accipiter
Established Member
In a printer... Sorry this may turn out as a rant about our "throw away society" brought about - maybe? - by product manufacturers no longer making parts available OR making service by owners a possible option for continued use.
I have an Epson Stylus PhotoR340 printer which, admittedly, I've had for a long time - I don't recall the date purchased but it was released by Epson in 2005. I know that was the year of release because of the research I've been doing to try to get some support for an error message that the printer is now giving me when I use it: "Service required. Parts inside your printer are near the end of their service life. See your printer documentation."
This message gives no indication as to what parts but the research shows that it relates to the Ink Pads becoming full of old ink *because*, probably, of the print counter for number of prints made on the printer, cartridge flushes when replaced etc., etc.
Contacting Epson about support gives a reply that pretty much says "it's an old printer, throw it away as we can no longer service it - no parts (ink pads) available and the service can't be done by you. Go buy a new one" - words to that effect but put more politely. They (Epson) don't advise (like) others to service their printers but said "some one may have parts - but we don't". Searching for another service company indicates that such would cost "from" £65... New Printers are less than that depending on what you go for if starting for a basic A4.
Doing Google searches brings up mentions of utility programs to reset the counter and make the printer useable again - if it's become locked and unusable... which it apparently can IF you ignore the Service Required/error message. Trying to get these little programs comes up with broken links OR zip files that won't open/extract (on Win10 laptop)... I'm wary of trying these anyway because of possible virus issues in running them
So... it now seems that I will have to go and throw away a printer - along with the ink cartridges - that is only usable *until* the required service message decides to lock the printer, put it on the scrap heap with all the other products no longer supported and serviceable, and then go buy a new one.
Sorry all for the rant.
I have an Epson Stylus PhotoR340 printer which, admittedly, I've had for a long time - I don't recall the date purchased but it was released by Epson in 2005. I know that was the year of release because of the research I've been doing to try to get some support for an error message that the printer is now giving me when I use it: "Service required. Parts inside your printer are near the end of their service life. See your printer documentation."
This message gives no indication as to what parts but the research shows that it relates to the Ink Pads becoming full of old ink *because*, probably, of the print counter for number of prints made on the printer, cartridge flushes when replaced etc., etc.
Contacting Epson about support gives a reply that pretty much says "it's an old printer, throw it away as we can no longer service it - no parts (ink pads) available and the service can't be done by you. Go buy a new one" - words to that effect but put more politely. They (Epson) don't advise (like) others to service their printers but said "some one may have parts - but we don't". Searching for another service company indicates that such would cost "from" £65... New Printers are less than that depending on what you go for if starting for a basic A4.
Doing Google searches brings up mentions of utility programs to reset the counter and make the printer useable again - if it's become locked and unusable... which it apparently can IF you ignore the Service Required/error message. Trying to get these little programs comes up with broken links OR zip files that won't open/extract (on Win10 laptop)... I'm wary of trying these anyway because of possible virus issues in running them
So... it now seems that I will have to go and throw away a printer - along with the ink cartridges - that is only usable *until* the required service message decides to lock the printer, put it on the scrap heap with all the other products no longer supported and serviceable, and then go buy a new one.
Sorry all for the rant.