cannon ip 6000d photo print

  • Thread starter Thread starter jthomas39
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jthomas39

does any one know why the ink cartridge has a electronic strip on it.
My question is will other cartridges without the strip work. or can
you some how dump the ink in the original cartidge?
 
If you're talking about the "chip" on the newer tanks, yes it does have to
be there. You can, however, reset the printer to accept that tank as full,
and you can also move the chip from one tank to another.
Most of the ink and tank sellers now have instructions available for doing
this.

Suggest you visit www.allotofthings.com
 
Dan G said:
If you're talking about the "chip" on the newer tanks, yes it does have to
be there. You can, however, reset the printer to accept that tank as full,
and you can also move the chip from one tank to another.
Most of the ink and tank sellers now have instructions available for doing
this.

Suggest you visit www.allotofthings.com
The ip6000d printer uses bci-6 carts that are not chipped and there is no
electronic strip on them. The newest generation of Canon printers use
chipped carts. There is, to my knowledge, not a chip resetter available as
there is for Epson chipped carts. Both can be refilled but the printers
that use chipped carts will stop monitoring ink levels once you refill a
cart it has registered as empty. Chips can be removed and "transplanted" to
aftermarket carts, but they can not be reset to reactivate the ink monitor.
 
Cartridge World UK supply refilled Pg5 and CLi 8's that have had the chips
reset. They purhased a commercial chip resetter from the phillipines that
will do the job. It works! I have had some of the cartridges, they go in the
print just like new ones.
 
Stick Stickus said:
Cartridge World UK supply refilled Pg5 and CLi 8's that have had the chips
reset. They purhased a commercial chip resetter from the phillipines that
will do the job. It works! I have had some of the cartridges, they go in
the print just like new ones.
(snip)
I have read about a Canon cart chip resetter that is more expensive than an
individual end user would afford. At this point anyone who is refilling his
own carts would not have access to a resetter such as is available for Epson
carts.
 
Nobody can refill a CLI8 Canon cart with appropriate ink since this new
patented Canon formula is a total secret and unique to Canon. Canon
does not sell this ink in bulk. So what ever went in to these carts is
who knows what.

I think that they claim it is Formulabs ink but I have not seen that
fact publically disclosed. And even if that is the case it is the same
Formulabs ink that many claimed that it was the same as the Canon BCI 6
and Canon has moved on from that.
 
Nobody can refill a CLI8Canoncart with appropriate ink since this new
patentedCanonformula is a total secret and unique toCanon. Canon
does not sell this ink in bulk. So what ever went in to these carts is
who knows what.

How much does Canon pay you to make you say such idiocies ?
Don't listen to this troll paid by the manufacturer... I have _always_
used compatible cartridges with results equal if not better than the
original...

-Fred
 
There is no compatible ink to the new patented Canon CFL8.  All the relabelers try to do is come close to the BCI6 ink and claim compatibility for all new Canon printers.  This is a sham but today anything can be sold and one can believe just about anything.

grok wrote:

On Apr 11, 7:59 pm, measekite <[email protected]> wrote:



Nobody can refill a CLI8Canoncart with appropriate ink since this new patentedCanonformula is a total secret and unique toCanon. Canon does not sell this ink in bulk. So what ever went in to these carts is who knows what.



How much does Canon pay you to make you say such idiocies ? Don't listen to this troll paid by the manufacturer... I have _always_ used compatible cartridges with results equal if not better than the original... -Fred
 
grok said:
How much does Canon pay you to make you say such idiocies ?
Don't listen to this troll paid by the manufacturer... I have _always_
used compatible cartridges with results equal if not better than the
original...

-Fred
Yep! You got that one right. Meashershithead is legally and mentally
brain dead!
Frank
 
grok said:
How much does Canon pay you to make you say such idiocies ?
Don't listen to this troll paid by the manufacturer... I have _always_
used compatible cartridges with results equal if not better than the
original...

-Fred
I know I'm going to regret chiming in here, but surely if the formula is
patented, it is therefore definitely NOT a total secret? Patents are
available to anyone who wishes to look them up, and no patent authority is
going to issue one without full disclosure? Still, it was Measekite who made
the statement...
Steve.
P.S. Spellchecker just suggested 'miswrite' for Measekite! Well done,
Microsoft!
 
grok said:
nonsense:
(snip the troll)
How much does Canon pay you to make you say such idiocies ?
Don't listen to this troll paid by the manufacturer... I have _always_
used compatible cartridges with results equal if not better than the
original...

-Fred
"new and improved" isn't always new and improved to everyone, depending on
what people want out of a printer. If our troll really believes that the
new inks are so much better he should trash his ip4000 printer and buy an
ip4300. The fact is that, for his use, the ip4000 must be more than
satisfactory. By the same token, those who wish to refill the new chipped
carts have more than one high quality source of inks for these printers.
From what I've read, the ink colors are very close to the bci-6 colors
except for a reformulated magenta. Some people are using the new ink sets
in the older bci-6 printers and like them better than the inks available for
the bci-6 carts. I would guess that people who refill their carts or use
aftermarket prefilled carts would have still preferred to buy the ip4000 if
they were available and not the ip4300.
 
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