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Canon Pixma IP4500 duplex printing

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How to save money printing with Canon Pixma Printers

Canon Pixma Printers, Smart chips, Resetters, ARCs & how to save money printing

Canon Printers are designed to keep you coming back to Canon for expensive ink cartridges. Let me explain how you can purchase a great Canon printer and save over 90% on printing costs. 

What most people do not know about Canon printers is that they use a Smart Chip system to keep you buying their ink cartridges. Those cartridges for a 5 cartridge printer can cost you over $60 every time you have to replace them! In many cases that is about half the cost of the printer itself. If you have children, or are going to school, or do printing for your church or club, or have a small business, which depends on printing documents, this cost can quickly become a money eating monster. 

We learned this when we purchased our first Canon printer back in 2006. So why not, refill those ink cartridges, and just buy ink? Won’t that work? 

Well it sounds like a great idea until you discover, like many of our customers have, that Canon Pixma printers will recognize the ink cartridge but they will continue to tell you that it is empty despite the fact that you have filled it with ink!

Why this is, is because of the ‘Smart Chip’, which Canon installs on all their ink cartridges. 

That little chip on the bottom front of your ink cartridge has to be reset to its original specifications before it will let the printer print no matter how much in you have poured into it. 

So what to do about that? 

Well it is not such an issue anymore because RKS back in 2004 broke the way for people to decode those chips. Today we have resetters and chips, and even auto reset chips for all of the Canon printers that take: Cli-8, pgi-5, cli-221, pgi-220, cli-226 and pgi-225 chips. 

At this writing, there are 47 printers that take these ink cartridges.

But unless you know which ones to consider, you may purchase one of the other Canon Pixma printers which will never have a resetter. This is where doing your homework can save you hundreds of dollars. The original cost a printer is not high, but if you have to replace cartridges every month, at the rate of $60, that will add up very quickly. 

So now that you understand what you need to know, below I have listed all the Canon Pixm printers, at this writing, which have aftermarket resetting capabilities. We stock resetters for each of these printers, we also stock empty refillable ink cartridges which come with auto reset chips already installed. These auto reset chips, or ARCs as they are called in the business, will automatically reset themselves to the original specifications, every time you remove them from your printer and put them back in. So now you have more choices in the way you can save money. 

1.)You can keep your original ink cartridges and buy a resetter to reset the chips each time. Filling an original ink cartridge can be done either by drilling a little hole in the top and filling with a syringes, or peeling back the top front of the label and pulling out the little dipple plug that seals the hole that Canon used to fill the cartridge. Then once you have filled it with ink, you can either use and aftermarket plug or just a drop of silicon to seal it back. 

2.) You can buy a resetter and compatible ink cartridges without the chips. Then when your original carts are empty you reset the chip, peel it off the cartridge and slide into the harness on the new compatible ink cartridge. With our G&G compatibles, it take about 2 minutes to do this. Price for a set of G&G compatibles, which come with excellent Everbrite ink is $11.92 

3) You can buy a set of empty refillable ink cartridges without chips and then just glue your original chips in place, reset them and fill the cartridges each time. 

4) You can buy a set of empty refillable ink cartridges with auto reset chips and then that is that. Just refill them and put them back in your printer. 

I hope this helped you realize how you can save money printing with most Canon Pixma printers. If you are in the market for a new printer or when you are again, make sure to check the list below or email me with your question or for an update. I will do my best to help you get a printer that will suit all your needs, save you money on printing and hopefully keep this planet green. 

Thanks for visiting - 

Michele & The InkjetReset family 
Please check our store for resetters, empty refillable ink cartridges with auto reset chips, plugs and other helpful aftermarket Pixma printer products. 

Printers using the CLI-8 & PGI-5 chips series include:  (30 printer choices)  See the resetter here: Cli-8 Resetter
iP3500, iP4200,  iP4300, iP4500, iP5000, iP5200, iP5200R, iP5300, iP6600, iP6600 D, iP6700, 
iP6700D, iX4000, iX5000, Pro9000
MP500,MP510, MP520, MP530, MP600, MP600R, MP610, MP800, MP800R, MP810, MP830, MP950, MP 970*, MX700, MX850

Printers using the CLI-221 & PGI-220 chips series include:   (11 printer choices) See this resetter here: Cli-221 Resetter
IP3600, IP4600, IP4700, MP560, MP620, MP620B, MP640, MP980, MP990, MX860, MX870

Printers using the CLI-226 & PGI-225 chips series include:  (6 printer choices) See this resetter here: Cli-226 Resetter 
IP4820, MG 5120, MG 6120, MG 8120, MG 5220, MX882

Please visit InkjetReset.com for all your Canon Pixma reseters, refillables & other money saving items. 
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Demise of printing on account of the iPad Heres the man bites dog version

Demise of printing at the hands of the iPad? Its a familar story of the last few years, but heres a "man bites dog" version, as related in a CNet story questioning the veracity of the "accidental nature" of BBC newsperson Simon McCoy mistaking a package of office paper for an iPad. As the piece, by Chris Matsyzyczyk, points out, the "heft" of the paper would make it very difficult to mistake for the much lighter iPad.

Our industry has been very aware of the shift from consumption of information via electronic devices, like smartphones and tablet computers, at the expense of printers and the supplies and paper which go with them. Heres a purported case, however, of paper replacing the iPad - and does that overall incredulity lead to why it the story is so questioned?

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More on iPhone printing 2 0

With the recent excitement surrounding the new iPhone, the 2.0 software, and all the new iPhone applications, it seemed inevitable that wed get some printing information from some where.

Well, thanks to a sharp-eyed reader (thanks SS), from iPhoneBuzz.com comes a post entitled "Printing from your iPhone may be possible soon". Interesting indicator of Bluetooth printing in iPhones future?

And on the same beat, King HomeTech is featuring an untitled post regarding iPhone printing. The blogs author is working with me on a further explanation for us mere mortals, so stay tuned!
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No stone unturned HP enters 3D Printing Market

HP continues to expand its printing industry footprint (remember when they declared it was "printing", not "printers") with todays announcement they will join forces with 3D-printer maker Stratasys of Eden Prairie, MN. Weve covered this market a bit (see "3D Printers on the same downward price path as conventional printers?") and it seems inevitable, when thinking about it, that HP would enter this space. Its notable that the deal, basically a branding deal for now, comes from the Large-format/Graphics unit of IPG, and the linkage between printing designs and then modeling them in three dimensions (see quote below) makes it clear that we havent heard the last of HP in this space.

"There are millions of 3D designers using 2D printers who are ready to bring their designs to life in 3D," said Santiago Morera, vice president and general manager of HPs Large Format Printing Business. "Stratasys FDM technology is the ideal platform for HP to enter the 3D MCAD printing market and begin to capitalize on this untapped opportunity."


PR advice based on recent pop culture trends for HP and Stratasys (not that they asked)? Play up the 3D connection with box-office movie sensation Avatar (which of course only has the label "3D" in common, except maybe for its "futuristic" aura), and downplay the recent Stratasys charity auction of a Jay Leno-autographed Dimension 3D printer...
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