Also, didn't you leave out a step: each new cart needs to have the top ball drilled out prior to becoming the recipient?
The Freedom Method does not require any modification to the cart at all. You do not need to touch the top ball. The ink enters the cart via the Exit Port.
I just wonder if there's an easier way to get at the remaining ink when a cart is tagged "empty". For example, what would happen if you took out an "empty" cart, reset it, and put it back in?
This essentially does the same as “Ink Monitor Override”, perhaps with one advantage and one disadvantage. It’s a long long time since I have overridden the ink monitor on a Canon Printer, but here is my recollection of how it works:
When the printer reports a cart as empty and you ignore that and try to print you will be prompted that the cart is empty and to continue using it is potentially damaging to the printer. However, Canon give you the option of continuing to use the cart, by overriding the ink monitor. When the cart was reported as empty there are several warning lights in addition to the on screen advise. One of those is the red leds associated with the cart start flashing quickly, another is the “Resume Button” on the printer also starts flashing quickly. The on screen advise will ask you to press the “Resume Button” if you wish to ignore all the warnings. This action will result in the ink monitor displaying a “?” against the overridden cart, in place of the red “X’. In addition the cart graph will be completely white, instead of showing 5% remaining, as in the case of the normal empty graph.
If you use the cart with “Ink Monitor Overridden”, it will eventually start to run out of ink, but there is no way of knowing when that will be, and when it does happen there is the potential to damage the printhead. If you are part way through printing an A4 or A3 when ink runs out, you won’t know immediately because that part of the print is not yet in view and you really need to stop it printing ASAP.
Removing the cart and resetting is much the same as Overriding the ink monitor,except the ink monitor is not totally useless but it is misleading. The ink monitor will start at 100% full, drop to 90% full after the 1st ml or so, then drop to 80% full after the 2nd ml or so and I suspect around about this point is where it is likely to run out of ink and you have the same problem of potential damage to the printhead.
Transferring ink from a Donor cart to a Recipient cart removes the danger of damaging the printhead and, I believe, should yield more ink than continuing to just use a cart reported as empty.
I agree that extracting the ink took a bit of effort in my initial trial, but I hope my revised equipment will improve that significantly. Refilling is frankly “a piece of cake” (is that a globally used term) using the Freedom Method, from what I have seen and read. I have not tried it yet though.
The workflow I described has more procedures than necessary, but I wanted to make sure it was foolproof. eg. It is potentially possible to remove a cart refill it and replace it within 60s. However, I can imagine someone new to refilling could panic in the rush to beat the clock and stuff things up.