Many printer companies produce ink cartridges that combine the print nozzles with the ink reservoirs. Other printer manufacturers use a combination of ink cartridges and print head cartridges. In such cases, color ink cartridges may be organized in individual Cyan, Magenta, Yellow, and Black units, but each cartridge has a corresponding print head unit that is almost equally disposable. This effectively doubles the cost of replacing the ink. If you do a lot of printing, replacing all four colors at once can be a $200 expense (or more). In laser printers, the price can easily exceed $400 (laser toner tends to be more expensive). Be careful, though. If you find a great sale on ink and decide to stock up, some printer cartridges are equipped with a microchip that is pre-programmed to disable the cartridge when the inks published expiration date is reached, whether or not the ink could otherwise be used. You could easily have an entire shelf full of junk overnight, literally, if you don’t use your stockpile of ink in a timely manner. Original Equipment Manufacturers (OEM) try to maximize their revenues on ink sales. Printer cartridge refills, remanufactured cartridges, and generic compatibles are on the increase in the marketplace. In the early days of these types of cartridges (which I will refer to categorically as “compatibles”), the quality was suspect and using such cartridges put your hardware in jeopardy. However, with an increasing demand and improvements in technology, compatibles have taken on a completely new position in the market with little to no risk. In fact, some compatibles even boast higher output capacities than the genuine (OEM) cartridges. Advantages of Using Recycled Printer Cartridge, it uses so much and helped so, so please feel free to use it, should not be wearing the new
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