I got a canon pixma tr4520 from a technologically challenged relative, who told me they couldn’t get it to print and it was mine to try and fix. I worked out that it didn’t have an ink cartridge in it (not even an empty), bought a replacement, and got it printing. But now it has vertical alignment issues and paper jams. I can’t afford a new printer right now, and I would love to fix this one. My fear is that I’ll sink half the cost of a new one into it between the ink I already bought and replacement parts, just for it to come out not working anyway. Is it worth my time to try and fix or should I cut my losses and start saving for a new unit?
It’s rarely worth fixing an inkjet. There’s a host of issues that could be in play, but if shit is out of register and paper isn’t feeding in an environment of reasonable humidity, this is going to be more expensive than just getting a new one. Sadly, this is the state of our economy.
What I will suggest, whether you go laser or inkjet, is Brother. They’ve not yet, to my knowledge, instituted chip limitations and other such lock-in crap. Granted, this was before the pandemic, but I was able to get five-packs (CMYKK) of third-party ink for $10, and toner for the laser good for 3,000 pages at 5% coverage for $30.
There’s been some talk about Brother imitating HP lately. Last thing I heard is that they’ve been attributing it to a ‘faulty’ firmware upgrade and offering a ‘fix’. Personally I’m not yet sure what to think of it - it’s one thing I’ll be keeping an eye on though. My current HP printer will still happily work with third-party toner but is slowly approaching the end of its lifespan.
Generally speaking, for the average user who doesn’t need special hardware to produce ultra-quality borderless photo posters on a regular basis: