- Other ways to Clean Heads on Epson 740?
- Posted by J on August 2nd, 2004
Hi,
I have an Epson 740 which is getting on a bit now.
It still prints fine with one exception: the magenta print head is slightly
blocked, this leads to a streakiness in the print. I have tried using the
"clean print head" many, many times, but it can't seem to unblock it.
Can anyone recommend a stronger method of cleaning? I seem to remember
reading something about cotton buds and boiling water a while back, if
anyone knows a link for an alternative process, it would be much
appreciated.
Thanks!
Joel
- Posted by Jay Cee on August 2nd, 2004
post a valid email and i can send you a word document on how to clean the
epson 740...i've cleaned dozens of non-working printers using this method.
i tried posting the file here and it exceeds the file size allwed in this
n.g.
jay cee
- Posted by J on August 2nd, 2004
cheers JC
ukbloke28@hotmail.com
"Jay Cee" <no@spam.please> wrote in message
news:cel9os$dd7$1@nntp-stjh-01-01.rogers.nf.net...
- Posted by Not Me on August 2nd, 2004
"Jay Cee" <no@spam.please> wrote in message
news:cel9os$dd7$1@nntp-stjh-01-01.rogers.nf.net...
| post a valid email and i can send you a word document on how to clean the
| epson 740...i've cleaned dozens of non-working printers using this method.
|
| i tried posting the file here and it exceeds the file size allowed in this
| n.g.
I'd be interested as well.
brother_rabbit @ hotmail . com
- Posted by Jay Cee on August 2nd, 2004
This is an automatically generated Delivery Status Notification.
Delivery to the following recipients failed.
ukbloke28@hotmail.com
- Posted by J on August 3rd, 2004
agh
sorry JC, must be hotmail acting up again. There is plenty of space and the
account is active.
Could you send it here instead: shok1(at)bboy(dot)zzn(dot)com
thanks!
"Jay Cee" <no@spam.please> wrote in message
news:cem0pb$k64$1@nntp-stjh-01-01.rogers.nf.net...
- Posted by Arthur Entlich on August 4th, 2004
If you contact me via private email, I will send you my free Epson
Cleaning Manual which works the vast majority of times, especially with
dye ink Epson printers. The procedure uses household ingredients under
a dollar in cost.
The manual is free.
Art
J wrote:
- Posted by Danielle Laferriere on August 4th, 2004
Hi Jay Cee,
I'd like a copy of your 740 cleaning technique, if you'd send it to my
email address (above).
Thanks,
Danielle
Not Me wrote:
- Posted by J on August 5th, 2004
.... except that Epson say not to use alcohol at any cost.
Does anyone know what the active constituents are in the official cleaning
fluid?
J
- Posted by Arthur Entlich on August 6th, 2004
There is little more annoying than a Sophomore.
The term comes form the Greek "sophos" meaning a sage or wise person,
and "more" meaning fool.
In other words, a wise fool... used in the second year of a secondary
education or university education to symbolize how a little knowledge is
a dangerous thing.
You tend to claim you know a great deal, and that your knowledge is
absolute but that's not the annoying part. It's your arrogance toward
people who ask questions that turns your "knowledge" into a crude weapon.
Isopropyl alcohol (often called rubbing alcohol) is not the main active
component of "official cleaning fluid" (whatever "official cleaning
fluid" is).
Epson has a number of ink bases. Solvents which work to dissolve them
include: water, isopropyl alcohol, glycols, ammonia (in low
concentrations), and probably several others.
By far, the best general cleaner that the average person can get hold of
is a glycol ammonia mix, such as window cleaner. Adding some 75-99%
isopropyl alcohol, up to about 30%, can work as a wetting agent, a
drying agent and a solvent.
Using higher concentrations can cause damage to some plastics and that
may be why Epson doesn't recommend it (it's also potentially flammable).
Epson uses some polymers in some of their inks which dissolve well in
low concentrations of ammonia. Alcohol tend to dissolve them but can
quickly redeposit them since it is so volatile.
The world is not black or white, and your continual absolutes "this is
the only correct way to do...." is often the sign of either a zealot or
someone of still limited knowledge and experience.
I think it is great that you want to be so helpful and I encourage it,
but you needn't be insulting and arrogant with everyone who asks a
reasonable question, or makes a statement or claim that doesn't fit your
your current vision of the world.
Art
puss@purrpurr.com wrote:
- Posted by Warren Post on August 22nd, 2004
On Mon, 02 Aug 2004 09:19:49 -0230, Jay Cee wrote:
IŽll take one, thanks.
Warren
- Posted by J on August 24th, 2004
<puss@purrpurr.com> wrote in message> Its Isopropyl you dick head, I use a
Spray and Wipe stuff to soak the head
Oh great, another mouthy idiot who doesn't know what he's talking about and
hurls random abuse. Amazing how hard people think they are when they are
hiding behind a screen.
- Posted by Danielle Laferriere on August 26th, 2004
I'm still waiting for mine, and it's been weeks...
Could you let me know if you actually get anything from Jay Cee?
Danielle
Warren Post wrote:
- Posted by Doug on September 17th, 2004
Thanks, Arthur, for the tips. I've been trying to find a way to bring some
clogged cartridges back to life, and from what you suggest, it sounds like
a combination of window cleaner and alcohol should work on most
formulations. I have several Ebsons, a Lexmark z33, and a DeskJet 952c. The
Lexmark and HP color cartridges seem to clog very quickly if not used
regularly. Contrary to opinions I've read here, my Ebsons work like a
dream -- I use two dollar refill cartridges from the Internet, and they've
been working just fine for several years now. I'd buy another Epson before
spending another $30 on a HP cartridge that will clog up in a month.
Anyway, just for fun I'm going to try pouring a little cleaning solution
into the HP cartridge, since applying it to the head hasn't helped so far.
Nothing to lose, I suppose...
Doug
"Arthur Entlich" <artistic@telus.net> wrote in message
news:4BIQc.51972$T_6.18095@edtnps89...
- Posted by Arthur Entlich on September 18th, 2004
Doug wrote:
Most inkjet printer dye ink formulas, although unique, use similar
components in slightly differing percentages. I have been told that
often a lintfree rag with some warm water and which is held over the
head surface of HP printer cartridges will unclog them. I believe a
small amount of ammoniated window cleaner won't harm them either.
My experience with 3rd party dye ink cartridges for Epson printers has
been quite positive as well. In fact some seem to be less likely to
cause clogging than the OEM Epson, BUT, quality varies, and I suppose
some bad ink might be out there which could caused head clogs.
Art