Xerox Ink Sticks and Xerox Solid Ink for Phaser

Xerox Ink Reviews, Tech Tips and Comparisons

Are Compatible Ink Sticks Safe?

By Yantze • Jul 24th, 2009 • Category: Technical Tips

OFFICIALFRED300 Are Compatible Ink Sticks Safe?

Everyone likes to save money. It always feels good to know you found a great deal on an item, or you saved a few dollars with a coupon. That being said, there are times when “you get what you pay for”. Sometimes quality comes at a price, and saving a few dollars on an item results in lower quality, costing you more money in the long run.

Today, we explore the question: Are compatible ink sticks as good as OEM (original equipment manufacturer) ink sticks? In other words, is buying a third party brand instead of Xerox brand safe? The short answer is yes, and compatible ink sticks can also save you quite a bit of money over their OEM counterparts.

Compatible ink products have gotten somewhat of a bad reputation in recent years, mainly due to inkjet cartridges and ink. With a large majority of consumers using inkjet printers and wanting to save money, companies have filled that gap with compatible inkjet cartridges and refill kits. Unfortunately, these products run the gamut from high-quality to extremely poor quality. The result is horror stories of poor quality inkjet cartridges that have ruined inkjet printers.

While there are still poor quality inkjet cartridges around, solid ink printers don’t suffer from some of the issues that have given compatible inkjet cartridges their bad reputation. For example, a compatible inkjet cartridge must include the cartridge itself, the circuitry, and a number of other tiny parts, all of which need to function properly.

OFFICIALFRED468X60 Are Compatible Ink Sticks Safe?

A solid ink stick, on the other hand, has none of these parts. A solid ink stick is only solidified ink. There are no cartridges or parts to be reverse-engineered. In fact, the only quality concern with a compatible ink stick is with the quality of the ink itself. Even on the rare occasion that a compatible ink stick did not perform properly, once the ink stick is consumed, there is no trace of it left behind, meaning it can be replaced with a better quality stick with no damage to the printer.

As long as you look for a reliable reseller with a satisfaction guarantee to back their products, compatible ink sticks should be just as high-quality and reliable as the sticks you buy from Xerox. This is one case where you can save money and still get the quality you expect.

Yantze is
Email this author | All posts by Yantze

One Response »

  1. What Yantze says is true but not all compatible ink is made equal. I have used Media Science ink for years in both of my Xerox phaser printers and they have worked well. I print fairly large quantities well over 200,000 pages a year. Much of what I print is 100% color saturation and requires clear crisp images.

    A couple years ago a supplier tricked me into buying some “compatible” ink that was manufactured in Korea. I challenged them about the ink because I noticed the packaging was different than what I was used to. They assured me it was just a packaging difference. Well after a few thousand pages I started to get an echoing of images repeating on a page. My first thought was the maintenance kit so I took it out and found it wet with a thick oily type liquid. The roller was saturated and the bottom of the kit had this liquid standing in it, I poured it out into a can.

    After running several sticks of Media Science ink through the machine and changing the maintenance kit my print quality returned to ALMOST NORMAL. I was down for weeks trying to get the ink from Korea out of my machine.

    Now I’ve printed for another two years without any problem and now once again a supplier has convinced me to try this new, cheaper ink. I told them in advance what I thought would happen but they assured me it was a good product and I wouldn’t have a problem.

    Well a week or so later I checked my maintenance kit and poured off an ounce of the liquid I predicted would collect. I’ve waited for over a week now for the factory rep to even give me a call.

    Bottom line – ONLY USE Xerox ink or Media Science compatible ink or you are in for a problem.

    Steve in Tacoma

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สำเนาซิรอกสหมึก Sticks และสำเนาซิรอกสของแข็งหมึกสำหรับ Phaser »เทคนิคเคล็ดลับ» เข้ากันหมึก Sticks Safe?

Xerox Ink Sticks and Xerox Solid Ink for Phaser

Xerox Ink Reviews, Tech Tips and Comparisons

Are Compatible Ink Sticks Safe?

By Yantze • Jul 24th, 2009 • Category: Technical Tips

OFFICIALFRED300 Are Compatible Ink Sticks Safe?

Everyone likes to save money. It always feels good to know you found a great deal on an item, or you saved a few dollars with a coupon. That being said, there are times when “you get what you pay for”. Sometimes quality comes at a price, and saving a few dollars on an item results in lower quality, costing you more money in the long run.

Today, we explore the question: Are compatible ink sticks as good as OEM (original equipment manufacturer) ink sticks? In other words, is buying a third party brand instead of Xerox brand safe? The short answer is yes, and compatible ink sticks can also save you quite a bit of money over their OEM counterparts.

Compatible ink products have gotten somewhat of a bad reputation in recent years, mainly due to inkjet cartridges and ink. With a large majority of consumers using inkjet printers and wanting to save money, companies have filled that gap with compatible inkjet cartridges and refill kits. Unfortunately, these products run the gamut from high-quality to extremely poor quality. The result is horror stories of poor quality inkjet cartridges that have ruined inkjet printers.

While there are still poor quality inkjet cartridges around, solid ink printers don’t suffer from some of the issues that have given compatible inkjet cartridges their bad reputation. For example, a compatible inkjet cartridge must include the cartridge itself, the circuitry, and a number of other tiny parts, all of which need to function properly.

OFFICIALFRED468X60 Are Compatible Ink Sticks Safe?

A solid ink stick, on the other hand, has none of these parts. A solid ink stick is only solidified ink. There are no cartridges or parts to be reverse-engineered. In fact, the only quality concern with a compatible ink stick is with the quality of the ink itself. Even on the rare occasion that a compatible ink stick did not perform properly, once the ink stick is consumed, there is no trace of it left behind, meaning it can be replaced with a better quality stick with no damage to the printer.

As long as you look for a reliable reseller with a satisfaction guarantee to back their products, compatible ink sticks should be just as high-quality and reliable as the sticks you buy from Xerox. This is one case where you can save money and still get the quality you expect.

Yantze is
Email this author | All posts by Yantze

One Response »

  1. What Yantze says is true but not all compatible ink is made equal. I have used Media Science ink for years in both of my Xerox phaser printers and they have worked well. I print fairly large quantities well over 200,000 pages a year. Much of what I print is 100% color saturation and requires clear crisp images.

    A couple years ago a supplier tricked me into buying some “compatible” ink that was manufactured in Korea. I challenged them about the ink because I noticed the packaging was different than what I was used to. They assured me it was just a packaging difference. Well after a few thousand pages I started to get an echoing of images repeating on a page. My first thought was the maintenance kit so I took it out and found it wet with a thick oily type liquid. The roller was saturated and the bottom of the kit had this liquid standing in it, I poured it out into a can.

    After running several sticks of Media Science ink through the machine and changing the maintenance kit my print quality returned to ALMOST NORMAL. I was down for weeks trying to get the ink from Korea out of my machine.

    Now I’ve printed for another two years without any problem and now once again a supplier has convinced me to try this new, cheaper ink. I told them in advance what I thought would happen but they assured me it was a good product and I wouldn’t have a problem.

    Well a week or so later I checked my maintenance kit and poured off an ounce of the liquid I predicted would collect. I’ve waited for over a week now for the factory rep to even give me a call.

    Bottom line – ONLY USE Xerox ink or Media Science compatible ink or you are in for a problem.

    Steve in Tacoma

Leave a Reply