The Ink Blog - Printer and Cartridge News and Reviews

What does the U.S. population think about printer ink?

Kodak recently commissioned a nationwide survey and the results are in. Here is what they found out.

Nearly 50% of home printer users said they would print more or their printing habits would change if printer ink cost less. Nearly 60% said that printer ink is so expensive that they try not to waste it. And, 8 out of 10 (80%) of printer users say it is important to conserve printer ink.

Other results show that:

- 59% of printer users print in black and white as a way to conserve the more expensive color ink.

- 33% print in draft mode to conserve ink.

- 57% choose to just view things on their computer monitor rather than print at all.

- 30% avoid printing photos.

- 25% are sneaky and print in locations other than their home (friend’s home, work)

The cost of printer ink has also impacted children. 30% of the parents surveyed said they would let their children print more in color if ink was less expensive. 36% of parents admited to limiting their children’s use of the printer because of the cost of ink.

And now comes my favorite part of the survey. A new titled has been given to those that do all of their printing at their place of work — The Office Ink Sneak!

Results show that 6 out of 10 office workers that own their own printer (at home) print their personal documents at work. 28% said they use the office printers to conserve their home printing supplies or because the supplies at the office are free. You can read the whole story and see all the results here.

Having worked in an office I could definitely be called an Ink Sneak, as are many of my co-workers now. But, this gives me an idea. How about Pacific Ink offers a Ink Sneak discount? A little something to save you a little money so you don’t have to feel so bad when you have to print something on a weekend while you are away from the office.

Save 10% on all products (excluding OEM cartridges) when you use coupon code INKSNEAK. Visit Pacific Ink to take advantage of the offer.

The Canon PIXMA Pro9000 photo inkjet printer provides photo lab quality prints up to 11″ x 14″ and is priced at $830.00 (although better prices can be found by shopping around online).

Canon describes this photo inkjet printer in the following way:

With the PIXMA Pro9000, you’ll discover just how good a photographer you really are. The 8-color ink system opens up your color palette, and advanced software fine-tunes your output. Move up to 13×19 print on fine art papers. The PIXMA Pro9000’s ChromaLife100 system combines the benefits of dye-based ink, Canon photo paper and FINE print head technology to produce long-lasting, beautiful prints. With an 8-color dye ink system, the Pro9000 produces a wide color gamut to achieve vivid coloration and high glossiness. Black and Color Print Resolution - Up to 4800 x 2400 dpi Maximum 4800 x 2400 dpi FINE print head technology High-Speed USB 2.0 Ink Droplet Size - 2 picoliters Buffer/Ram - 42KB Paper Sizes - Letter, Legal, 4x 6, 4x 8, 5x 7, 8×10, 13×19, U.S. #10 Envelopes Paper Handling - Top Feeding (ASF); Front Feeding (Single sheet up to 1.2mm paper thickness) Noise Level (Approx.) - 37 dB(A) in the best quality mode Power Source - 120V AC, 60Hz Professional printer features using Easy-PhotoPrint Pro (Plug-in software for Adobe Photoshop CS/CS2) New printer driver with advanced color controls OS Compatibility - Windows XP, 2000, ME, 98 and Mac OS X v.10.2.8 or higher Dimensions - Width 26.0 x Height 7.6 x Depth 14.0 inches Weight - 30.8 pounds

Here’s what the users of this printer are saying:

  • It has greatly exceeded my expectations and has far outperformed other printers I have owned over the past 15 years.
  • It is a huge printer, but I absolutely love it.
  • The color from this printer just blew me away.
  • This is not a printer for the casual PC user. It was clearly designed for art studios and pro photo labs.
  • It does not have in internal paper cartridge. To print you must open the front tray and rear trays.
  • Very fast. Very quiet.

If you own this printer, let Pacific Ink know what you think.

This is a sad one.

The Glouchester County Times recently ran a story about a township council cutting $809,000.00 from their proposed school budget. Areas of reduction included transportation, employee health benefits, benefits paid to retirees, and $20,000 in each printer ink and supplies.

A $20,000 cut in printer ink supplies? What on earth are you doing spending so much in the first place? Honestly, give Pacific Ink a call we’ll work to save you some money so you can put some it back in to health benefits and retiree benefits. Those folks work hard and don’t deserve to have their benefits reduced.

Any thoughts from anyone out there?

HP 57 Ink Cartrdiges at Pacific Ink

There is finally some data on the page yields of the new Kodak inkjet cartridges. Here is what we found.

Kodak contacted Quality Logic, a provider of leading edge quality assurance and quality control test tools for the imaging industry. Quality Logic partners with leading technology firms and standards organizations to develop their testing protocols.

With Kodak’s permission, Quality logic put their EASYSHARE 5300 printer to the test against the printers of 5 other manufacturers (Brother MFC-5460CN, Canon PIXMA MP160, PIXMA MP510, PIXMA MP600, PIXMA MP810, Epson Stylus CX6000, Stylus Photo RX580, HP PhotoSmart C3180, PhotoSmart C4180, PhotoSmart C5180, Lexmark X3470, X8350). Here is what the test included:

  • Use of a standard suite of 5 pages printed in a controlled environment with printer default settings.
  • Nine cartridges from each of the printers was tested. Cartridges were used until they ran out of ink.
  • The cartridges used represented those available to consumers on the open market.
  • A well defined “out of ink” criterion was developed to determine when they could deem the cartridge as out of ink.
  • A minimum of 3 different cartridges were tested on 3 different printers.
  • The printing environment was controlled.

What did they find out? Results were quite interesting, and the Kodak printers performed right in line with all the other printers it was tested against. Take look at the full results when you have a few minutes.

As a note of interest, the HP printers did not perform as well against the Kodak as all the Brother, Canon, Epson, and Lexmark printers did. We’re wondering if this has something to do with all the noise they are making with the re-pricing of their cartridges. Let Pacific Ink know what you think?

HP and Kodak have introduced plans to save you some money on printer cartridges, but the immediate savings they offer might just cost you more in the long run — Cheaper ink cartridges aren’t really that much cheaper.

How is this possible you ask? The cartridge you were paying $30 for now only costs $15. What a bargain!

Not really, make sure to check just how much ink is inside that $15 cartridge.

Less ink in your cartridge means a lower cartridge price, but it also means a higher, or at least the same, cost per page when you actually get down to printing. In some cases you can also expect to pay more for the printer that uses these cartridges. Now you are left with a higher price tag on your printer and going through printer cartridges a lot quicker than you used to. All this from an idea that initially sounded as thought it would save you some money. Sorry.

Late last month HP unveiled their new black and color ink cartridges (we had something to say about that) priced at $14.99 and $17.99. These prices were lower than their previous $19.99 and $24.99 price points. In February 2007 both Kodak and Canon unveiled their less expensive printer cartridges. Kodak, new to the printer cartridge market, priced their cartridges at $9.99 and $14.99. Canon priced theirs at $15.99 and $19.99 (down from $19.99 and $24.99).

Some analysis of these new cartridges showed they contained less ink than those purchased at the old, higher price. Our friends at LYRA Research did some comparisons. One comparison showed that the older, higher priced HP cartridge contained 11ml of ink. The new, lower priced cartridge contained just 4.5ml of ink. As a result, the price per printed page goes up to 7.5 cents from 4.4 cents.

The same was true for Canon. Their new black cartridge contains 11ml of ink while their old cartridge contained 16ml of ink. Price per page goes up to 6.7 cents from 5.6 cents. The new color cartridges contain 9ml of ink (versus 12ml in the old). You’ll now spend an additional 1.7 cents per page.

And, what about Kodak? At this point all we know is that their printers cost more. About $50 more than the comparable printers made by HP and Canon. They have yet to release the amount of ink within their cartridges.

Just make sure you watch what you are buying. The price may look good, but check the amount of ink in the cartridge. Here’s a shameless Pacific Ink plug: Our remanufactured cartridges are filled to capacity and are priced to save you money. Give them a try!

The Canon PIXMA iP4300 Photo Printer has been receiving great reviews at Amazon.com (4.75 starts out of 5). CNET gives it their Very Good rating (7.6 out of 10), and one single Yahoo! user has rated the printer 5 starts (out of 5).

Here is the Canon’s description of the iP4300:

PIXMA iP4300 is one fast, versatile photo printer. Thanks to its patented print head and 5-color ink system, you can quickly produce spectacular, long-lasting photos with borderless edges - from credit-card size up to 8.5″ x 11″ - along with bold, laser-quality text. The two paper trays let you hold both plain and photo paper, so you’re always ready to print text or photos. And for convenience, you can print 2 sided without manually flipping over the page!

Features include:

  • Exceptional Resolution: 3,584 precision nozzles create exceptional resolution—up to 9600 x 2400 color dpi (More nozzles = higher quality).
  • Exceptional detail: Microscopic 1-picoliter sized ink droplets produce exceptionally detailed photos.
  • Click-Connect-Print: Just capture an image with a PictBridge-ready digital camera/DV camcorder, then connect and print.
  • Print 2 sided: Print 2 sided–and save paper.
  • Long-lasting photos: Using select genuine Canon inks and photo papers, you can create beautiful photos that last up to 100 years.2
  • Vivid color, bold text: Four dye-based inks plus a pigment-based black ink deliver superb photos and laser-quality text.
  • Enhance Your Digital Photos: Easy-PhotoPrint 3.5 software makes it simple to enhance and print amazing-looking digital photos through your computer.
  • Smart software, better results: Easy-WebPrint software gives Windows users the tools to properly print Web Pages in full color and without trimming off the right-hand margin.

So, what are the iP4300 users saying?

  • Print head and 5 ink tanks installed very easily.
  • Setup was easy enough, but the quick setup photos on the instructions took an extra look or two to figure out what they were showing.
  • I printed out and 8×10 photo on Canon’s Photo Paper Plus Glossy and it looked perfect! No banding, incorrect colors or any flaws whatsoever.
  • I would recommend it to anyone looking for a cheap printer which gives great results.
  • The instructions for installation were clear and precise.
  • My printer gives me top quality color photos as well as crisp black and white copy, and the speed of the printer is commensurate with my needs.
  • The HP 8250xi has truer colors.
  • The photo printing program is dedicated to a Canon printer ONLY. Once the choices have been made for which photos are to be printed, THATS IT. You cannot choose any other printer but the Canon.
  • The duplex printing feature is worth the price of the printer.
  • When the printer is used often (daily at least) the prints are very good. If the printer is left off for even a couple of days, what should be a red color begins as sort of a rust color.

Overall, it sounds as though Canon has produced another low priced, great printing printer. Users are happy with its price and performance.

Let us know what you think.

Now here is a lady that is putting her printer to good use.

Cleveland painter, Phyllis Seltzer, uses a Canon color printer and heat transfer process to create prints that are 70-100% the size of her original oil paintings. How does she do it? First she prints out 11 x 17 inch sections of the original. Then while the image is still hot she turns the page over and transfers the ink on to acid-free archival paper. Last she glues the smaller pieces together in to one large pictures.

Using the heat transfer process allows Seltzer’s assistants to make up to three prints per day. They also touch the images up with colored pencils when necessary.

This is pretty amazing work.

Anyone hear that big cheer?

You didn’t? How could you miss the celebration? We celebrated. Well, not really.

Epson has released their new Micro Piezo print heads. Let’s all take a moment to honor the old Micro Piezo and embrace the new.

HP 57 Ink Cartrdiges at Pacific Ink

Here are some tidbits from a Q&A between Lexmark executives and financial analysts.

The purpose of the conversation was to discuss company earnings. Executives also discussed future plans to help bring earnings back up — They have been a little low by shareholder standards as of late. Here are some topics covered.

Cartridge Return Program:
Lexmark recently expanded its cartridge return program (or Prebate program). The program, they claim, will offer more choices to consumers. It offers an immediate $4 discount on cartridges you are purchasing if you agree to send them back when they run out of ink. This is Lexmark’s attempt to prevent customers from getting their empty cartridges refilled elsewhere, or recycling them elsewhere. As a safeguard these cartridges come with a chip that will not allow the cartridge to print if it has been refilled rather than returned to Lexmark. Pretty sneaky, Lexmark!

Lexmark also mentioned the possibility of a two tiered cartridge pricing program. This is something they currently do with their laser toner cartridges. Customers have the choice of buying the more expensive “new” cartridge, or a lesser priced remanufactured cartridge that has been remanufactured from cartridges that have been returned through the return program.

Memjet Technology:
When asked about the new Memjet Printer Lexmark executives played down the technology and said they did not see such technology impacting their sales. They gave two reasons:

  • The Memjet technology has yet to be commercialized, meaning it has not been prepared to be made available to the general public. Silverbrook Research, the maker of the Memjet, has not released any sort of time line as to when this might happen.
  • Lexmark estimates that Memjet printers will be expensive, and not compete in the price category as Lexark does.

Interesting stuff.

HP 57 Ink Cartrdiges at Pacific Ink

Robin Raskin, a Yahoo! tech advisor, wrote an interesting article on Kodak inkjet printers and their claim to save consumers 50% on their printer cartridge costs.

You can read the full story, but here is the short of it.

Kodak has been selling inkjet cartridges at $10 (black) and $15 (color), about 50% less than other printer manufacturers are selling their black and color printer cartridges for. They also claimed that based on these prices a home printer user could produce 4×6 color photos at a cost of 14 cents each.

Popular Photography took these numbers and put them to the test. Their finding: To get the quality photo that Kodak claimed you would you needed to purchase their more expensive photo paper. This brought the price of each photo to 35 cents. Kodak quickly responded that their printers and inks were “created to serve the needs of households that print large quantities of black and white and color documents in addition to color photos.” The Kodak series of printers were not designed to be exclusively photo printers.

In the end, Raskin said she liked the printer, and felt she was saving money. Pacific Ink wants to know what you think?

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