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Trouble Shooting:
Colors Missing at Step 1:
If one or more colors are missing before you started this procedure, most likely the inkjets
are plugged. Your chance of success is reduced to about 50%. It all depends how long you
have been out of ink. If it is just a matter of minutes, you will probably be OK. If it has
been empty for hours or days, you best bet is a new cartridge. This cartridge self-destructs
if left empty for longer than about 30 minutes. Successful refillers learn to top it off
before it goes empty. If you wish to proceed, read the next trouble shooting step.
Colors Missing after Step 7:
If there is no color present on your paper towel after putting ink in each chamber, then one
of two things is wrong.
- Clogged Jets - The very small inkjet holes, where the ink comes out can easily
clog. Ink starts to dry from the outside air and the inside air, as soon as the chamber
is empty. The dried ink blocks the holes.
There is a kitchen remedy using hot water. Boil some water in a tea kettle or microwave
and pour it into a shallow container, like a saucer or the bottom of a paper cup. You only
need about 1/8" to 1/4" of water. Hold just the print head in the hot water until the water
becomes cool. Then immediately take your cartridge to the printer and run the cleaning
cycles. You may have to repeat this 3 or 4 times. The hot water will soften up the dried
ink and the cleaning cycles will force it out of the inkjet holes. If this does not work
after about 4 attempts, try adding a little household ammonia to the hot water.
- Air Pockets - Air pockets are hard to correct. If you did not get your needle
all the way to the bottom in Step 6, chances are you have created an air pocket at the
bottom of the sponge.
If there is an air pocket, many times you will get ink coming out on the paper towel, but
the cartridge will not print. The remedy is to go back in with the 4 inch long needle, this
time get all the way down to the bottom and put in another 2 cc of ink. Then fold a paper
towel into a small square, and attach it to the print head with a rubber band. Let it sit
like this for a couple of hours. The paper towel should become saturated. After a couple of
hours, remove the paper towel, then add 2 more cc of ink. Take it to the printer, run the
series of cleaning cycles and see if it prints. If it does not, put the folded towel on
it again and wait another few hours. Try it again. If nothing is coming out it is time
for a new cartridge, you are spending too much time on it.
Plenty of Ink - No Print
This is an overfill condition. Too much ink in the sponge will cause it to leak very slowly. A
film of ink builds up on the print head and during normal operation the jets of ink can not
get through the film of ink, or they get through but have weird colors.
The remedy is similar to the air pocket remedy. fold a paper towel into a small square,
and attach it to the print head with a rubber band. Let it sit like this for a couple of
hours. The paper towel should become saturated. After a couple of hours, remove the paper
towel, install the cartridge in the printer and run the cleaning cycles.
Color Contamination
In Step 5, if you did not keep the print head in contact with some paper while putting the ink
in, it will create color contamination. When a drop of ink forms on the print head, the adjacent
chamber sucks it in by capillary action. This causes minor color contamination.
The remedy is to run about 10 pages of each color. Make them solid pages, 8x10. This will get
the ink flowing and hopefully purge out the ink that has minor contamination. If 10 pages doesn't
do it, try 20 each color.
The Best Solution
The best way to avoid all of these problems is to fill BEFORE the cartridge goes empty.
You will have to develop a feel for when it is time to top off the colors. Keeping track of
how much paper you have consumed is one method, filling once per week or month is another, or go
by the weight of the cartridge. If you know the empty and full weight, you can calculate how
empty it is. When topping off don't use the full 5 cc of ink, use about 2 or 3. You can do it
with out removing it from the printer if you know you won't be over filling.
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