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Inkjet Testing Machines

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Inkjet Testing Machines

With huge numbers of households (and most small businesses) now owning and using at least one toner, the thorny subject of inkjet Inkjet Testing Machines remains shrouded in mystery for the majority of users. In recent years, all the major desktop toner manufacturers (including HP, Lexmark, Epson, Canon and Brother) have introduced smaller, faster machines that take up less space on the desk which is great. The downside however, is that the ink Inkjet Testing Machines inside the machines have generally become much smaller, containing less ink and therefore need replacing more frequently.

About Our Inkjet Testing Machines

Go back just a few years to the late 1990's, and the toners being produced then might take a black inkjet containing 40ml or more of ink the very common HP45 is a prime example, containing 42ml. A tri-colour Inkjet Testing Machine would typically contain 30ml or more the HP78A (38ml) being an example of a widely used Inkjet Testing Machine. Although HP examples have been used here, the other manufacturers also produced and sold toners with bigger Inkjet Testing Machines. At the turn of the 21st century the price of digital cameras and desktop toners became much lower. The toner manufacturers realized there was much profit to be made selling toner consumables to a mass market, which was (and still is) growing at a phenomenal pace.

Inkjet Testing Macines - Buy it from STS!

Supplying toners at an incredibly attractive price was a short-term expense, but leading to a longer term gain by way of very profitable ongoing Inkjet Testing Machine and photo-paper sales. Having successfully established this way of marketing some years ago, more recently the manufacturers have gradually reduced the amount of ink supplied with the toners from new, and inside the Inkjet Testing Machines sold later. These days a typical Inkjet Testing Machine for a new toner will contain less than 10ml of ink many just 5ml. That's 5ml - one teaspoon. Interestingly, many of the Inkjet Testing Machines supplied with just 5ml of ink are exactly the same physical size as earlier models supplied with much more liquid inside. The reduction simply means Inkjet Testing Machines need to be replaced more frequently, keeping the tills busy! As the toner manufacturers are all too aware, there is a huge market in non-branded toner Inkjet Testing Machines, from which they make no profit. To combat this they make frequent changes to model ranges, and even the electronics inside existing ranges, in a bid to discourage the use of after-market goods.

Inkjet Testing Machines