Posts Tagged ‘remanufactured ink’

Remanufactured cartridges help to save our planet

Friday, January 28th, 2011

Remanufactured cartridges help to save our planet

Not many people give much thought when it comes to discarding their empty ink cartridges. Most of us are probably guilty of throwing them in the bin. Unfortunately ink cartridges take thousands of years to fully decompose in UK landfill sites; they also emit harmful chemicals whilst doing so. Every year in the UK millions of empty cartridges end up in landfill sites when most of them could be recycled and re-used with little effort.

Often people don’t realise there are cheaper recycled alternatives to expensive OEM cartridges. These not only save you lots of money, they also save our planet.

Don’t be fooled in to thinking remanufactured cartridges will be of a lower standard compared to OEM products. If you buy from a reputable retailer you shouldn’t be able to notice the difference between the two.

How to get the maximum ink from your cartridge?

Monday, October 11th, 2010

How to get the maximum ink from your cartridge?

To get the most ink out of your ink cartridge, you need to carry out a few simple steps; these include cleaning the print heads regularly and also making use of the printer settings.

Step 1: Draft Mode

Maximising your ink usage means maximising the amount of printouts. Therefore, it’s important to select the ‘draft mode’ whenever you can. This reduces the amount of ink used for the printing process, and makes your cartridge last even longer!

Step 2: Select the cartridges

If you want to print a black and white page, do not select the colour ink cartridges for the process. If you select the colour ink cartridge it will mix various colours to create the black ink. This will only waste your colour ink.

Step 3: Manage the colour

If you are printing rough drafts always remember to change the printer settings to draft mode. The default setting is ‘best quality’, you should only use this for the final printout.

Step 4: Current page

There are times when you only need to print out one page on a document which contains multiple pages. Some people just give the command to print the entire document. This will waste ink. In order to get the maximum ink from your cartridge you need to select ‘print current page’.

Step 5: Cost of the ink cartridge

Once you become aware of the high cost of branded ink cartridges, you will notice remanufactured or compatible ink cartridges. These are much cheaper options, work the same and often give you a higher page yield.

Original, Compatible or Remanufactured Ink Cartridges?

Friday, August 13th, 2010

Original, Compatible or Remanufactured Ink Cartridges?

What is an Original (OEM) Ink Cartridge?

An ‘Original’ or ‘OEM’ cartridge is a brand new cartridge that has been manufactured by the same company that made the printer. For example, A cartridge manufactured by HP for a HP printer. Original manufacturer cartridges often cost considerably more than ‘compatible’ or ‘remanufactured’ versions.

What is a Compatible Ink Cartridge?

A ‘Compatible’ ink cartridge is a brand new ink cartridge that has been manufactured by a company other than the printer manufacturer. Our compatible ink cartridges are guaranteed to perform at least as well as the ‘Original’ cartridge they have replaced.

What is a Remanufactured Ink Cartridge?

A ‘Remanufactured’ ink cartridge is an empty ‘original’ cartridge, for example an empty Canon cartridge that has been professionally factory cleaned out, thoroughly tested and refilled to the maximum capacity (up to 4x the ink of an original cartridge).

Will using Compatible or Remanufactured cartridges damage my printer?

There is a myth that using remanufactured or compatible ink cartridges will void your warranty and destroy your printer. This myth was started many years ago by the printer manufacturers themselves to encourage you to purchase their very expensive OEM products. Printer cartridges are self contained units, defective cartridges may fail to print or might leak requiring some quick cleaning up, but these malfunctions will in no way damage or destroy your printer! Because printer manufacturers actually sell their printers at below cost, they need to make their profits from selling their own ink cartridges. By using remanufactured or compatible ink cartridges, you are cutting their primary source or profit. Because of this, they will threaten to void your printer warranty if you use cartridges other than OEM. It is illegal for these companies to void your printer warranty no matter how convincing they may seem. There is absolutely no reason why you shouldn’t use remanufactured or compatible ink cartridges, they work and will save you money!

Printing Photos at Home

Wednesday, June 30th, 2010

Printing Photos at home

The affordability and continuing improvement of low cost digital cameras and mobile phones with built in cameras has resulted in more amateur photographers snapping and sharing their photos with friends all over the world then ever before!

If you use a digital camera there are 3 ways you can print your photos:

1. Print your photos instantly on your own photo printer

2. Order your prints online and have them delivered to your home

3. Order your prints from a local photo lab and collect them yourself

Recent surveys show that 45% of digital photographers print their own photos at home, while an equal number order their prints online and have them delivered. Consumers seem to vary their behaviour depending on the number of photos they desire.

Research shows that if they only want a handful of photos they will print them at home, if you want 30-40 prints they will order them from an online retailer and get them delivered to their home, and if they are creating large projects like a photo album or mass greetings cards then they will use a mail order company. How cost effective is printing your photos at home?

Advantages of home photo printing

The decision whether or not to print your own photos or have them professionally processed is the same issue as having your own dark room or sending the film out to be developed in a professional lab, it’s about controlling the final output. The main advantage of printing your own photos is that you have complete control over the image quality. If you are not happy with the result, you can adjust the photo editing software and re-print, learning as you go.

There is something satisfying about taking a new digital image and manipulating it until you feel that it is ‘just right’. For people who enjoy having creative control over their photos, then it is more of a control issue than a cost issue, but it is definitely worth the extra cost. If you are serious about photography, you will agree that commercially made prints can never quite match the prints you make yourself.

One way to cut your printing costs is to print the images smaller than the desired size, until you are certain that the output is what you expect. Considering that not every print on a roll of 35mm film will be exactly how you expected, likewise not every digital image will be ideal. The goal is to select the best images and then make them as perfect as possible.

To achieve the best possible results when printing colour photos; make sure you use special photo paper because it is designed to absorb the ink correctly. Glossy photo paper delivers a smooth glossy finish for everyday photos with the look of true professional prints. Premium glossy photo paper costs  little more, but it has a very high gloss finish that is perfect for printing your perfect cherished photos and enlargements to display in glass frames and photo albums. Whichever paper you decide to go for, make sure you change your print settings to match the type of paper you are using.

If digital photography and printing your own photos is very important to you, inkjet colour printers will offer you the variety and colour controls that you need for the best price.

Cost of ownership

For some people, however, the price of home printing can be too high. Although inkjet colour printers may have dropped considerably in the last few years, and they often come as a package deal with some new printers, they are not that cheap when you consider the total cost of ownership. After you make the initial purchase, you then have to remember the high cost of OEM ink cartridges, and if you are mainly printing out colour photographs, you will go through them like there’s no tomorrow! You may be wondering why is the cost of ink so high? The major printer manufacturers do not make their profits on the printers, which actually return relatively low profit margins. They make the bulk of their profits from the sales of ink, toner cartridges and photo paper. Ounce for ounce, the cost of the ink inside a brand name cartridge is four times the cost of some top champagne which sells for around £280 a bottle.

In addition to the high cost of supplies, another disadvantage of inkjet printers is that the cartridge ink can dry out relatively quickly, depending on the humidity of your environment and how frequently you use the printer. OEM cartridges have a shelf life as soon as they enter the machine, which means you will need to replace the cartridge every 2 years, regardless of whether it is empty of not.

Of course, by purchasing remanufactured or compatible ink cartridges will save you a lot of money each time it comes to replacing the cartridges. Most ink cartridges will produce about 120 to 200 pages, depending on type of use.

Why are ink cartridges so expensive?

Friday, March 12th, 2010

Why are ink cartridges so expensive?

The cost of buying a new printer these days is unbelievably low. You can purchase brand name photo printers for as little as £50 and work horse laser printers for under £100. Colour inkjet printers still remain a bargain starting at around £60. If you are not careful though, what you save in the initial purchase price of the printer, you will rapidly lose when the time comes to buy replacement ink or toner cartridges. The printer manufacturers bring out printers at low prices so that all households have access to them. The problem is that for them to make any money they have to sell the replacement ink cartridges at a very high price. This has been a common business plan for many other products over the years such as cheap razors but expensive razor blades, cheap or free phones with expensive contracts. Although this may be true, printer manufacturers charge so much for their ink cartridges because they can, there is a demand for the product and people do pay the ridiculous prices for original ink cartridges.

When deciding which printer to buy, you should look at the cost per page.  This cost is calculated by the cost of the cartridge you use. For example, you have purchased a Brother laser printer for £100 and a HP colour inkjet printer for £100. A new OEM (original manufacturer equipment) toner cartridge for the brother printer costs around £40 and will print roughly 2500 pages. The black ink cartridge for the HP printer only costs around £20, you might think this is good as it’s half the cost of the Brother Toner cartridge, but the HP cartridge will only print roughly 800 pages. The brother cartridge will give you a cost per page of a little over 1p per page where as the HP cartridge will actually cost you up to 2p per page. This may not sound like a lot but over the course of printing 50,000 pages, you will pay roughly £400 more for the HP ink than you will for the brother.

If you are in the market for a new printer and are churning out page after page with the printer you currently own, chances are you are paying top price for expensive OEM ink cartridges. A great way to bring down your cost per page is to choose a less expensive option when it comes to replacing your ink cartridges. The two cheapest options currently available are compatible ink cartridges and remanufactured ink cartridges.

You have probably heard that using non branded ink cartridges will ruin the printer or produce poor inferior quality print outs. Printer manufacturers have an enormous economic stake in making sure you buy their brand name cartridges, of course they do.

Compatible and remanufactured ink cartridges are made and sold by companies other than printer manufacturers. You can find reputable inkjet and toner cartridge sellers online who take pride in providing products that meet or exceed the specifications set forth by printer manufacturers. Compatible cartridges will work perfectly in your printer and won’t void the warranty. They essentially consist of previously used casing with all new parts and new toner or ink. Remanufactured ink cartridges have been recycled, fully tested, cleaned and refilled with comparable ink.

You must remember that ink cartridges are the hidden cost in any printer purchase. Don’t end up paying for your printer over and over again by paying top prices for OEM cartridges when you can save up to 75% of the cost by purchasing compatible or remanufactured ink cartridges!

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