Thu Feb 9, 2006 1:32PM EST
See Comments (6)
One day my Epson Stylus CX4600 printer decided not to print colors as they appear in real life. Then it decided not to print at all. I cleaned the heads, checked the nozzle, aligned the print head, but still no words. Several attempts and loads of ink later, same result.
I logged onto Epson.com and clicked through the troubleshooting guide. The nice thing about it is, it's quick, and at the end an 800-number pops up to call between 6 a.m. and 6 p.m. PT. So many tech product web sites make it close to impossible to find a customer service telephone number to call.
I dialed and settled in for what I thought would be a long chat as the customer service rep and I ran through everything I had done, and all the things I hadn't. Ending with directions on where to ship it for repairs.
The call lasted all of five minutes, and that includes three minutes on hold. I told the customer service rep what I had done, and how many times I had tried. He asked if I used genuine Epson ink cartridges. I said, "Yes." He said: "Looks like you've done everything you can do. We'll send you a new printer." He did say it would be the Epson Stylus CX4800 model since Epson was no longer making the CX4600. He had access to my warranty info because I entered it automatically online when I installed the printer. A new printer arrived in three days.
I told a friend in my writers' group to do the same when she said her Epson printer was no longer printing black, only colors. She called Epson and messaged me that a new printer was on its way.
Not sure why I thought Epson would want to repair a $120 printer. As Joe Nocera wrote in Saturday's New York Times about Apple's iPods (his family has bought six iPods since 2001, three to replace broken ones), customer support is expensive for electronics makers. They train their reps to get off the phone as soon as possible. And if that means sending out a new printer, so be it. It's cheaper than paying the labor bills to diagnose a problem and then repair it.
We consumers have to accept the fact that we're spending hundreds of dollars on disposable items. I realized that the same day I read Nocera's article, when I found my self waiting on the only line at the county recycling center to drop off a cream-colored boxy monitor, a TV, old phones and reams of wiring I don't even remember using. Our long-neglected electronic components had lots of look-alike company waiting to be shrink-wrapped and carted away.
Join in the discussion. Here you'll see the comments in the order they were posted.
Get a Canon. MP 730. Price is mid range but quality is above average. Also does OK on pictures. not real fast but why rush. moderate use and no problems for 2 yrs. now. only complaint, printing an e-mail stops 3 or 4 letters short on the right margin.
I,too,had this same problem with Epson printer. My model was the Stylus C80, I did everything you've done.No luck.It was a week out of warranty,I still called Epson,and they said the print head is clogged,and they wanted to charge me almost what I paid for the printer new for a print head.I said no way.... Was getting ready to trash it,but before I did,I wanted to research the Web.Turns out Epson printers a known for this problem..Then I found a do-it yourself site,and ordered the head cleaning kit for my printer,and now it works like the day I bought it. $10 ,can't go wrong. Here's the link for your printer. http://www.fixyourownprinter.com/kits/epson/K70
My Epson Stylus CX4600 stopped printing after 6 months. I just changed the ink with an Epson brand catridges few days later it started printing blank. I e-mailed Epson about my problem with this printer and this is what they replied "They feel sorry that I am having problem with my printer". Yup, that was it... I will try huntmaster8041 advised,I hope it works on mine.
I am on my 2nd Epson All-in-one in a school setting. I am the only one who prints with it. Of we course bought it just over a year ago (BTW - to replace one that did EXACTLY the same thing!!) I used it heavily this month for a project the kids were doing. Printed 11 pages perfectly today, then one by one the colors stopped printing - except for blue (the kids all look like Martians!). Did all the usual troubleshooting. Called Epson and they eventually sent me to a web page where I can get another Epson at a discount like an Epson Stylus 5000 for $89.99. Spoke to the 'guy' on the phone quite a while and they seemed to think this was an acceptable solution! In a school we are lucky to get one new printer every couple of years - forget about a new one every year! I told him if my school ran the way that company ran we'd be in real trouble!
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1 Posted by g_alan_e on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:15PM EDT Report Abuse
That beats the treatment I got from HP when an EXPENSIVE OfficeJet decided it wasn't going to work at all anymore, just popped up a cryptic error message on the LCD. New ink cartridges didn't help, so I hit the support forum on the HP website. All I got from HP was an invitation to call a support line for business products, where the first thing they wanted was my credit card number to bill me for the call! Online efforts only got offers to buy copies of the service manual for about $50. All I wanted to know was what the error message meant so I could decide whether or not the OfficeJet was worth fixing, or if I could order parts and fix it myself. The idea that I should possibly spend more money than the printer might be worth just to find out what its problem was and IF it could be fixed did not thrill me at all. The OfficeJet got tossed and I decided that I wouldn't have another HP 'business' inkjet printer unless I first found a source for FREE troubleshooting info. Gonna charge me $50 to tell me that a printer that'd bring $15 on eBay needs a $100 part to make it work? I'm not quite that stupid. ;)