You can change a cartridge in the middle of a print with an Epson as
well. My Epson is faster and quieter than my Canon everyday printer.
But both have newer models I am not familiar with. Canon has not even
attempted to follow Epson into the archival area. I doubt that that
droplets below a certain size is that important except for bragging
rights when they are all so small as to be unseen by the unaided eye.
Canon may be stuck with impermanent dyes because their head design
relies on heaters to boil the ink and blow it through the jet. Pigments
may clog that kind of head.
HP has followed Epson with their archival pigmented inks. You can see
them on the Wilhelm site. They make a good printer as well. HP seems to
be trying the hardest to bite into Epson's print market. HP just has a
bad history of major shifts of support especially for the Mac and with
their current business problems...
Winsor
Long Beach, California, USA
On Feb 15, 2005, at 9:47 AM, Willie Wonka wrote:
> It looked like Epson was a follower. I also interrogated the
> Silverschnozzed to the point of annoyance and was impressed when he
> told me how he changed a cartrige in the middle of a print with no
> effect on the picture on his S9000
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