My printer does not print light magenta. (Canon MP220 - CL-38) The Next CEO of Stack...

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My printer does not print light magenta. (Canon MP220 - CL-38)



The Next CEO of Stack OverflowFixing striped printing from inkjet printerI have some printing problems. I get some black stains all over my pages. Help?HP All-in-one inkjet printer doesn't print wellEpson XP-600 will not print properly with all new ink recently installedEpson BX635FWD Black print poorColors print very dark from an HP Officejet Pro 8610Epson WF-3520. Difference in ink cartridge useageWhy would a printer print wrong colors only from some apps?Windows prints everything too lightHP Officejet Pro 8000: Blinking Lights












2















I have a Canon MP 220, with new cartridges. Prints fine everything, but it won't print light magenta. I cleaned it and deep cleaned it many times. I have no idea what could be the problem. Cartridge models: CL-38 and PG-37.



Any ideas ?



LE: Now it won't print magenta at all!










share|improve this question

























  • Are you able to get another cartridge to verify if it is the cartridge or the printer?

    – Bobby
    Apr 8 '11 at 19:42











  • I thought of that, but I don't have where to get another one. It would've been very useful, but as both cartridges are new, I'm thinking the printer is the cause of the problem.

    – ChristianM
    Apr 9 '11 at 18:53
















2















I have a Canon MP 220, with new cartridges. Prints fine everything, but it won't print light magenta. I cleaned it and deep cleaned it many times. I have no idea what could be the problem. Cartridge models: CL-38 and PG-37.



Any ideas ?



LE: Now it won't print magenta at all!










share|improve this question

























  • Are you able to get another cartridge to verify if it is the cartridge or the printer?

    – Bobby
    Apr 8 '11 at 19:42











  • I thought of that, but I don't have where to get another one. It would've been very useful, but as both cartridges are new, I'm thinking the printer is the cause of the problem.

    – ChristianM
    Apr 9 '11 at 18:53














2












2








2


0






I have a Canon MP 220, with new cartridges. Prints fine everything, but it won't print light magenta. I cleaned it and deep cleaned it many times. I have no idea what could be the problem. Cartridge models: CL-38 and PG-37.



Any ideas ?



LE: Now it won't print magenta at all!










share|improve this question
















I have a Canon MP 220, with new cartridges. Prints fine everything, but it won't print light magenta. I cleaned it and deep cleaned it many times. I have no idea what could be the problem. Cartridge models: CL-38 and PG-37.



Any ideas ?



LE: Now it won't print magenta at all!







printing inkjet-printer






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Apr 9 '11 at 18:54







ChristianM

















asked Apr 5 '11 at 20:39









ChristianMChristianM

34561431




34561431













  • Are you able to get another cartridge to verify if it is the cartridge or the printer?

    – Bobby
    Apr 8 '11 at 19:42











  • I thought of that, but I don't have where to get another one. It would've been very useful, but as both cartridges are new, I'm thinking the printer is the cause of the problem.

    – ChristianM
    Apr 9 '11 at 18:53



















  • Are you able to get another cartridge to verify if it is the cartridge or the printer?

    – Bobby
    Apr 8 '11 at 19:42











  • I thought of that, but I don't have where to get another one. It would've been very useful, but as both cartridges are new, I'm thinking the printer is the cause of the problem.

    – ChristianM
    Apr 9 '11 at 18:53

















Are you able to get another cartridge to verify if it is the cartridge or the printer?

– Bobby
Apr 8 '11 at 19:42





Are you able to get another cartridge to verify if it is the cartridge or the printer?

– Bobby
Apr 8 '11 at 19:42













I thought of that, but I don't have where to get another one. It would've been very useful, but as both cartridges are new, I'm thinking the printer is the cause of the problem.

– ChristianM
Apr 9 '11 at 18:53





I thought of that, but I don't have where to get another one. It would've been very useful, but as both cartridges are new, I'm thinking the printer is the cause of the problem.

– ChristianM
Apr 9 '11 at 18:53










6 Answers
6






active

oldest

votes


















5





+25









I have lately run into this problem and have found the solution to be much
simpler than is advised below by the specialists.



I have simply opened up the hot water at the sink to the full at the hottest
possible, and let the water run into both openings.
The ink will run out, but do not stop when the ink stops running.
Continue with the water for a few minutes more until a second run-out of ink
occurs. Stop only when after several minutes no more ink comes out.



Finally leave the head to dry off for some hours.
Using a drier to blow air into the openings may speed up the process.
When the head is totally dry, replace it, and do head-alignment
and print a nozzle check for verification. If the check pattern is not
correct, some old and dry ink is still inside, so repeat the process.





From Cleaning out a Canon printhead :



Canon printers have a semi-permanent printhead. It's the 'holder' that the ink cartridges (tanks) fit into. It can be removed fairly easily. Over time, it can and does become clogged, mainly from letting the printer set without use. You need to print both black and color at least once per week in order to prevent clogging and keep the ink flowing.



Normally you can clear up minor clogs and streaking by running the cleaning cycle found in your printer's software utility. For quick access to your printer's utility (drivers): In your browser's address bar type: control panelprinters and hit 'enter' on your keyboard. This will bring up a page with your installed printer's icon. Place your mouse cursor over the printer icon and 'right-click' on it. When the dropdown menu shows, click on 'properties'. This will bring up the printer utility. Look for the 'maintenance' tab and follow the cleaning prompts.



If the cleaning cycles don't do the trick in clearing up poor and incomplete output, don't give up and assume you'll need to buy a new print head (they often cost more than a new printer!). You can try the following as it will cause no harm: (we and many others have successfully done this)



Remove the ink tanks from the printhead (tank holder) and seal them in a ziplock plastic bag. Set them aside, preferably propped upright. Next remove the print head, it snaps out. Use the kitchen or other sink and turn the water on so that it is running slowly and that it is warm. Hold the print head, bottom facing down, and cup your hand under the running water so that the water fills it up and flows into the the print head. This will flush the ink out of the printhead. You'll need to turn the print head over, bottom side up, and flush it that way as well. You'll see when there is no more ink being flushed out.



You WILL need to do a final flush/rinse with some distilled, or purified water. This ensures that any residual minerals or impurities of the tap water are flushed out of the print head. Set the print head on a paper towel to dry, drying time will vary but is LONG. TIP: To expedite the drying process, shake the printhead vigorously as there is a fair amount of water retained after rinsing!



Place the printhead (tank holder) back in the printer and reinsert the inks tanks. The printer should automatically do a print head alignment. If it doesn't, manually perform a "Printhead Alignment" through the printer's utility. Next, run the "printhead cleaning" cycle and print a nozzle check.



Here's another, similar method:



Open the lid of the printer and when the print head moves to the left, remove the cartridges (tanks). You should then be able to easily remove the print head. It has the circuitry on it and on the bottom are the outlet nozzles.



Get a small, shallow pan and lay a couple of paper towels in the bottom. Heat up (via microwave) enough purified/bottled water to cover the paper towels. Set the print head on the towels. You should see ink 'bleeding' out. Move the print head to several different spots (about a minute each spot). This will dissolve the ink clogs. Remove the print head and gently dab it dry on fresh paper towels.



Place the print head back in the printer and insert the ink tanks.Run a print head alignment and a regular cleaning followed by nozzle check and test print(s). That should do it. If not, repeat the above procedure(s).



If the above two methods don't quite do the trick, try this:



Remove the ink tanks and printhead (cartridge holder) from the printer as instructed above. Get a small bowl, dish or pan, large enough to accommodate the printhead. Lay down a layer or two of paper towels in the bottom of the container to protect the printhead circuitry from contact damage.



Make up a 50/50 mixture of ammonia and distilled water, about a pint will do. Heat the mixture up in the microwave for about a minute or so, not boiling. Slowly pour over the paper towels so that you have approximately 1/2 inch mixture total. Set the printhead (cartridge holder) into the container and pour some of the remaining mixture over the top, just enough to wet it good. Let it soak for several hours (3-4) or overnight. You can move it slightly to a different spot every hour or so.



Remove the printhead and rinse thoroughly with distilled water. Shake it dry, set it on folded paper towels to air dry. Reinsert the printhead and ink tanks. The printer should do an automatic "Printhead Alignment", if not manually do so and run a cleaning cycle or two followed by printing a nozzle check pattern to check your progress. Repeat as necessary.






share|improve this answer

































    5














    while deep cleaning is useful in many situations, sometimes it dosen't help with a very badly clogged print head. I'd suggest trying to change it.



    some people have reported they can clean print heads with rubbing alcohol, and a qtip, but that's something to do at your own risk.






    share|improve this answer
























    • Both cartridges are new!

      – ChristianM
      Apr 7 '11 at 15:24






    • 1





      what about the print head?

      – Journeyman Geek
      Apr 7 '11 at 23:20











    • The one from the printer ?

      – ChristianM
      Apr 8 '11 at 8:23











    • yes. the one in the printer - which can get clogged, sometimes beyond what deep clean can help with.

      – Journeyman Geek
      Apr 8 '11 at 9:25






    • 2





      no. water or rubbing alcohol. acetone might dissolve the material the print head is made of.

      – Journeyman Geek
      Apr 8 '11 at 9:40



















    1














    HP includes print heads on their cartridges for this reason, the heads get replaced each time the cartridge is replaced.



    Look for new print heads. Many larger office-supply stores should carry them near the ink.






    share|improve this answer































      1














      I know this seems trivial but perhaps take out the cartridge and make sure there isn't a strip of plastic over the bottom or there isn't a plastic tab that needs to be pulled out of it.






      share|improve this answer



















      • 1





        I'm not that dumb.

        – ChristianM
        Apr 8 '11 at 22:12











      • CHristianM, I wasn't implying that you are dumb. Sometimes the simplest things get overlooked in haste.

        – 에이바
        Apr 11 '11 at 1:06



















      1














      I just encountered the same problem on my MP990. Turns out that it had nothing to do with the nozzle being clogged. In my case, a piece of the plastic from the protective wrap around the cartridge (i.e. that I was supposed to COMPLETELY remove before installing) had clung to the nozzle with static electricity and was blocking the head. I'm sure this is not a common issue, but worth checking before you disassemble the head.






      share|improve this answer































        0














        I just had this problem on my MX922. In my case, the back of the cartridge had popped out of the slot when I clicked the front down. Because of the way it's built, it's easy not to notice, and the printer still recognizes the cartridge as present.



        Should be obvious, I guess, but it's something to check before you resort to something more drastic.





        share








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          6 Answers
          6






          active

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          6 Answers
          6






          active

          oldest

          votes









          active

          oldest

          votes






          active

          oldest

          votes









          5





          +25









          I have lately run into this problem and have found the solution to be much
          simpler than is advised below by the specialists.



          I have simply opened up the hot water at the sink to the full at the hottest
          possible, and let the water run into both openings.
          The ink will run out, but do not stop when the ink stops running.
          Continue with the water for a few minutes more until a second run-out of ink
          occurs. Stop only when after several minutes no more ink comes out.



          Finally leave the head to dry off for some hours.
          Using a drier to blow air into the openings may speed up the process.
          When the head is totally dry, replace it, and do head-alignment
          and print a nozzle check for verification. If the check pattern is not
          correct, some old and dry ink is still inside, so repeat the process.





          From Cleaning out a Canon printhead :



          Canon printers have a semi-permanent printhead. It's the 'holder' that the ink cartridges (tanks) fit into. It can be removed fairly easily. Over time, it can and does become clogged, mainly from letting the printer set without use. You need to print both black and color at least once per week in order to prevent clogging and keep the ink flowing.



          Normally you can clear up minor clogs and streaking by running the cleaning cycle found in your printer's software utility. For quick access to your printer's utility (drivers): In your browser's address bar type: control panelprinters and hit 'enter' on your keyboard. This will bring up a page with your installed printer's icon. Place your mouse cursor over the printer icon and 'right-click' on it. When the dropdown menu shows, click on 'properties'. This will bring up the printer utility. Look for the 'maintenance' tab and follow the cleaning prompts.



          If the cleaning cycles don't do the trick in clearing up poor and incomplete output, don't give up and assume you'll need to buy a new print head (they often cost more than a new printer!). You can try the following as it will cause no harm: (we and many others have successfully done this)



          Remove the ink tanks from the printhead (tank holder) and seal them in a ziplock plastic bag. Set them aside, preferably propped upright. Next remove the print head, it snaps out. Use the kitchen or other sink and turn the water on so that it is running slowly and that it is warm. Hold the print head, bottom facing down, and cup your hand under the running water so that the water fills it up and flows into the the print head. This will flush the ink out of the printhead. You'll need to turn the print head over, bottom side up, and flush it that way as well. You'll see when there is no more ink being flushed out.



          You WILL need to do a final flush/rinse with some distilled, or purified water. This ensures that any residual minerals or impurities of the tap water are flushed out of the print head. Set the print head on a paper towel to dry, drying time will vary but is LONG. TIP: To expedite the drying process, shake the printhead vigorously as there is a fair amount of water retained after rinsing!



          Place the printhead (tank holder) back in the printer and reinsert the inks tanks. The printer should automatically do a print head alignment. If it doesn't, manually perform a "Printhead Alignment" through the printer's utility. Next, run the "printhead cleaning" cycle and print a nozzle check.



          Here's another, similar method:



          Open the lid of the printer and when the print head moves to the left, remove the cartridges (tanks). You should then be able to easily remove the print head. It has the circuitry on it and on the bottom are the outlet nozzles.



          Get a small, shallow pan and lay a couple of paper towels in the bottom. Heat up (via microwave) enough purified/bottled water to cover the paper towels. Set the print head on the towels. You should see ink 'bleeding' out. Move the print head to several different spots (about a minute each spot). This will dissolve the ink clogs. Remove the print head and gently dab it dry on fresh paper towels.



          Place the print head back in the printer and insert the ink tanks.Run a print head alignment and a regular cleaning followed by nozzle check and test print(s). That should do it. If not, repeat the above procedure(s).



          If the above two methods don't quite do the trick, try this:



          Remove the ink tanks and printhead (cartridge holder) from the printer as instructed above. Get a small bowl, dish or pan, large enough to accommodate the printhead. Lay down a layer or two of paper towels in the bottom of the container to protect the printhead circuitry from contact damage.



          Make up a 50/50 mixture of ammonia and distilled water, about a pint will do. Heat the mixture up in the microwave for about a minute or so, not boiling. Slowly pour over the paper towels so that you have approximately 1/2 inch mixture total. Set the printhead (cartridge holder) into the container and pour some of the remaining mixture over the top, just enough to wet it good. Let it soak for several hours (3-4) or overnight. You can move it slightly to a different spot every hour or so.



          Remove the printhead and rinse thoroughly with distilled water. Shake it dry, set it on folded paper towels to air dry. Reinsert the printhead and ink tanks. The printer should do an automatic "Printhead Alignment", if not manually do so and run a cleaning cycle or two followed by printing a nozzle check pattern to check your progress. Repeat as necessary.






          share|improve this answer






























            5





            +25









            I have lately run into this problem and have found the solution to be much
            simpler than is advised below by the specialists.



            I have simply opened up the hot water at the sink to the full at the hottest
            possible, and let the water run into both openings.
            The ink will run out, but do not stop when the ink stops running.
            Continue with the water for a few minutes more until a second run-out of ink
            occurs. Stop only when after several minutes no more ink comes out.



            Finally leave the head to dry off for some hours.
            Using a drier to blow air into the openings may speed up the process.
            When the head is totally dry, replace it, and do head-alignment
            and print a nozzle check for verification. If the check pattern is not
            correct, some old and dry ink is still inside, so repeat the process.





            From Cleaning out a Canon printhead :



            Canon printers have a semi-permanent printhead. It's the 'holder' that the ink cartridges (tanks) fit into. It can be removed fairly easily. Over time, it can and does become clogged, mainly from letting the printer set without use. You need to print both black and color at least once per week in order to prevent clogging and keep the ink flowing.



            Normally you can clear up minor clogs and streaking by running the cleaning cycle found in your printer's software utility. For quick access to your printer's utility (drivers): In your browser's address bar type: control panelprinters and hit 'enter' on your keyboard. This will bring up a page with your installed printer's icon. Place your mouse cursor over the printer icon and 'right-click' on it. When the dropdown menu shows, click on 'properties'. This will bring up the printer utility. Look for the 'maintenance' tab and follow the cleaning prompts.



            If the cleaning cycles don't do the trick in clearing up poor and incomplete output, don't give up and assume you'll need to buy a new print head (they often cost more than a new printer!). You can try the following as it will cause no harm: (we and many others have successfully done this)



            Remove the ink tanks from the printhead (tank holder) and seal them in a ziplock plastic bag. Set them aside, preferably propped upright. Next remove the print head, it snaps out. Use the kitchen or other sink and turn the water on so that it is running slowly and that it is warm. Hold the print head, bottom facing down, and cup your hand under the running water so that the water fills it up and flows into the the print head. This will flush the ink out of the printhead. You'll need to turn the print head over, bottom side up, and flush it that way as well. You'll see when there is no more ink being flushed out.



            You WILL need to do a final flush/rinse with some distilled, or purified water. This ensures that any residual minerals or impurities of the tap water are flushed out of the print head. Set the print head on a paper towel to dry, drying time will vary but is LONG. TIP: To expedite the drying process, shake the printhead vigorously as there is a fair amount of water retained after rinsing!



            Place the printhead (tank holder) back in the printer and reinsert the inks tanks. The printer should automatically do a print head alignment. If it doesn't, manually perform a "Printhead Alignment" through the printer's utility. Next, run the "printhead cleaning" cycle and print a nozzle check.



            Here's another, similar method:



            Open the lid of the printer and when the print head moves to the left, remove the cartridges (tanks). You should then be able to easily remove the print head. It has the circuitry on it and on the bottom are the outlet nozzles.



            Get a small, shallow pan and lay a couple of paper towels in the bottom. Heat up (via microwave) enough purified/bottled water to cover the paper towels. Set the print head on the towels. You should see ink 'bleeding' out. Move the print head to several different spots (about a minute each spot). This will dissolve the ink clogs. Remove the print head and gently dab it dry on fresh paper towels.



            Place the print head back in the printer and insert the ink tanks.Run a print head alignment and a regular cleaning followed by nozzle check and test print(s). That should do it. If not, repeat the above procedure(s).



            If the above two methods don't quite do the trick, try this:



            Remove the ink tanks and printhead (cartridge holder) from the printer as instructed above. Get a small bowl, dish or pan, large enough to accommodate the printhead. Lay down a layer or two of paper towels in the bottom of the container to protect the printhead circuitry from contact damage.



            Make up a 50/50 mixture of ammonia and distilled water, about a pint will do. Heat the mixture up in the microwave for about a minute or so, not boiling. Slowly pour over the paper towels so that you have approximately 1/2 inch mixture total. Set the printhead (cartridge holder) into the container and pour some of the remaining mixture over the top, just enough to wet it good. Let it soak for several hours (3-4) or overnight. You can move it slightly to a different spot every hour or so.



            Remove the printhead and rinse thoroughly with distilled water. Shake it dry, set it on folded paper towels to air dry. Reinsert the printhead and ink tanks. The printer should do an automatic "Printhead Alignment", if not manually do so and run a cleaning cycle or two followed by printing a nozzle check pattern to check your progress. Repeat as necessary.






            share|improve this answer




























              5





              +25







              5





              +25



              5




              +25





              I have lately run into this problem and have found the solution to be much
              simpler than is advised below by the specialists.



              I have simply opened up the hot water at the sink to the full at the hottest
              possible, and let the water run into both openings.
              The ink will run out, but do not stop when the ink stops running.
              Continue with the water for a few minutes more until a second run-out of ink
              occurs. Stop only when after several minutes no more ink comes out.



              Finally leave the head to dry off for some hours.
              Using a drier to blow air into the openings may speed up the process.
              When the head is totally dry, replace it, and do head-alignment
              and print a nozzle check for verification. If the check pattern is not
              correct, some old and dry ink is still inside, so repeat the process.





              From Cleaning out a Canon printhead :



              Canon printers have a semi-permanent printhead. It's the 'holder' that the ink cartridges (tanks) fit into. It can be removed fairly easily. Over time, it can and does become clogged, mainly from letting the printer set without use. You need to print both black and color at least once per week in order to prevent clogging and keep the ink flowing.



              Normally you can clear up minor clogs and streaking by running the cleaning cycle found in your printer's software utility. For quick access to your printer's utility (drivers): In your browser's address bar type: control panelprinters and hit 'enter' on your keyboard. This will bring up a page with your installed printer's icon. Place your mouse cursor over the printer icon and 'right-click' on it. When the dropdown menu shows, click on 'properties'. This will bring up the printer utility. Look for the 'maintenance' tab and follow the cleaning prompts.



              If the cleaning cycles don't do the trick in clearing up poor and incomplete output, don't give up and assume you'll need to buy a new print head (they often cost more than a new printer!). You can try the following as it will cause no harm: (we and many others have successfully done this)



              Remove the ink tanks from the printhead (tank holder) and seal them in a ziplock plastic bag. Set them aside, preferably propped upright. Next remove the print head, it snaps out. Use the kitchen or other sink and turn the water on so that it is running slowly and that it is warm. Hold the print head, bottom facing down, and cup your hand under the running water so that the water fills it up and flows into the the print head. This will flush the ink out of the printhead. You'll need to turn the print head over, bottom side up, and flush it that way as well. You'll see when there is no more ink being flushed out.



              You WILL need to do a final flush/rinse with some distilled, or purified water. This ensures that any residual minerals or impurities of the tap water are flushed out of the print head. Set the print head on a paper towel to dry, drying time will vary but is LONG. TIP: To expedite the drying process, shake the printhead vigorously as there is a fair amount of water retained after rinsing!



              Place the printhead (tank holder) back in the printer and reinsert the inks tanks. The printer should automatically do a print head alignment. If it doesn't, manually perform a "Printhead Alignment" through the printer's utility. Next, run the "printhead cleaning" cycle and print a nozzle check.



              Here's another, similar method:



              Open the lid of the printer and when the print head moves to the left, remove the cartridges (tanks). You should then be able to easily remove the print head. It has the circuitry on it and on the bottom are the outlet nozzles.



              Get a small, shallow pan and lay a couple of paper towels in the bottom. Heat up (via microwave) enough purified/bottled water to cover the paper towels. Set the print head on the towels. You should see ink 'bleeding' out. Move the print head to several different spots (about a minute each spot). This will dissolve the ink clogs. Remove the print head and gently dab it dry on fresh paper towels.



              Place the print head back in the printer and insert the ink tanks.Run a print head alignment and a regular cleaning followed by nozzle check and test print(s). That should do it. If not, repeat the above procedure(s).



              If the above two methods don't quite do the trick, try this:



              Remove the ink tanks and printhead (cartridge holder) from the printer as instructed above. Get a small bowl, dish or pan, large enough to accommodate the printhead. Lay down a layer or two of paper towels in the bottom of the container to protect the printhead circuitry from contact damage.



              Make up a 50/50 mixture of ammonia and distilled water, about a pint will do. Heat the mixture up in the microwave for about a minute or so, not boiling. Slowly pour over the paper towels so that you have approximately 1/2 inch mixture total. Set the printhead (cartridge holder) into the container and pour some of the remaining mixture over the top, just enough to wet it good. Let it soak for several hours (3-4) or overnight. You can move it slightly to a different spot every hour or so.



              Remove the printhead and rinse thoroughly with distilled water. Shake it dry, set it on folded paper towels to air dry. Reinsert the printhead and ink tanks. The printer should do an automatic "Printhead Alignment", if not manually do so and run a cleaning cycle or two followed by printing a nozzle check pattern to check your progress. Repeat as necessary.






              share|improve this answer















              I have lately run into this problem and have found the solution to be much
              simpler than is advised below by the specialists.



              I have simply opened up the hot water at the sink to the full at the hottest
              possible, and let the water run into both openings.
              The ink will run out, but do not stop when the ink stops running.
              Continue with the water for a few minutes more until a second run-out of ink
              occurs. Stop only when after several minutes no more ink comes out.



              Finally leave the head to dry off for some hours.
              Using a drier to blow air into the openings may speed up the process.
              When the head is totally dry, replace it, and do head-alignment
              and print a nozzle check for verification. If the check pattern is not
              correct, some old and dry ink is still inside, so repeat the process.





              From Cleaning out a Canon printhead :



              Canon printers have a semi-permanent printhead. It's the 'holder' that the ink cartridges (tanks) fit into. It can be removed fairly easily. Over time, it can and does become clogged, mainly from letting the printer set without use. You need to print both black and color at least once per week in order to prevent clogging and keep the ink flowing.



              Normally you can clear up minor clogs and streaking by running the cleaning cycle found in your printer's software utility. For quick access to your printer's utility (drivers): In your browser's address bar type: control panelprinters and hit 'enter' on your keyboard. This will bring up a page with your installed printer's icon. Place your mouse cursor over the printer icon and 'right-click' on it. When the dropdown menu shows, click on 'properties'. This will bring up the printer utility. Look for the 'maintenance' tab and follow the cleaning prompts.



              If the cleaning cycles don't do the trick in clearing up poor and incomplete output, don't give up and assume you'll need to buy a new print head (they often cost more than a new printer!). You can try the following as it will cause no harm: (we and many others have successfully done this)



              Remove the ink tanks from the printhead (tank holder) and seal them in a ziplock plastic bag. Set them aside, preferably propped upright. Next remove the print head, it snaps out. Use the kitchen or other sink and turn the water on so that it is running slowly and that it is warm. Hold the print head, bottom facing down, and cup your hand under the running water so that the water fills it up and flows into the the print head. This will flush the ink out of the printhead. You'll need to turn the print head over, bottom side up, and flush it that way as well. You'll see when there is no more ink being flushed out.



              You WILL need to do a final flush/rinse with some distilled, or purified water. This ensures that any residual minerals or impurities of the tap water are flushed out of the print head. Set the print head on a paper towel to dry, drying time will vary but is LONG. TIP: To expedite the drying process, shake the printhead vigorously as there is a fair amount of water retained after rinsing!



              Place the printhead (tank holder) back in the printer and reinsert the inks tanks. The printer should automatically do a print head alignment. If it doesn't, manually perform a "Printhead Alignment" through the printer's utility. Next, run the "printhead cleaning" cycle and print a nozzle check.



              Here's another, similar method:



              Open the lid of the printer and when the print head moves to the left, remove the cartridges (tanks). You should then be able to easily remove the print head. It has the circuitry on it and on the bottom are the outlet nozzles.



              Get a small, shallow pan and lay a couple of paper towels in the bottom. Heat up (via microwave) enough purified/bottled water to cover the paper towels. Set the print head on the towels. You should see ink 'bleeding' out. Move the print head to several different spots (about a minute each spot). This will dissolve the ink clogs. Remove the print head and gently dab it dry on fresh paper towels.



              Place the print head back in the printer and insert the ink tanks.Run a print head alignment and a regular cleaning followed by nozzle check and test print(s). That should do it. If not, repeat the above procedure(s).



              If the above two methods don't quite do the trick, try this:



              Remove the ink tanks and printhead (cartridge holder) from the printer as instructed above. Get a small bowl, dish or pan, large enough to accommodate the printhead. Lay down a layer or two of paper towels in the bottom of the container to protect the printhead circuitry from contact damage.



              Make up a 50/50 mixture of ammonia and distilled water, about a pint will do. Heat the mixture up in the microwave for about a minute or so, not boiling. Slowly pour over the paper towels so that you have approximately 1/2 inch mixture total. Set the printhead (cartridge holder) into the container and pour some of the remaining mixture over the top, just enough to wet it good. Let it soak for several hours (3-4) or overnight. You can move it slightly to a different spot every hour or so.



              Remove the printhead and rinse thoroughly with distilled water. Shake it dry, set it on folded paper towels to air dry. Reinsert the printhead and ink tanks. The printer should do an automatic "Printhead Alignment", if not manually do so and run a cleaning cycle or two followed by printing a nozzle check pattern to check your progress. Repeat as necessary.







              share|improve this answer














              share|improve this answer



              share|improve this answer








              edited Jun 1 '17 at 6:36

























              answered Apr 8 '11 at 20:04









              harrymcharrymc

              263k14271580




              263k14271580

























                  5














                  while deep cleaning is useful in many situations, sometimes it dosen't help with a very badly clogged print head. I'd suggest trying to change it.



                  some people have reported they can clean print heads with rubbing alcohol, and a qtip, but that's something to do at your own risk.






                  share|improve this answer
























                  • Both cartridges are new!

                    – ChristianM
                    Apr 7 '11 at 15:24






                  • 1





                    what about the print head?

                    – Journeyman Geek
                    Apr 7 '11 at 23:20











                  • The one from the printer ?

                    – ChristianM
                    Apr 8 '11 at 8:23











                  • yes. the one in the printer - which can get clogged, sometimes beyond what deep clean can help with.

                    – Journeyman Geek
                    Apr 8 '11 at 9:25






                  • 2





                    no. water or rubbing alcohol. acetone might dissolve the material the print head is made of.

                    – Journeyman Geek
                    Apr 8 '11 at 9:40
















                  5














                  while deep cleaning is useful in many situations, sometimes it dosen't help with a very badly clogged print head. I'd suggest trying to change it.



                  some people have reported they can clean print heads with rubbing alcohol, and a qtip, but that's something to do at your own risk.






                  share|improve this answer
























                  • Both cartridges are new!

                    – ChristianM
                    Apr 7 '11 at 15:24






                  • 1





                    what about the print head?

                    – Journeyman Geek
                    Apr 7 '11 at 23:20











                  • The one from the printer ?

                    – ChristianM
                    Apr 8 '11 at 8:23











                  • yes. the one in the printer - which can get clogged, sometimes beyond what deep clean can help with.

                    – Journeyman Geek
                    Apr 8 '11 at 9:25






                  • 2





                    no. water or rubbing alcohol. acetone might dissolve the material the print head is made of.

                    – Journeyman Geek
                    Apr 8 '11 at 9:40














                  5












                  5








                  5







                  while deep cleaning is useful in many situations, sometimes it dosen't help with a very badly clogged print head. I'd suggest trying to change it.



                  some people have reported they can clean print heads with rubbing alcohol, and a qtip, but that's something to do at your own risk.






                  share|improve this answer













                  while deep cleaning is useful in many situations, sometimes it dosen't help with a very badly clogged print head. I'd suggest trying to change it.



                  some people have reported they can clean print heads with rubbing alcohol, and a qtip, but that's something to do at your own risk.







                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










                  answered Apr 5 '11 at 22:01









                  Journeyman GeekJourneyman Geek

                  113k44217371




                  113k44217371













                  • Both cartridges are new!

                    – ChristianM
                    Apr 7 '11 at 15:24






                  • 1





                    what about the print head?

                    – Journeyman Geek
                    Apr 7 '11 at 23:20











                  • The one from the printer ?

                    – ChristianM
                    Apr 8 '11 at 8:23











                  • yes. the one in the printer - which can get clogged, sometimes beyond what deep clean can help with.

                    – Journeyman Geek
                    Apr 8 '11 at 9:25






                  • 2





                    no. water or rubbing alcohol. acetone might dissolve the material the print head is made of.

                    – Journeyman Geek
                    Apr 8 '11 at 9:40



















                  • Both cartridges are new!

                    – ChristianM
                    Apr 7 '11 at 15:24






                  • 1





                    what about the print head?

                    – Journeyman Geek
                    Apr 7 '11 at 23:20











                  • The one from the printer ?

                    – ChristianM
                    Apr 8 '11 at 8:23











                  • yes. the one in the printer - which can get clogged, sometimes beyond what deep clean can help with.

                    – Journeyman Geek
                    Apr 8 '11 at 9:25






                  • 2





                    no. water or rubbing alcohol. acetone might dissolve the material the print head is made of.

                    – Journeyman Geek
                    Apr 8 '11 at 9:40

















                  Both cartridges are new!

                  – ChristianM
                  Apr 7 '11 at 15:24





                  Both cartridges are new!

                  – ChristianM
                  Apr 7 '11 at 15:24




                  1




                  1





                  what about the print head?

                  – Journeyman Geek
                  Apr 7 '11 at 23:20





                  what about the print head?

                  – Journeyman Geek
                  Apr 7 '11 at 23:20













                  The one from the printer ?

                  – ChristianM
                  Apr 8 '11 at 8:23





                  The one from the printer ?

                  – ChristianM
                  Apr 8 '11 at 8:23













                  yes. the one in the printer - which can get clogged, sometimes beyond what deep clean can help with.

                  – Journeyman Geek
                  Apr 8 '11 at 9:25





                  yes. the one in the printer - which can get clogged, sometimes beyond what deep clean can help with.

                  – Journeyman Geek
                  Apr 8 '11 at 9:25




                  2




                  2





                  no. water or rubbing alcohol. acetone might dissolve the material the print head is made of.

                  – Journeyman Geek
                  Apr 8 '11 at 9:40





                  no. water or rubbing alcohol. acetone might dissolve the material the print head is made of.

                  – Journeyman Geek
                  Apr 8 '11 at 9:40











                  1














                  HP includes print heads on their cartridges for this reason, the heads get replaced each time the cartridge is replaced.



                  Look for new print heads. Many larger office-supply stores should carry them near the ink.






                  share|improve this answer




























                    1














                    HP includes print heads on their cartridges for this reason, the heads get replaced each time the cartridge is replaced.



                    Look for new print heads. Many larger office-supply stores should carry them near the ink.






                    share|improve this answer


























                      1












                      1








                      1







                      HP includes print heads on their cartridges for this reason, the heads get replaced each time the cartridge is replaced.



                      Look for new print heads. Many larger office-supply stores should carry them near the ink.






                      share|improve this answer













                      HP includes print heads on their cartridges for this reason, the heads get replaced each time the cartridge is replaced.



                      Look for new print heads. Many larger office-supply stores should carry them near the ink.







                      share|improve this answer












                      share|improve this answer



                      share|improve this answer










                      answered Apr 8 '11 at 19:48









                      music2myearmusic2myear

                      32k859101




                      32k859101























                          1














                          I know this seems trivial but perhaps take out the cartridge and make sure there isn't a strip of plastic over the bottom or there isn't a plastic tab that needs to be pulled out of it.






                          share|improve this answer



















                          • 1





                            I'm not that dumb.

                            – ChristianM
                            Apr 8 '11 at 22:12











                          • CHristianM, I wasn't implying that you are dumb. Sometimes the simplest things get overlooked in haste.

                            – 에이바
                            Apr 11 '11 at 1:06
















                          1














                          I know this seems trivial but perhaps take out the cartridge and make sure there isn't a strip of plastic over the bottom or there isn't a plastic tab that needs to be pulled out of it.






                          share|improve this answer



















                          • 1





                            I'm not that dumb.

                            – ChristianM
                            Apr 8 '11 at 22:12











                          • CHristianM, I wasn't implying that you are dumb. Sometimes the simplest things get overlooked in haste.

                            – 에이바
                            Apr 11 '11 at 1:06














                          1












                          1








                          1







                          I know this seems trivial but perhaps take out the cartridge and make sure there isn't a strip of plastic over the bottom or there isn't a plastic tab that needs to be pulled out of it.






                          share|improve this answer













                          I know this seems trivial but perhaps take out the cartridge and make sure there isn't a strip of plastic over the bottom or there isn't a plastic tab that needs to be pulled out of it.







                          share|improve this answer












                          share|improve this answer



                          share|improve this answer










                          answered Apr 8 '11 at 20:02









                          에이바에이바

                          82641436




                          82641436








                          • 1





                            I'm not that dumb.

                            – ChristianM
                            Apr 8 '11 at 22:12











                          • CHristianM, I wasn't implying that you are dumb. Sometimes the simplest things get overlooked in haste.

                            – 에이바
                            Apr 11 '11 at 1:06














                          • 1





                            I'm not that dumb.

                            – ChristianM
                            Apr 8 '11 at 22:12











                          • CHristianM, I wasn't implying that you are dumb. Sometimes the simplest things get overlooked in haste.

                            – 에이바
                            Apr 11 '11 at 1:06








                          1




                          1





                          I'm not that dumb.

                          – ChristianM
                          Apr 8 '11 at 22:12





                          I'm not that dumb.

                          – ChristianM
                          Apr 8 '11 at 22:12













                          CHristianM, I wasn't implying that you are dumb. Sometimes the simplest things get overlooked in haste.

                          – 에이바
                          Apr 11 '11 at 1:06





                          CHristianM, I wasn't implying that you are dumb. Sometimes the simplest things get overlooked in haste.

                          – 에이바
                          Apr 11 '11 at 1:06











                          1














                          I just encountered the same problem on my MP990. Turns out that it had nothing to do with the nozzle being clogged. In my case, a piece of the plastic from the protective wrap around the cartridge (i.e. that I was supposed to COMPLETELY remove before installing) had clung to the nozzle with static electricity and was blocking the head. I'm sure this is not a common issue, but worth checking before you disassemble the head.






                          share|improve this answer




























                            1














                            I just encountered the same problem on my MP990. Turns out that it had nothing to do with the nozzle being clogged. In my case, a piece of the plastic from the protective wrap around the cartridge (i.e. that I was supposed to COMPLETELY remove before installing) had clung to the nozzle with static electricity and was blocking the head. I'm sure this is not a common issue, but worth checking before you disassemble the head.






                            share|improve this answer


























                              1












                              1








                              1







                              I just encountered the same problem on my MP990. Turns out that it had nothing to do with the nozzle being clogged. In my case, a piece of the plastic from the protective wrap around the cartridge (i.e. that I was supposed to COMPLETELY remove before installing) had clung to the nozzle with static electricity and was blocking the head. I'm sure this is not a common issue, but worth checking before you disassemble the head.






                              share|improve this answer













                              I just encountered the same problem on my MP990. Turns out that it had nothing to do with the nozzle being clogged. In my case, a piece of the plastic from the protective wrap around the cartridge (i.e. that I was supposed to COMPLETELY remove before installing) had clung to the nozzle with static electricity and was blocking the head. I'm sure this is not a common issue, but worth checking before you disassemble the head.







                              share|improve this answer












                              share|improve this answer



                              share|improve this answer










                              answered Apr 28 '13 at 13:23









                              WillWill

                              111




                              111























                                  0














                                  I just had this problem on my MX922. In my case, the back of the cartridge had popped out of the slot when I clicked the front down. Because of the way it's built, it's easy not to notice, and the printer still recognizes the cartridge as present.



                                  Should be obvious, I guess, but it's something to check before you resort to something more drastic.





                                  share








                                  New contributor




                                  jorgenman is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                  Check out our Code of Conduct.

























                                    0














                                    I just had this problem on my MX922. In my case, the back of the cartridge had popped out of the slot when I clicked the front down. Because of the way it's built, it's easy not to notice, and the printer still recognizes the cartridge as present.



                                    Should be obvious, I guess, but it's something to check before you resort to something more drastic.





                                    share








                                    New contributor




                                    jorgenman is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                    Check out our Code of Conduct.























                                      0












                                      0








                                      0







                                      I just had this problem on my MX922. In my case, the back of the cartridge had popped out of the slot when I clicked the front down. Because of the way it's built, it's easy not to notice, and the printer still recognizes the cartridge as present.



                                      Should be obvious, I guess, but it's something to check before you resort to something more drastic.





                                      share








                                      New contributor




                                      jorgenman is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                      Check out our Code of Conduct.










                                      I just had this problem on my MX922. In my case, the back of the cartridge had popped out of the slot when I clicked the front down. Because of the way it's built, it's easy not to notice, and the printer still recognizes the cartridge as present.



                                      Should be obvious, I guess, but it's something to check before you resort to something more drastic.






                                      share








                                      New contributor




                                      jorgenman is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                      Check out our Code of Conduct.








                                      share


                                      share






                                      New contributor




                                      jorgenman is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                      Check out our Code of Conduct.









                                      answered 7 mins ago









                                      jorgenmanjorgenman

                                      1




                                      1




                                      New contributor




                                      jorgenman is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                      Check out our Code of Conduct.





                                      New contributor





                                      jorgenman is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                      Check out our Code of Conduct.






                                      jorgenman is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                      Check out our Code of Conduct.






























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