I got a new printer.. an HP 7110 Wide format inkjet printer (13x19 or Super B) for printing positives for burning screens. Its a great printer that only costs $150. Yeah, I know, Epsons are supposed to rule the screen printing roost but to get this size output in an Epson you're talking well over $500-$1000.
So, big prints mean lots of ink being put down. A lot, a shit ton. When I print a positive I have the printer firing all 4 colors to get the opaquest possible print. So that's were CIS systems come in ( Continuous Ink Systems).. yeah yeah CIS system is redundant.
So not wanting to throw $200 at a CIS setup I opt for a local ebay-er that has a $60 CIS and I also order a refill kit for $17.
This is just a photo of the extras that you get, 4 syringes with blunt tips for refilling the tanks, two plastic tubing guides.
The kit came with no directions, and the Changlish web site that was supposed to have the most up to date installation tips was a joke.
The biggest problem is that the tanks are plumbed wrong.. this is how they come in the box:
Note that the black is on the left and the tubing goes straight 'up' from the carts. There is no HP inkjet on the planet that has the black on the left. NONE. To you would think its a simple task to pull the small plastic elbows out of the tanks and reposition them. Yeah.. but ink squirts all over. Now your black tank is on the right, but the tubing is laying in such a manner that it will never work flat as in my photos. So you try and twist the small plastic elbows and they become destroyed. I had to contact the seller and got them to send me (FOR FREE, including shipping) 5 new elbows... of course they said they 'never had this problem' and 'sold thousands of kits' (ebay said they sold 10 kits) yet no HP inkjet has the black in the left... so there's that.
Here's the CIS installed:
Note the clear carts are exact dupes of HP carts. The tubing runs under the print carriage (the heads are about 2 inches back) and I simply glued it to the metal rail... its all trail and error. Note that the tubing runs to the left, is flat, and each cart has a custom fit to the elbow. This is the work you must do. Also, one VERY IMPORTANT thing that was never mentioned in the joke directions.. you *MUST* prime the tanks. That means get the air out. If you look at the sellers ebay photo you can see that the tubes are not full of ink. Air pockets are bad, um kay? There are several videos on youtube on how to prime the CIS, its easy enough, but never mentioned in the directions... I just knew it had to be done because when I researched buying one every other CIS seller mentioned it.
This is the side of the printer and the tanks/refills. I did drill a half inch hole so the tubing would run flat under the carriage (even when parked).
Bottom line, I had to pull the tubing, reorient all the tanks, cut the tubing the correct size so that it will feed from the left and also lay flat. Not a horribly difficult affair, but hardly 'drop in'. From what I can tell of the $200 CIS kits they all suffer from this problem... at least the photo's on the web sites do.
One last thing... you will lose the ink level reporting feature, and the printers drivers will complain of 'counterfeit' ink carts... easily worked around and does not interrupt printing at all:
For my needs and skill level saving $100+ was a no brainer. Its not plug-n-play but even the expensive ones don't appear that they would drop right in, either. The tanks hold 100ml of ink, and the carts probably hold 20ml if that. Walmart sells a complete refill kit for $50, and for $75 I have the equivalent of 10-15 refills. But the real savings will show up when I start doing a lot of positives and use a lot of ink.
I have printed out photo's and color pages... the ink looks fine and I cannot tell any difference between the ink from the original HP carts and the CIS ink.