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Inkjet printer component From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
An ink cartridge or inkjet cartridge is a component of an inkjet printer that contains ink to be deposited onto paper during printing.[1] It consists of one or more ink reservoirs and can include electronic contacts and a chip to exchange information with the printer.[2]
This article needs additional citations for verification. (October 2023) |
Most consumer inkjet printers use a thermal inkjet. Inside each partition of the ink reservoir is a heating element with a tiny metal plate or resistor. In response to a signal given by the printer, a tiny current flows through the metal or resistor, making it warm, and the ink in contact with the heated resistor is vaporized into a tiny steam bubble inside the nozzle.[3] As a result, an ink droplet is forced out of the cartridge nozzle onto the paper. This process takes a fraction of a millisecond.[4]
The printing depends on the smooth flow of ink, which can be hindered if the ink begins to dry at the print head, as can happen when an ink level becomes low. Dried ink can be cleaned from a cartridge print head using 91% denatured isopropyl alcohol (not rubbing alcohol).[5] Tap water contains contaminants that may clog the print head, so distilled water and a lint-free cloth is recommended.[6]
The ink also acts as a coolant to protect the metal-plate heating elements − when the ink supply is depleted, and printing is attempted, the heating elements in thermal cartridges often burn out, permanently damaging the print head. When the ink first begins to run low, the cartridge should be refilled or replaced, to avoid overheating damage to the print head.
Piezoelectric printers use a piezoelectric crystal in each nozzle instead of a heating element. When current is applied, the crystal changes shape or size, increasing the pressure in the ink channel and thus forcing a droplet of ink from the nozzle.[7][8] There are two types of crystals used: those that elongate when subjected to electricity or bi-morphs which bend. The ink channels in a piezoelectric ink jet print head can be formed using a variety of techniques, but one common method is lamination of a stack of metal plates, each of which includes precision micro-fabricated features of various shapes (i.e. containing an ink channel, orifice, reservoir and crystal). This cool environment allows the use of inks which react badly when heated. For example, roughly 1/1000 of every ink jet is vaporized due to the intense heat, and ink must be designed to not clog the printer with the products of thermal decomposition. Piezoelectric printers can in some circumstances make a smaller ink drop than thermal inkjets.
Stores the ink of the ink cartridge. May contain hydrophobic foam that prevents refilling.
Some ink cartridges combine ink storage and printheads into one assembly with four main additional parts:
Ink cartridges are typically priced at $13 to $75/US fl oz ($1,664 to $9,600/US gal; $440 to $2,536/L) of ink,[15] meaning that refill cartridges sometimes cost a substantial fraction of the cost of the printer. To save money, many people use compatible ink cartridges from a vendor other than the printer manufacturer[citation needed]. A study by British consumer watchdog Which? found that in some cases, printer ink from the manufacturer is more expensive than champagne.[16] However, the comparison depends on the brand and type of ink purchased. Others use aftermarket inks, refilling their own ink cartridges using a kit that includes bulk ink. The high cost of cartridges has also provided an incentive for counterfeiters to supply cartridges falsely claiming to be made by the original manufacturer.[17] The print cartridge industry failed to earn $3 billion in 2009 due to this, according to an International Data Corporation estimate.
Another alternative involves modifications of an original cartridge allowing use of continuous ink systems with external ink tanks.[citation needed] Some manufacturers, including Canon and Epson, have introduced new models featuring in-built continuous ink systems.[18]
It can sometimes be cheaper to buy a new printer than to replace the set of ink cartridges supplied with the printer. The major printer manufacturers − Hewlett Packard, Lexmark, Dell, Canon, Epson and Brother − use a "razor and blades" business model, often breaking even or losing money selling printers while expecting to make a profit by selling cartridges over the life of the printer.[citation needed] Since much of the printer manufacturers' profits are from ink and toner cartridge sales, some of these companies have taken various actions against aftermarket cartridges.[19]
Some printer manufacturers set up their cartridges to interact with the printer, preventing operation when the ink level is low, or when the cartridge has been refilled. One researcher with the magazine Which? overrode such an interlocked system and found that in one case he could print up to 38% more good quality pages after the chip stated that the cartridge was empty. In the United Kingdom, in 2003, the cost of ink has been the subject of an Office of Fair Trading investigation, as Which? magazine has accused manufacturers of a lack of transparency about the price of ink and called for an industry standard for measuring ink cartridge performance. Which? stated that color HP cartridges cost over seven times more per milliliter than 1985 Dom Perignon.[20]
In 2006, Epson lost a class action lawsuit that claimed their inkjet printers and ink cartridges stop printer operation due to "empty" cartridge notifications even when usable ink still remains. Epson settled the case by giving $45 e-coupons in their online stores for people who bought Epson inkjet printers and ink cartridges from April 8, 1999, to May 8, 2006.[21]
In 2010, HP lost three class action lawsuits:
In 2017, Halte à L’Obsolescence Programmée (HOP) — End Planned Obsolescence — filed a lawsuit and won against Brother, Canon, Epson, HP and other companies for intentionally shortening product life spans - inkjet printers and ink cartridges included. The companies were fined €15,000.[citation needed]
In September 2018, HP lost a class action lawsuit where plaintiffs claim HP printer firmware updates caused fake error messages upon using third party ink cartridges. HP settled the case with $1.5 million.
In October 2019, Epson had a class action complaint filed against it for printer firmware updates that allegedly prevented printer operation upon detection of third-party ink cartridges.[22]
This section needs additional citations for verification. (February 2008) |
Since printer cartridges from the original manufacturer are often expensive, demand exists for cheaper third party options. These include:
Ink refill services used to be available in office supplies stores, pharmacies and warehouse clubs such as Office Max, Walgreens and Costco.[23] Empty ink cartridges were refilled in-house for customers. These services have been mostly discontinued.[24]
Ink can be bought in bulk, ranging from 100 mL to 5 gallons.[citation needed] Ink from these bottles is transferred to the printer through syringes or droppers.
Cartridge refill kits can contain both ink syringes/droppers, sealing tape, rubber plugs, a drill tool and a screw driver.[citation needed] Some cartridges need to be unscrewed, drilled or simply injected, depending on the design.[25]
Remanufactured toner and ink cartridges make up 30% of the total printer cartridge market.[citation needed] Remanufactured cartridges are recycled cartridges that have been disassembled, cleaned and tested for quality. Worn or damaged parts are replaced and the cartridge is then re-assembled and refilled with ink. Manufacturing costs stay low since remanufactured cartridges do not require many new parts.[citation needed]
Compatible ink cartridges are generic cartridges that are made of 100% new materials instead of remanufactured cartridges.[citation needed]
A continuous ink supply (CIS) system consists of a set of cartridges that have tubes connected to them, through which the ink continuously flows from ink reservoirs on the outside of the printer. Instead of refilling the cartridges themselves, the user refills the bottles on the outside of the printer. Early CIS systems were composed of OEM cartridges that had been drilled and outfitted with fittings to accept the ink delivery tubes, a set of "ribbon" tubes, and plastic bottles with holes drilled in the caps for the tubes and the vents. Today's CIS systems are mass-produced in China, often incorporating all ink bottles into one partitioned container. They typically utilize auto-reset chips, which means the cartridges rarely have to be removed from the printer.
The legality of this industry was brought to the United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit in the case of Lexmark Int'l v. Static Control Components. The Court ruled that reverse-engineering the handshaking procedure to enable compatibility did not violate the Digital Millennium Copyright Act.[26] The Supreme Court of the United States also ruled in May 2017 in Impression Products v. Lexmark that companies cannot use patent law to block reuse of products protected by patent once the product is sold, which in the case of ink cartridges, allows the sale of refurbished cartridges both within the United States and overseas.[27]
HP has fiercely defended its printing interests from the refill industry, including filing patent complaints and false advertising lawsuits which allege that inferior ink is not properly differentiated from the original HP ink.[28]
In 2007, PC World reported that refilled cartridges have higher failure rates, print fewer pages than new cartridges, and demonstrate more on-page problems like streaking, curling, and color bleed.[29] Therefore, product or service research is often recommended.[30] In the tests made by Wilhelm Imaging Research, Epson ink is fade-resistant up to 40 years. Ink from remanufactured cartridges are only fade-resistant up to 3.9 years.[citation needed]
Many programs have been implemented in the United States and Europe[31] to encourage the recycling of ink cartridges. New York has implemented a recycling law for businesses and consumers regarding toner and ink cartridges.[32] In California the Public Contract Code (PCC) section 12156[33] encourages businesses to purchase recycled ink and toner cartridges. In the UK, large compatible cartridge manufacturers have implemented recycling programs in order to receive empty cartridges for refilling of HP, Lexmark, Dell, etc. cartridges, as no compatible version is readily available.
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