- cross-posted to:
- hardware@lemmy.world
- cross-posted to:
- hardware@lemmy.world
tbh i have a old hp printer sitting in the closet collecting dust we dont rlly need it anymore
Not that HP isn’t aware or not ticked off about this, mind. Recently they threatened to brick HP printers that use third-party cartridges if detected
Try that in EU.
I dare you. I double dare you.
<Jules Winnfield>What does ECCN look like?</Jules Winnfield>some ‘third-party’ printer consumables have custom chips on them already.
Recently they threatened to brick HP printers that use third-party cartridges if detected
Simple. Don’t buy HP ever again.
If a company intentionally bricks your device then they are malicious and under no circumstances should you buy another product of theirs.
They should be legally required to refund full purchase price plus interest in every case. If there are legal fees to get compliance, multiply that plus the refund by five.
I have a basic Brother monochrome laser for high volume. I can buy a compatible cartridge for 9€. An Epson A3+ (tabloid) inkjet for color and photos, not a real photo printer, only 4 inks. Compatible inks cost less than 3€.
A great option is to buy auto reset refillable carts, and refill with genuine epson eco tank ink, super cheap, and guarantees Epson quality
My ecotank died just like all the other inkjets. It went few weeks without printing and blue nozzle dried completely up and on the pipes I can see dried up ink on other colors as well. So I had to dig up old Brother HL3040 back to the duty which I retired after print quality started to drop (it needs new fuse unit or something similar, so not that big of a deal) and I thought having an option to print nice color pictures would be nice.
So, if you plan to run ecotank (which does have pretty good printing quality when it works) set up a scheduled task on your computer to print something, in color, quite frequently even if it wastes some ink and paper. I think the main issue with mine was that even if I print stuff somewhat often there was a period where I only needed b&w documents so color nozzles went unused for a while.
I might get a new set of nozzles and ink tanks for my unit as it’s a ton cheaper than a whole new printer, but if you’re looking for a printer this is something to take into consideration, regardless of their marketing material.
I have a brother ecotank…i know this one will wake every noon and do some quick maintenance, like attempting a 10 second print. I guess it’s exactly to avoid ink drying up.
[…] inkjet throws another vague error when all you want is to just print a text document.
If that’s your usecase, it’s cheaper (and greener) to save as pdf.
Sometimes you need a hard copy
Sure, your situation may be different. Here and for employees, it’s about once per year (printing shop) and the odd package sendt (printer in post office). Even tax application is all digital now. And still, most people have one.
Great news for the population segment that was dumb enough to buy an HP printer in the last 20 years, yet is smart enough to perform this operation!
I have a really old one that doesn’t do part pairing and is new enough to do color so it’s worth holding on to. The ink expiration, refill and status is still locked and it still can still brick specific ink cartridges if detects stuff like low ink or whatever. At least non-hp cartridges aren’t all-out blocked. I might have to steal all the information in the post so I can build my own whatever that is before hp sues everyone involved and purges it from the internet.
Some day I hope I’ll find a way to refill the cartridges with ink and hack them to reset the ink levels.
They sure do seem to really hate their customers
My HP printer is 15 years old and we are not changing it until it breaks.
We are used to refill cartridges with a ink syringe.
Dad is that you? :D
Unfortunately he bought a “modern” HP a few years back. It’s a nightmare.