Toner News Mobile › Forums › Toner News Main Forums › MARKET GROWS FOR REFILLING INK CARTRIDGES
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AnonymousInactiveMarket grows for refilling ink cartridges
Ryan
Jarrell hated spending $25 to $30 each time the cartridge on his inkjet
printer ran out. So a few years ago, he bought a home ink-refill kit.
His
cost of printing dropped to about $5 per cartridge, but the owner of
the Louisville-based video-production company Phoenix Multi-Media found
the downsides to piercing the cartridge with a syringe and squeezing it
full of ink.
“You’d best wear old clothes and have a splash mat down
or you’ll spill on the carpet like I did, and your wife will send you
to the doghouse,” Jarrell said. In addition, the refilled cartridges
didn’t always work.
Jarrell eventually stopped using refill kits but
said he’d be willing to take his empties to stores that refill
cartridges. He should have that opportunity soon.
Refilling ink cartridges
New
cartridges for inkjet printers can cost $35 or more, encouraging some
users to turn to alternatives such as refilling used cartridges
themselves. Refill kits cost $10 to $15 and can fill several empty
cartridges.
1. Assemble the syringe and needle and fill with the
correct color. Insert the needle deeply into the filling hole.Slowly
and carefully push the plunger in and fill the ink tank with a volume
of 4 to 6 milliliters, then remove the needle.
2. Clean the outlet and syringe.
3. Reload the cartridge in the printer and run “head cleaning” utility two to three times before printing.
Note: Instructions might differ slightly with different brands of ink replacement kits.
Drugstore
chain Walgreens soon will launch a service at 1,500 of its more than
5,000 stores that lets people refill inkjet cartridges in 10 to 15
minutes. OfficeMax and Office Depot are testing similar systems. The
refilling services cost $12 to $15, about half as much as buying a
replacement cartridge.
That’s still about twice the cost of
refilling a cartridge yourself, but store refills are guaranteed and
quality tends to be higher, said Bill McKenney, CEO of Boston-based
InkTec Zone. His company sells both home refill kits and the machines
that stores are using to refill cartridges. He said that in the past
six months, four equipment vendors have started selling store-based
refillers.
“There are entire factories across the United States
where all people do is take apart cartridges, flush them and refill
them, and they make money at it,” McKenney said. “That got a lot of us
interested in how to offer a store-based service.”
Because
replacement ink cartridges are where printer makers make their money,
profit margins are huge, McKenney said. That’s why stores can halve the
prices and still make a profit.
Lexington, Ky.-based Lexmark and
other printer makers often lose money on printers but recoup it on ink.
They defend their higher prices, saying their cartridges are as
technologically advanced as the printers.
“Refillers are providing
you with used cartridges with print heads that were not designed for
multiple uses and with ink that is not optimized for use with the
printer,” Lexmark spokesman Tim Fitzpatrick said.
Jana Munford, a
Dallas-based analyst at market researcher Current Analysis, said
printer makers have spent a lot in recent years updating inks for
digital photos and other high-resolution printing. Refillers may be
cheaper, but she said they can’t compete on quality.
“I wouldn’t trust my photos to a remanufactured or a refilled cartridge,” Munford said.
In
September, Consumer Reports released the results of a four-month study
that found that remanufactured and refilled cartridges are not as
efficient at printing photos, so people don’t save much by using them.
Consumer
Reports said such cartridges may be the “smart choices when economy is
more important than excellent photo quality. … With some off-brands,
you can get excellent black text at a good price.” -
AuthorMarch 13, 2006 at 10:02 AM
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