Say ya old fart, didn't you already bring up this printer topic a while back?
Which olde pharte are you referencing?
This question appears fairly often and I gave my standard answer
again, with respect to my personal experience. That is, HP inkjet printers.
It would appear (quite naturally) that if your own printer is working, you would not read a topic on printers. So when your own printer craps out, the question comes up again.
And I answer it again, wiith respect to HP inkjets, but presumably generalizable to others and possibly useful in terms of the concepts involved.
Yes, I inject the supposedly "spent" inkjet cartridges with water, and yes, I shake them vigorously in all 3 axes to "re-wet" whatever sensor in them that indicates they're all used up, thereby extending their usefulness.
And they do dry out in the jet nozzles and alcohol seems to loosen them up. One of my ancient HP drivers has a software cleaning routine, but Microsoft, in its winseven wisdom, has overwritten the old one and I can't find any reference to cleaning routines any more.
And the next time the question arises, I'll say the same thing all over again. It's just a perennial question, like on twist rate in firearms rifling.
Up to 250,000 RPM or more.
No, you can't use a caseful of Red Dot in your .30-'06 reloads.
What does point-blank range mean?
How does shooting up or downhill affect trajectory?
:)
Terry,
, 230RN