Select from a wide range of
Inkjet Cartridges from HP Hewlett Packard Canon Lexmark Brother Epson Xerox Okidata.
Lowest everyday prices on compatibles or choose to purchase the OEM originals.
Inkjet cartridges. An awful fact of life is that you have to replace those expensive
inkjet cartridges. We make it a bit easier on your wallet by offering compatibles
that are designed to replace the original OEM models. For those that can only do
without the originals, we have the originals as well. Choose from all major brands.
Inkjet Printers. A type of printer that works by spraying ionized ink at a sheet of paper.
Magnetized plates in the ink's path direct the ink onto the paper in the desired shapes.
Ink-jet printers are capable of producing high quality print approaching that produced by
laser printers. A typical ink-jet printer provides a resolution of 300 dots per inch,
although some newer models offer higher resolutions. In general, the price of ink-jet
printers is lower than that of laser printers. However, they are also considerably slower.
Another drawback of ink-jet printers is that they require a special type of ink that is
apt to smudge on inexpensive copier paper. Because ink-jet printers require smaller
mechanical parts than laser printers, they are especially popular as portable printers. In
addition, color ink-jet printers provide an inexpensive way to print full-color documents.
Inkjet Cartridge. (1) A removable storage medium (tape, disk, or memory chip). Some
printers have slots in which you can insert cartridges to load different fonts. A font
loaded from a cartridge is called a font cartridge or cartridge font. The term removable
cartridge usually refers to a type of hard disk that you can remove. Removable cartridges
offer the speed of hard disks along with the portability of floppy disks. (2) For laser
and ink-jet printers, a toner cartridge is a metal container that holds the toner.
Replacement of consumables is an important use for cartridges. They are typically used in
printers to hold the ink in the case of inkjet printers, or toner for laser printers.
Ink jet printers are the most common type of computer printer; and industry and commerce
also use them extensively for special-purpose applications. For example, many ATMs, stock
control systems, and cash registers use an inkjet printer.
An Epson inkjet printerIn the personal and small business computer market, inkjet printers
currently easily predominate. Inkjets are usually inexpensive, quiet, reasonably fast, and
many models can produce high quality output.
Like most modern technologies, the present-day inkjet has built on the progress made by
many earlier versions. Among many contributors, Hewlett-Packard and Canon can claim a
substantial share of credit for the development of the modern inkjet. In the worldwide
consumer market, four manufacturers account for the majority of inkjet printer sales:
Canon, Hewlett-Packard, Epson, and Lexmark.
Most current inkjets (Epson being a notable exception) work by having a print cartridge
with a series of tiny electrically-heated chambers constructed by photolithography. To
produce an image, the printer runs a pulse of current through the heating elements. A
steam explosion in the chamber forms a bubble, which propels a droplet of ink onto the
paper (hence Canon's tradename for its inkjets, bubblejet). When the bubble condenses,
surplus ink is sucked back up from the printing surface. The ink's surface tension pumps
another charge of ink into the chamber through a narrow channel attached to an ink
reservoir. Epson's Micro Piezo technology uses a piezo crystal in each nozzle instead of a
heating element. When current is applied, the crystal bends, forcing a droplet of ink from
the nozzle.
Older ink jet printers directed ink streams electrostatically or piezoelectrically;
ultrasound was used to induce waves in the ink, which then broke into little droplets that
would fall on the right place on the page.
Compared to earlier consumer-oriented printers, ink jets have a number of advantages.
Compared to dot matrix or daisywheel printers, they run much more quietly. Many can
produce high resolutions, and color printing of excellent quality is widely available.
The disadvantages of inkjets include flimsy print heads (prone to clogging) and expensive
ink cartridges (sometimes costing US$30 $40 or more). This typically leads
value-minded consumers to consider laser printers for medium-to-high volume printer
applications.
Two main design philosophies operate in inkjet head design. Each has strengths and
weaknesses.
The fixed-head philosophy provides an inbuilt print head that is designed to last for the
whole life of the printer. The idea is that because the head need not be replaced every
time the ink runs out, consumable costs are typically lower and the head itself can be
more precise than a cheap disposable one. On the other hand, if the head is damaged, it is
usually necessary to replace the entire printer. Epson have traditionally used fixed print
heads. In fact, disposable heads have proven to be equally good.
The disposable head philosophy uses a print head which is part of the replaceable ink
cartridge. Every time the printer runs out of ink, the entire cartridge is replaced with a
new one. This adds to the cost of consumables and makes it more difficult to manufacture a
high-precision head within reasonable cost limits, but also means that a damaged print
head is only a minor problem: the user can simply buy a new cartridge. Hewlett-Packard has
traditionally favoured the disposable print head, as did Canon in its early models.
A few printers (including certain Olivetti and Fujitsu models) have used an intermediate
method: a disposable ink tank mounted on a disposable head, which is replaced infrequently
(perhaps every sixth ink tank or so). These did not achieve great market success.
Canon now uses (in most models) replaceable print heads which are designed to last the
life of the printer, but can be replaced by the user if they should become clogged. The
ink tanks are separate for each ink color.
A common business model for ink jet printers involves selling the actual printer at or
even below cost, while dramatically marking up the price of the (proprietary) ink
cartridges. Hewlett-Packard, for example were recently able to cover the entire 12-month
losses accumulated by their other division with the profits made by their consumables
division, and have a little left over.
Alternatives for consumers are cheaper copies of cartridges, produced by other companies,
and refilling cartridges themselves, for which special refill sets are for sale. As a
result of the large differences in pricing due to OEM markups, there are many companies
specializing in these types of alternative off-brand ink cartridges.
Some inkjet printers use microchips in the cartridges to prevent the use of third-party or
refilled ink cartridges. The E.U. ruled this practice illegal: it will disappear in newer
models.
High-end inkjet printers can be used to produce fine-art prints called giclées.
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