Wednesday 13 June 2012

How much ink is left in the cartridge?

Your printer tells you it's time to change the cartridge, but you dismiss the message and keep printing. Days or weeks later, you're still using the same cartridge and thinking to yourself that rumors of its death were greatly exaggerated.

Many manufacturer-branded (OEM) and third-party (aftermarket) vendor cartridges leave a startling amount of ink unused when they read empty. In fact, some inkjet printers force users to replace black ink cartridges when the cartridge is nearly half full. When using ink of their own manufacturer's cartridges, the printers display several low-ink warning messages before finally shutting down due to low ink.

There are valid reasons for not draining an ink cartridge completely, printing experts say. Many inks, if they run dry, can cause significant damage to the printer. You always want to leave a buffer in the tank so that the printer never runs dry. There should always be a factor of safety included.

Wednesday 8 February 2012

Buying Brand Name vs. Compatible Ink Cartridges

You may find that purchasing new brand name ink cartridges for your printer quickly becomes very costly, but there are alternative ways to get the same quality standard for a lower price.
Your primary options are: brand name (OEM) cartridges, compatible cartridges or remanufactured cartridges.

Brand Name Cartridges

Most of the printer manufacturers make the replacement printer cartridges that are best suited for their printers. This is the most expensive option, and in some cases the only option if you purchase a newer printer whose manufacturer embedded computer chips inside the ink cartridge.

Compatible Cartridges

Compatible ink cartridges are specially manufactured to meet OEM (Original Equipment Manufacturer) specifications. They usually set very high standards of quality and reliability and offer high quality printing results, often exceeding the quality specification set by the OEM. These cartridges are manufactured with brand new components and are an economical alternative to expensive brand name cartridges.

You may also be pleasantly surprised to notice that the compatible cartridge will print as many or more pages than your original OEM cartridge. This mainly happens because some original OEM ink cartridges were not filled to capacity. In this case a compatible inkjet cartridge may give you double advantage: it can reduce your cost per cartridge and reduce your cost per page by printing more pages.

Remanufactured Cartridges

As the name suggests remanufactured cartridges are rebuilt from used empty cartridges. The remanufacturing process is not just about refilling the cartridges; they are taken apart, repaired, new parts are used if needed, and than they are refilled with ink.

High quality standards are maintained during the remanufacturing process so that the quality of the ink and any replaced part is the same as the original equipment manufacturer's (OEM) quality. If processed correctly, remanufactured cartridges have the ability to meet or exceed OEM specifications.