R
robwill2
Hi,
I have got a HP Deskjet 600 printer recently.
The original (and the replacement) black only cartridge has on the
back a strip of plastic with a printed circuit in it, it makes contact
to buttons in the housing when mounted.
Under the cartridge the plastic extends too, there is a recktangular
strip with 2 fine lines visible.
Are these lines the 'jets' where the ink is coming out when printing??
In the plastic bottom of the cartidge I find a small (0.5 mm) hole..
As I got a replacement cartridge from a non HP brand (refilled), which
has such a hole in the bottom too, but which also has a hole in the
top (closed by a plastic plug - I assume the cartridge was refilled by
making this hole, injecting the ink and closing by the plug).
I took the plug out and replaced it immediately again.
After this, I noticed ink coming out of the small hole in the bottom..
It kept seeping ink, that's why I let the cartridge a few hours upside
down on the table..
My idea: air coming in after unplugging would force the ink out of the
opening in the botoom; after standing upside down for a while air
might escape and no longer force ink out in upright position..
Is this true??
Hope you can answer on 'jets' and 'ink forced out' themes...
TX
rob
I have got a HP Deskjet 600 printer recently.
The original (and the replacement) black only cartridge has on the
back a strip of plastic with a printed circuit in it, it makes contact
to buttons in the housing when mounted.
Under the cartridge the plastic extends too, there is a recktangular
strip with 2 fine lines visible.
Are these lines the 'jets' where the ink is coming out when printing??
In the plastic bottom of the cartidge I find a small (0.5 mm) hole..
As I got a replacement cartridge from a non HP brand (refilled), which
has such a hole in the bottom too, but which also has a hole in the
top (closed by a plastic plug - I assume the cartridge was refilled by
making this hole, injecting the ink and closing by the plug).
I took the plug out and replaced it immediately again.
After this, I noticed ink coming out of the small hole in the bottom..
It kept seeping ink, that's why I let the cartridge a few hours upside
down on the table..
My idea: air coming in after unplugging would force the ink out of the
opening in the botoom; after standing upside down for a while air
might escape and no longer force ink out in upright position..
Is this true??
Hope you can answer on 'jets' and 'ink forced out' themes...
TX
rob