(E-Mail Removed) wrote:
> This isn't really a request for information, more a comment. I bought
> an canon ip4200 in the spring, as a replacement for an ip1000 that i
> had got really cheap, and which clogged up badly after I used about 3
> sets of Staples own brand cartridges.
>
> I am very happy with the ip4200, it does everything I want, I find the
> CD/DVD printing very handy, the duplex sounded great but I don't seem
> to use it that much. The cassette is handy, it means that the sheet
> feeder can stay shut, and Zebda the plush zebra can sit on top of the
> printer and supervise things. (Boy does he rock about when it's in
> action).
>
> In early September, I got a warning that the magenta tank was running
> low. A couple of days later I got warnings about the yellow and cyan,
> and after another week, the pigment black.
>
> I posted on here to find out if i would get further warning before the
> ink ran out, and was told that the printer would refuse to print if it
> decided a cartridge had actually run out. I dutifully went to Staples
> and bought a set of 5 cartridges. Maybe I don't print much, (perhaps
> the cost put a fright into me) but it took another 2 months before the
> first cartridge (magenta) to run out was signalled. A fortnight later
> the yellow ran out, and last week, the pigment black finally went. Four
> months after the first warning, the cyan is still going strong.
>
> I wonder if Canon deliberately make the running-out warnings happen
> very early indeed? Hoping people will just buy and replace the
> cartridges? I mean, I went out and bought new ink thinking that I had
> a day or two in hand, but four months!
>
> Does this suggest that I am a very light user? My girlfriend prints a
> lot of college stuff in black, and I do the the odd photo on glossy
> card.
>
The answer is YES, you are a light user. I don't
have the 4200 but have the 4000 which is quite
similar. If you print photos or use higher
quality paper, the mere selecting of those papers
will result in the use of much more ink because
the printing is much higher quality. You can
print lots of stuff (color or black) on regular
paper using one set of cartridges; printing on
higher quality paper or at higher quality settings
will use much more ink.