|
|
|
|
|
|
HomeElectronicsCamera & PhotoAccessoriesPrinter AccessoriesInks & TonersEpson America Ink Black Standard Capacity C64/c84 T044120 |
|
|  |
| Customer Reviews: | | Average Customer Review: ( 23 customer reviews )
Write an online review and share your thoughts with other customers.
Most Helpful Customer Reviews
25 of 28 found the following review helpful:
What a rip off Apr 21, 2004
By Carl E. Feather
"cfeather"
This has to be one of the most expensive, smallest capacity ink cartridges on the market. I go through three of these for every color cartridge. The C64 may have a low price, but the ink is a killer. I'm donating the printer to the Goodwill and saying goodbye to Epson. I can't afford this high cost of printing. And generics clog the nozzles.
9 of 9 found the following review helpful:
I agree. It is a ripoff Apr 29, 2004
By gopr I have to replace the cartridge for 20-25 pages of printing on a normal print. No photos or dark fonts. C64 is the only printer I have seen that requires a Black Cartdrige replacement way ahead of the Color even though I print lot of color pages. Think twice before you buy this.
10 of 11 found the following review helpful:
ink costs more than the printer Jul 24, 2005
By E. Taylor I have an epson cx4600, which on the surface looks to be a bargain, at $80. But the ink costs $60 to replace (3 colors and black) and the black, which I use mostly, costs twice the color ink.
But here's the real jab, I don't print too much and the ink got clogged some. It says to clean the print heads, and then print a test pattern. Well, the test pattern did not show completely clean, and so I repeated it 5 times. Then to my horror, I saw that each cleaning cleans ALL cartriges, and after the 5 cleanings, I was down to 50% ink. They don't have a way to clean just the black cartrige (or a specific color). I tried faking it out by saying i was replacing the ink in one cartrige (pull the black out and then back in) and it almost got the thing unclogged, but on the second try at this it got worse.
Bottom line, they give away the printers then get you by selling you high priced ink. The size of the cartrige is miniscule and I think you could probably only get about 20-30 full page images printed for about $50-60 worth of ink.
7 of 7 found the following review helpful:
Long lasting but clogs Nov 14, 2007
By Stuart D. Gathman
"Custom Designed"
I am on my second Epson printer, the first having been clogged using Epson inks. I have done a lot of research, and the issue is complex. First, there are two main types of ink, pigment based and dye based. Epson Durabright inks are pigment based inks. These produce better, longer lasting, and more water proof prints. However, they also clog the printer much more readily than dye based inks. Secondly, if you use your printer infrequently, the pigment inks are even more likely to clog.
So, if you use your printer a lot, and need the highest quality prints, use Durabright. Avoid 3rd party pigment based inks because variations in pigment particle size worsen the clogging potential. However, if you use your printer infrequently, or don't care about long lasting prints, and want to save some money, use 3rd party dye based inks. These are less prone to clog and are way cheaper. Apparently, mixing pigment and dye can be a problem, and there are various methods to online to purge the printer when switching. I've found that just printing a lot after switching is ok.
What, you noticed that ink vendors don't mention which type in their ads? Are you surprised?
4 of 4 found the following review helpful:
Dang yo Dec 07, 2005
By Cody Gibbs
"need for cognition"
You all are right. The ink is where they get you. It doesn't even last a semester. It's cheaper to print my papers at the library than at my house!
See all 23 customer reviews on Amazon.com
|
|  | |
|
|
|
|
|