TheWifeOfBrian
Lieutenant Commander
If the Money Buzzard visits you again consider a Lexmark. I have it on good authority that the Phantom Pervert is able to repair most models.
That's not his superhero name. It's Captain Faceplant. I should know, I'm his sidekick - The Nonchalant Kid.If the Money Buzzard visits you again consider a Lexmark. I have it on good authority that the Phantom Pervert is able to repair most models.
Why on earth would anyone willingly buy an HP printer?
That's not his superhero name. It's Captain Faceplant. I should know, I'm his sidekick - The Nonchalant Kid.If the Money Buzzard visits you again consider a Lexmark. I have it on good authority that the Phantom Pervert is able to repair most models.
You know... not that I really care or anything.![]()
After putting in the new/refilled (I hear the groans) yel and mag the printer worked fine for a couple of prints. The next time it was turned on it refused to work as it said the black cartridge was empty/incompatible. I had no problem with black before changing the others.
Why on earth would anyone willingly buy an HP printer?
My HP printer lasted about 10 years. It actually still works just fine, but I got a new computer a few months ago and decided to upgrade to a wireless printer.
That's not his superhero name. It's Captain Faceplant. I should know, I'm his sidekick - The Nonchalant Kid.If the Money Buzzard visits you again consider a Lexmark. I have it on good authority that the Phantom Pervert is able to repair most models.
You know... not that I really care or anything.![]()
I remember that story!
After putting in the new/refilled (I hear the groans) yel and mag the printer worked fine for a couple of prints. The next time it was turned on it refused to work as it said the black cartridge was empty/incompatible. I had no problem with black before changing the others.
This could actually be your problem right here. On most printers, the printhead is a part of the tray in which the cartridges sit inside the printer. Not on an HP. On an HP, the printhead is part of the cartridge itself. So, everytime you replace the cartridge, you are replacing the printhead. When you refill the cartridge or purchase a refilled/remanufactured cartridge, you are using an old printhead. And they do wear out. When they wear out, the machine acts like the cartridge is empty.
Surest way to test for this is to use a brand new cartridge.
...For my home use, I've tried every major brand and had problems with every one of them except HP. A few have even been memorable in their failures. The board in the Canon took a crap at 2-3 years and the Epson went through cartridges every month or so, even if you didn't use it.
When I bought my current printer, I checked Consumer Reports, which recommended it. That's reason number three.
We now have three of them in the house . One for each PC and/or Mac.
Best part....None cost more than $60 and all are all-in-ones.
This could actually be your problem right here. On most printers, the printhead is a part of the tray in which the cartridges sit inside the printer. Not on an HP. On an HP, the printhead is part of the cartridge itself. So, everytime you replace the cartridge, you are replacing the printhead. When you refill the cartridge or purchase a refilled/remanufactured cartridge, you are using an old printhead. And they do wear out. When they wear out, the machine acts like the cartridge is empty.
Surest way to test for this is to use a brand new cartridge.
Ah, I understand. But the thing that is frustrating is that the black cartridge which now refuses to work is not one of the new/refilled ones that I bought.It was quite happy until I put the other ones in.
Canon is nice. Ink is a touch expensive but not as bad as Lexmark.
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