs to get desktop sized and mass produced, and black and white would be even simpler to implement.

  • @memyname1771
    @memyname1771 Год назад +5

    That is nice to know. I checked and Canon states that the absorber is non-user replaceable. They state that the G3200 printer needs to go to a service center where they will charge to replace the absorber.
    My Epson ET-3750 uses a user replaceable maintenance tank. I am going on four years of ownership with no problems and only two head cleanings. It came with two free sets of ink bottles, and I am halfway through the second set of ink.

  • @adityasixviandyj7334
    @adityasixviandyj7334 9 месяцев назад

    Sorry if I talk with different brand, but I will said, Epson ECOTank that we use in the office is working perfectly fine (320K+ pages), but we do had replace the ink absorber as well. Epson told on the manual and you need replaced as it use cotton sponges, not standard sponges. i tried to wash it but like you said, it take few days to dry (must bone dry) and they will compacted and not as dense as before. And now for the newer model, the maintenance box had chip on it, so you cannot replace as easy as the older models.
    now For the missing color, Epson technician who service my printer told me, there is 2 reason: either the printhead is clogged if you rarely use it, or pump failure. If you rarely print, like your printer idle for few weeks, then you had chance that ink clogged the printhead and you don't need to replace, unless if the printhead is damage. Epson technician recommended you flush/deep cleaning several times then try to use the printer everyday. this is no.1 common problem that epson service center had. While my office printer is actually had PUMP Failure, and the technician said is actually very common if your printer already print 320K pages within 4-5 years, and the pump sparepart is quite afforable too when I service it on epson service center.
    but again , the technician always (what i seen), he always told me, NO MATTER THE BRAND IS, most tank based printer he seen can had long life as long you do this:
    1. Print everyday if you can, at least 2 pages of mixed text & images. the longer idle duration of the printer, the higher chance your ink will clogged the printhead.
    2. Use same ink, whether official ones or off brand ones, always stick to that brand. Never try to change brand every single refills.
    3. save some money on fresh maintenance box, if you use older models then stock some fresh sponges. this one is rarely need to be done, but when the notification is showed, then it is the time to replace it.
    that why when I pickup the printer after he service it, he pointed out to some customer why my office printer can last 4+ year, but they don't. And that tips also said by some print station nearby my uni as well, and that's why their printer can print thousand of pages every day without any troubled.

  • @op3l
    @op3l 9 месяцев назад

    Inkjet manufacturers: Aha... so they caught on to the fact we're scamming them with cartridges huh? Well new idea! We'll make even MORE money and get all of it up front for selling them the printer!

  • @mattbosley3531
    @mattbosley3531 Год назад +15

    I have a Brother AIO that cost me about $100 maybe 6 years ago. I buy generic ink cartridges online pretty cheaply. I have had to clean the heads once but otherwise it's been fine for me. I also appreciate that I can print from MacOS and Linux easily as well.

    • @KISSbestfan
      @KISSbestfan Год назад +1

      A Brother user over here as well.
      I cant really understand why its the only brand that haven't been problematic so far. Or at least less problematic.
      Earlier on I had two HP printers, one had this rather cool ability to print on printable discs, which has been a huge help with my first business, but sadly the ink was deadly expensive. I tried to refill the cartridges, and while black worked out well, the color one did not, and it printed weird colors. And not to mention it broke after some time, it was probably around 2010 or so. The second one I got for free from my mobile operator after signing a new deal, and it worked a small bit longer. It was a combo, had the scanner on top (tbh all of the later printers I got had those built in scanners). But again had that annoyance in form of expensive inks. Not to mention it used a very weird kind of PSU, and after moving out I lost one, so now its basically a piece of junk.
      In the meantime my grandfather bought himself a Brother printer. It was in around 2007 I believe so. He still uses it like... once over 3 months? And it works like a charm.
      And so I went for buying Epson printer. It had those cool features like Wi-Fi printing, fax, and so on. Had a normal 8-style power cord, and it wasnt HP. Ink wasnt cheapest, but still better than HP. It worked for like 2 years. Still got it, but I dont really know why I keep this. Probably just to give away to someone who'd want a free scanner.
      Sadly this carried on. Around 2019 my father wanted to buy a printer for himself, and chose HP, after all I went through. I told him "dont buy this junk, you'd only lose money", but he insisted that he has to own a printer, because he has to have ability to print something when he needs to. Yep. He maybe used it like once or twice, and it stopped working. He is not used to print anything if he doesnt need to.
      It was a real annoyance that I couldn't print anything at home, and had to go visit my buddy who worked at the office. Until one day he asked me "hey, wouldnt you want a printer?". After I saw that its a Brother, I happily agreeded. The only reason he gave it away for me was the fact that it's "too slow", and his customers had to wait like 30 seconds for their documents, and he has to give it to them in lesser time. It was already used heavily, because he printed documents every day, and not to mention its already probably 10 years old. But it prints! And since I got it in 2020 I'm printing as much as I want. In colour and b&w. The only problem I have got now is where to get a cheap paper.
      This leaves a question. Why should I bother printing a page weekly if I dont need to, when my current printer works even if I leave it for a month or two?
      Even the OG inks for the Brother printer are cheap, and the third party ones now costs less than a pack of 500 sheet copy paper.
      The only problem I had with the printer recently was the fact, that the transparent ribbon inside got splashed with ink. After I cleaned it, it works again. Couldnt repair a similiar issue in my first HP.
      Sure - the print quality isnt the best one I had ever seen. But I can turn a blind eye on it, because it pays off with the reliability. It has almost zero impact when printing documents anyway. And what's best - printing has become affordable again.
      I'm not the kind of person who likes to praise big companies, but when it comes to printers I just can't stay silent, because this is a real difference. HP printers had this magnet for clients of being cheap, but then you had to spend more on inks, and the company earned their money anyway. Its probably a similiar story with Canon and Epson. I'm not sure how does Brother products hold up now, but Im sure that Im not going to change my printer anytime soon.

    • @diamond6256
      @diamond6256 Год назад

      May I ask what the model number is? PRETTY PLEASE

  • @rootbear75
    @rootbear75 Год назад +53

    If you print seasonally, a color laser printer is your best bet. There's no ink to worry about drying up. Yes they might be more expensive initially, but you won't run into the maintenance hassle

    • @john_barnett
      @john_barnett Год назад +4

      I have never had an inkjet printer remotely come close to the photo/label quality of my Kyocera colour laser printer. The only reason I keep my shitheap Canon around is because of the ADF scanner

    • @prathamshenoy9840
      @prathamshenoy9840 Год назад +1

      I have a hp laser 1020 plus 2015. No counters, waste bin etc. But I believe color lasers have toner waste bin? Also, they have counters for toner left

    • @prathamshenoy9840
      @prathamshenoy9840 Год назад +3

      @@john_barnett I haven't heard of kyocera before. Could you tell me which model you have?

    • @rootbear75
      @rootbear75 Год назад +1

      @@prathamshenoy9840 sure but you won't ever have to worry about print heads clogging up because the ink dried. And most of those bins are user serviceable

    • @michaelsteinbach
      @michaelsteinbach Год назад +1

      This! I had an inkjet 11 years ago but I was printing half a dozen documents or photos a year and having to replace the ink every time.
      Got a Canon MF634C a few years ago. Scans, prints, never have any problems.

  • @LarryBloom
    @LarryBloom 9 месяцев назад

    Good video and rant. I'm a tech professional, now retired, who has been in this personal tech world since before PCs. It sure seems that ALL of the ink-jet printers are trash. I am so disgusted by it that I have just given up. Now thinking my next personal printer will be a laserjet.
    BTW, your comment that Canon now has a replacement sponge is irrelevant to the fact that your printer STILL had non-functional print heads.

  • @catherinebelaski4307
    @catherinebelaski4307 8 месяцев назад +1

    I wish I came across this video sooner. 15 months later and my printer has the exact same issue. I will never buy one again. Thank you for making this video and not being afraid to go back and revise your review. I now want to know what I should buy.

    • @AstroBiswas
      @AstroBiswas 5 месяцев назад

      Sir Here is ur solution for canon printer it just needs a conbination of keys on printer to clear code and change the ink pad which are availble for under 5$ ruclips.net/video/jHprxt8ghYk/видео.htmlsi=7kjMFo9n5KqNsApV

  • @CloudSportracer
    @CloudSportracer Год назад +6

    I had a similar experience at one point. I had to run the deep clean through multiple cycles and it finally came clear. After that experience, I learned to use my printer often. I never use just black as I want to exercise all colors/lines. I have not experienced the same issue since and I have purchased this printer at the beginning of the pandemic in 2020.
    Even with that experience, I still suggest this printer to others.
    I have the G7020.

  • @corentinoger
    @corentinoger Год назад +11

    Thanks a lot! This is clearly planned obsolescence! Now I understand what the "Maintenance Cartridge" is on Newer models (Pixma G15/25/35xx and Maxify GX5050, 6050...) : it's a sponge in a plastic tray, with a chip so you can only use the original one! In France we have a law against planned obsolescence, it's typically a case where it could apply.

    • @DiThi
      @DiThi 9 месяцев назад +1

      Those chips are relatively easy to reset, apparently, by copying one that has a low use count, then writing it every time it gets full. Of course you need to manually clean the sponge so it doesn't overflow.

  • @elmarty4803
    @elmarty4803 Месяц назад

    Thanks for the video, it is appreciated. You hit all the problems with the home printers and the companies just aren't hearing it yet. I assume they will eventually.

  • @mikmik9034
    @mikmik9034 9 месяцев назад +1

    I used to use an Ink Jet printer (2) but I stopped making daily prints. I used to do 50 a day or more, I went to use the printer after a week or so. ERROR "tanks sponges were dry, required overhaul by qualified expert. BAH. I started using Toner and Laser Printers FINE. I might not use it for extended periods, FINE. New problem is Microsoft "Updating the OS" . Lost the use of two 500USD (bought on sale down from 1,000USD) Not supported by OS, so much Xerox, and OKI, now using a cheap HP colour laser. I really like the cumbersome OKI, too.

  • @Dreoni_
    @Dreoni_ 2 года назад +9

    I hate planned obsolescence

    • @nian60
      @nian60 2 года назад +2

      Me too.

  • @DrToly
    @DrToly 2 года назад +64

    Wow Canon actually designed this printer with a fixed pre-programmed counter to kill it.
    Great job on bringing this to life. Terrible job Canon!!

    • @JeanLucCaptain
      @JeanLucCaptain 2 года назад +4

      Epson has the SAME THING.

    • @Brisco_County_Jr
      @Brisco_County_Jr 2 года назад +1

      @@JeanLucCaptain while Epsons still do this, Canon has fixed this in their 2022 line.

    • @Roadsurfer2k11
      @Roadsurfer2k11 Год назад +1

      @@Brisco_County_Jr the pad maintenance cassette that for one apparently is not stocked at canon and second printer lineup double the price? The printhead in a maxify alone is $165.

    • @Roadsurfer2k11
      @Roadsurfer2k11 Год назад +1

      @@Brisco_County_Jr does it have a chip and just inserting it reset the counter?
      This is all confusing because I'm reading ebayers selling that cartridge, the sponge and chips plus resetter for more than if I was just to buy that cartridge. I don't understand why people would go through the trouble unless they have an abundance of sponge and feel like paying $12 for chips

    • @Roadsurfer2k11
      @Roadsurfer2k11 Год назад +2

      @@Brisco_County_Jr so now I either get a 620 to avoid this pad issue but pay double to triple for ink of that of the 6020, or get a 3260 which got lower reviews and no network connection. Ugh why can't canon just deliver a 6020 or 7020 upgrade with maintenance pad without having to pay $700 for a maxify. Or I'll just get the 6020 and bestbuy 4 yr warranty and let them deal with any codes

  • @misssonja2700
    @misssonja2700 10 месяцев назад

    So glad I came across this video while trying to find a video to set up the 3262 I just purchased 3 days ago. I had a lexmark for about 10 years before I broke it during a move. Replaced it with an HP AIO 6100 series in 2016, but it stopped working after a storm last week. I thought it was a blessing in disguise because i print a lot of docs and at $30-$35 for color and black ink each, I was done. Got tired of HP high priced ink cartridges and someone recommended Canon...oh boy. I need a printer, but this one has to go

  • @Slowpode
    @Slowpode 9 месяцев назад +1

    Years ago, there was the Canon BJ-330 that used large ink cartridges BJI642 that included inside the cartridge itself an ink sponge alongside the ink payload in a bag. You always had a fresh kit when changing ink cartridge. This printer lasted years printing engineering plans almost every days.

    • @neldasturgill8080
      @neldasturgill8080 8 месяцев назад

      I loved my old BJ-6000! Sounds like the 330 was even better!

  • @MrRustedmetal
    @MrRustedmetal 2 года назад +10

    Thanks for sharing your experience. I'm always wary of new products nowadays. I admit that I still have the urge to buy impulsively because they sell it so good. However, lately I think twice before buying anything since we are still living in a throwaway culture and companies take advantage of that. Laser printers have stood the test of time, I guess I'll look into that.

  • @totoro6453
    @totoro6453 Год назад +8

    I have been using this printer for about 5 years without running into any problem. Sometimes i dont use it for months and everything is working good. It’s an awesome printer. Haven’t buy an ink bottle since i bought it 😅

  • @edawriter
    @edawriter 9 месяцев назад

    Thanks for exposing this scam. I gave up with color inkjets and went to a laser printer, B&W. For color, I use Google print and the local CVS. It's easy, it's affordable, and no more hassles with ink.

  • @IARRCSim
    @IARRCSim 9 месяцев назад +1

    Printers have gotten so hopelessly bad that I never print at home anymore. I always pay for gas, parking... to print at a local university instead. The big printing companies have gotten in such a habit of ripping people off with overpriced ink that personal printing isn't worth the convenience.

  • @slike87
    @slike87 Год назад +21

    You can get rid of the error, there are plenty of tutorials on RUclips. Done it a couple of times. Also, you can buy ink absorbing pads, and they are not expensive.

    • @TevelDrinkwater
      @TevelDrinkwater 9 месяцев назад +1

      I've got this same printer, or pretty close. I've printed so much, and have used off-brand ink. The printer is so economical, but I have had to do the deep clean twice.

    • @someguy4915
      @someguy4915 9 месяцев назад +15

      Seems this guy has no clue what he is recommending on his youtube channel or even on national television, just recommends whatever he happened to have bought...
      You recommend a printer you don't even have looked at, haven't even read up on the limitations and requirements (frequent printing is required for inkt jet, especially with little tubes such as these). Then he doesn't even apologize/take responsibility and just fully blames Cannon for his own mistake of buying a heavy-use printer for occasional use...

    • @ryoohk
      @ryoohk 9 месяцев назад

      I don't have this printer but we had an Epson Etank we got when they 1st came out and it lasted years for us and finally had to replace it because my son dropped something on it and cracked one of the tanks

  • @meryl9846
    @meryl9846 2 года назад +10

    So glad I found this video!! These tanks printers sound too good to be true. I own an HP Envy 4500 that I got for $45 in 2015 and it’s still working like a beast! I’ve printed almost 10500 pages so far. The only reason I’m looking into a better printer is because I started a small business that requires me to produce quality readable labels on just about every type of paper (textured, matte, glossy, clear). I tried Epson EcoTank but I was honestly not amazed with the print quality. The colors were dull and despite letting it dry for days, the black ink on a clear label kept smudging. Also the updates became toooo frequent and annoying my god! And it won’t even accept a card stock paper no matter the settings. So I’m still using that HP inkjet but I have to be prepared when it starts breaking down.

    • @Onewaygage
      @Onewaygage Год назад +1

      Trying to start my own sticker thing did you ever find a printer I’ve been researching for weeks and can’t figure out the best for glossy sticker

    • @javierjmm
      @javierjmm Год назад

      I am happy with My Epson L805 with ink tank. 65,000+ pages printed SO far. Thousands of letter size photos. Even more in 4x6.

    • @Mr371312
      @Mr371312 Год назад

      If you don't print photos use pigment ink and printers that can use them, sharper and don't smudge and print on more medias

  • @mmeleacherteacher4787
    @mmeleacherteacher4787 9 месяцев назад

    I have the same printer that I bought around the same time. I was just as thrilled as you were, and have been for 4+ years.
    As a teacher, I HAVE printed THOUSANDS of coloured pages (photos, classroom décor, etc.) I've been SO disappointed about this stupid error, because up until I got the error, this thing printed like a dream, and I (like you) have recommended it to EVERYONE! I KNOW it was far less expensive than having to purchase cartridges. But I wish I could fix the problem. They DO sell brand new ink absorber pads on Amazon. 🤷‍♀Maybe I'll try those!
    Thanks for the video! I appreciated your expertise and info!

    • @polyfusion
      @polyfusion 5 месяцев назад

      Do try the new ink absorber pads, if the printer is still printing well, but bear in mind you will also need to reset the monitor for the ink saturation to get rid of the error. There is another video that shows you how to do that, but it only resets the absorption percentage to 30%. You would need the service tool to reset to zero, but the tool is hard to find.
      ruclips.net/video/2wo_suktXOE/видео.html
      This other video can help you with the replacement of the pads as well, and worthwhile going through the comments on that one, as I learned a lot as I was in a similar predicament, and managed to get this decent printer working great again.
      ruclips.net/video/2ghmJYNf3mI/видео.html

  • @ianbelletti6241
    @ianbelletti6241 9 месяцев назад +5

    This could have easily been solved by canon making the ink absorber a replaceable module with a self contained monitoring chip. I think that this particular printer was designed for high workflow environments where a lot of printing occurs. For most home environments I'm concerned about ink solidifying in the tanks and getting sucked in the lines. Most of your purges/cleanings are focused on making sure that the nozzle is clean enough that it sprays properly.

    • @j7ndominica051
      @j7ndominica051 9 месяцев назад +3

      If it is a sponge, couldn't it be simply rinsed out and put back in? Or design it as a tank can be wiped clean with alcohol. If we need a replacement cartridge with a microchip, then we are back to the old situation with expensive consumable parts.

    • @ianbelletti6241
      @ianbelletti6241 9 месяцев назад

      @@j7ndominica051 as far as rinsing it out, some inks become insoluble to water when dried. A tank seems like a good idea but so little ink is used each time that it would be dried out before you think to clean it. All I'm thinking for the monitoring chip is that it holds the counter not the equipment. I'm not talking about serious DRM on a replaceable component that could easily be manufactured by a third party.

  • @BornAgainCynic0086
    @BornAgainCynic0086 Год назад +3

    In Australia Tank Printers are very much more expensive than a normal printer, like $420 vs $98. And for all that money YOU GET NO MORE TECHNOLOGY. Just a box with a refill station moulded in. So, make sure you are doing A LOT of printing to justify the entry cost of the printer. Remember, you should only get 3~4 years out of an inkjet printer, so the clock is ticking.

  • @MasterFchains
    @MasterFchains Год назад +3

    We used a G3100 in my last work and lasted 30000 pages, (at 15k the absorber went full and the warranty was used to replace it and have other 15k pages).
    Apart of that, what replaced, but in their life was very practical and dozens of pages was printed and copied every day.
    The color print quality was good, even with alternative ink.

  • @torkalovolodymyr5097
    @torkalovolodymyr5097 7 месяцев назад +1

    It's just your fault to leave printer idle for months. It's written on every forum that you need print with inkjet at least one a week to keep it alive and do not flush ink into waste sponge. If it doesn't fit into your usage patterns just buy laser printer and make photos in lab

  • @mvp_kryptonite
    @mvp_kryptonite 9 месяцев назад

    Thanks for the video! I have the missing colour problem on my TS8000 and hesitant to do a deep clean but once I’m through all my ink it can be retired. Not sure if I will replace her really. I was interested in something like this unit but we’ll see

  • @grinster399
    @grinster399 2 года назад +5

    After various colour inkjet printers from Canon and Epson, I gave up on ink jet printing a long, long time ago due to the ridiculous cost of replacement inks, the generally inferior quality of third party inks, firmware updates that rejected third party cartridges, shamefully low print counts per cartridge, etc. We now have a moderately priced, high quality (in our experience) Brother mono-laser that accepts third party toner cartridges, for all our general printing needs. Any colour printing we use either a retail store or there are now quite a few online stores that print and ship prints at a very low cost ... and all with superior results to what the inkjet printers ever gave me even at their best. Your video is very on point, and I would go further to suggest that everyone should simply, and permanently, shun inkjet printers marketed for home use, so as to cease rewarding manufacturers in their shameful inkjet cartridge cost 'scams'. Third party printing services, that use higher quality machines than the home user could afford, while printing at a lower cost per page than the home user could achieve, are the way to go!

    • @JamieHofman
      @JamieHofman 2 года назад

      Well said!

    • @TheTechBuyersGuru
      @TheTechBuyersGuru  2 года назад

      I am in total agreement! I use a Brother monochrome laser and it is bulletproof and very cost-effective!

    • @no_peace
      @no_peace 2 года назад

      The reason I'm here is that I need a document with personal info on it printed immediately and my printer isn't working. They know they can do whatever they want

  • @joojoojeejee6058
    @joojoojeejee6058 Год назад +5

    I have a 10-year old (or so) Epson printer, and while the ink clogs up a lot, and I have to do cleaning cycles all the time, it's still cheap and worth the hassle because I buy 3rd party cartridges from eBay for like 1 euro... The sponge has probably "expired" physically a long time ago, but it doesn't seem there's any "digital expiration" on it.

  • @thiagoghilardi6779
    @thiagoghilardi6779 8 месяцев назад +1

    I bought my Canon 3060 about 2 years ago. Was happy with it until the head clogged just like the issue you are describing. I told myself I'd not rate any printers because they will eventually let me down. 2 years old and it's now almost junk as I can't print color. Unbelievable. The irony is that if manufacturers made a reliable printer, they would go out of business.

  • @gamingonpotatolaptops1665
    @gamingonpotatolaptops1665 Месяц назад +1

    I never update my printers firmware because it gives companies power to control the hardware I paid for

  • @paulmichaelfreedman8334
    @paulmichaelfreedman8334 Год назад +3

    If you're handy, you can just open up an inkjet printer and take out the sponge, and rinse it with cold tap water until it is white again. All the ink just sits there with nothing to chemically bind to, the sponge is inert to the ink. So it just dissolves in the water. I've done this a few times with customers inkjet printers.

    • @C1Ansy
      @C1Ansy Год назад +1

      Great tip! But how to you reset the inner counter to tell your printer it is able to print again?

  • @Leggir
    @Leggir Год назад +5

    I've been using a Brother MFC-6490CDW for the past ~13 years and have been pretty happy with it, not just for its reliability and interoperability with modern devices, but also relatively low cost per page, if using the larger cartridges. Although a Minolta Magicolor 2350 DL I have works well for color photos.

  • @warhammer5673
    @warhammer5673 9 месяцев назад

    I cleaned the absorbers then got a printer resetter. Since a certain amount of ink still remains in the absorber, I bought generic ones. Now what I do is clean (soak and squeeze until the squeezed liquid is almost clear) and dry the absorbers and then use a resetter if the waste ink as reported by the printer is 95% or above. For any percentage lower than that, I don't reset, and when it reaches 100%, I reset it. I repeat this cleaning method 1 or two times (plus the resetting when needed) then replace the absorbers with the new generic ones.
    So basically, my cycle is new -> clean -> clean -> clean -> replace the absorbers, with resetting the printer whenever needed.