Tony-S wrote in post #3274675
How's the R2400 held up? I've had two Epson printers in the past and had issues with the print heads becoming permanently clogged. After the second one (Sylus 777) I decided to go with a Canon printer and I never had clogging issues. This is what led me to buy the Canon i9900 in the first place, and it's done a great job at printing without clogging issues. Does the R2400 have such issues, or were my problems more likely due to the printers being consumer models? I'd just like a little reassurance as my experience with Epson printers has not been great.
Also, the new Canon 9500 has three blacks (actually, matte black, black and gray) and is the same price as the R2400 (and includes the Spyder 2 calibration package). Are the Epson black inks essentially the same?
Thanks,
Tony
i'm not sure if the inks are the same, unless you mean that you have Matte black, black and gray... the epson has Matte black, Gloss black, Light black and Light Light black. you have to switch out the M and G blacks and that can eat ink. I've ended up staying with gloss black because of much better dmax with the ink and gloss/semi-gloss/luster papers. especially for black and white printing. but it also helps in colors.
i have not had any issues with my r2400. we had a real dry winter this year (20% humidity or so is what i'd typically measure in my room) and no clogging. in fact i really only print in spurts with maybe 2-3 months in between. every now and again, maybe once or twice a month i'll run a web page print on standard inkjet paper.
the only banding issues i've had are: when ink is low, when i tried to run a thick paper through the sheet feeder instead of the manual feed.
i will continue to print when i get warnings that less than 10% ink is remaining, usually go until it warns me that 5% remains and/or when the red-light inside the printer comes on warning of low ink (the light by the cartridge not on the front of the printer) then a few prints later (8x10 or 12x18 ) it'll start to band.
the canons have been well reviewed and have a wide color gamut, wider for sure than the epson 2400 / 3800 etc... in bright colors. it's the same old, epson, canon, hp... the big leap recently has been to pigmented inks for their professional and pro-sumer printers.