Sounds to me that the problem is the css ink system and the ink used rather than the printer itself Shocked
I have heard of someone leaving their R1800 for several months and it fired up again with little problem.
Hi Terry and Ray.
I have to take the opposing view. I have an R 1800, and there were times, when I was in the hospital for many weeks, plus convalescing afterwards where the printer didn't get used at all.
I turned it on and it went through its normal start up routine which includes a mild cleaning cycle. I printed a test sheet to see if there were any clogs... nothing showed.
As you well know, that crappy Epson nozzle check print with the wavy lines is hard to see at best. Nothing beats a good test print of a test image which can be compared to one you printed a while ago.
The secret is in using Epson inks. It is more imperative to use Epson inks with pigment type ink than years ago.
I have many friends who use third party inks, and they realize the limitations. They make sure they use their printers often to keep the "lumps" out of the system.
I have a friend, Peter, who monitors the forum, but never posts. He lives in Sarasota 7 months, and New Jersey for 5 months. His Epson printer sits idle for 5 months. When he returns in November, one cleaning cycle to be sure, and he makes glorious prints... and talk about a fuss pot!
I have another (snow bird) friend who arrives in Sarasota in October and returns to NJ in May. He has a 3800 sitting idle here. He arrives, and makes a test print or two, and his prints are beautiful.
One rule that seems to be ignored in Mical's explanation. The one that says, whatever settings you use in the driver to create the target print, will be the settings to be used when using that profile.
As Ray says, the ink amount is governed by the paper selection. I see that your selection of paper brands include some I never heard of. Usually, that package will contain a specified Epson paper selection to be used with their paper. Otherwise you are flying blind.
The 1290 uses Dye ink. The R800 uses Pigment ink. Are you sure the paper you are trying to profile allows either ink type?
As I mentioned in an earlier post, I used and loved Colorlife paper. That is a DYE ink only paper. I had to give it up.
Why not: insert the Epson Profile that came with the R800 that says Epson Premium Glossy.icm and with the driver set to No Color Management, and the paper selection set to Epson Prem. Glossy Photo paper, and the quality set to Best Photo, make a test print using Epson Premium Glossy photo paper of course.
Now you have a starting baseline to make a judgement.
See screen snaps.
If you have a yellow cast in those, then I would suspect my ink flow (nozzles) or ink cartridges.
I know I got carried away here writing such a tome, but I might as well add one more item.
I have a Canon i960 which was impossible to use anymore. It required that I make three full 8 x 10 prints before the colors would look normal. The first print was covered in red, second less, third almost gone, and the 4th print looked fine.
I wanted to toss it out but I had so many new ink cartridges for it that I was looking for someone who would take the stuff away for free. It sat here idle for 8 months.
Finally as I was experimenting with my W7 64 bit, I wanted to see if I could get that i960 to print in the 64 bit W7. I managed to find a patched driver for it. I turned it on and the ink light was telling me I was low or out. Phooey, I replaced the inks that showed Low or OUT (3 carts) and the Red problem disappeared. The printer works perfectly now.
Was it bad ink cartridges? I believe so. I tried the i960 in my Vista 32 setup, and it prints fine there too. Old driver... was not the problem.
So a good thing to keep in the back of your mind...
Best to all.
Fred