Pyrex 7201-PC 6" Dark Red Round Plastic Cover Lid New for 4 Cup Glass Bowl
Dec 02, 2016
Cheap replacement that works
Perfect! It fit my Pyrex glass bowl with ease. Great replacement as the old lid had seen better days. Now I don't need to look around at a specialty store for this.
I have been eyeing an Ecotank or a Canon Supertank for a while deciding if I should purchase one or not. I have finally done so and could not be happier.
The amount of ink you get is crazy. 70 ml is about a few dozen cartridges worth. Refill bottles by far are cheap either $50 for OEM or around $20 for remanufactured, third-party ink. This is about as cheap to run as a laser printer.
I would love to say set up was easy but I had some difficulties with print quality. Refilling the tank requires some gloves and disposable paper towels in case of spills, which I did a few times. However, where I encounted problems was with print quality.
The first test page I printed looked great. But then I suddenly got splot of black ink on each page. What I figured out is that the ink sponges and wipe areas had an excess of black ink somehow transferring onto the paper. In order to access this area, I unplugged the printer without touching the off button. Then, I moved the print head to the left to access the wiper and sponges. Next, I got a few paper towels and tore them into small pieces and blotted the sponges until I got most of the ink off.
However, after that, I started to get vertical lines in the black colors which I first wiped the printhead then did 3 nozzle checks and cleanings. Still came out missing segements. What I did was wait a full 12 hours. To my disbelief, the vertical white lines in the black was gone, but I must have smeared some black across the color as they were showing black in their segments. Another nozzle check and clean followed by a full day cleared it up. The reason I waited was to allow the ink that may be hardedend to liquify.
Printed a few untouched photos I have and it looks great even on copy paper. I can't wait to print on photo paper. I will say that these have borders so if you are looking for a borderless printer, you'll want the ET-2750 or the ET-3700 depending on the size you'll print at.
If you are like me, living in an area where you can count 20+ other networks, it can become a drag when internet slows down. Even with switching to an optimal channel, networks still are present. Being fed with slow speeds, I decided to get a power line adapter (being in an apartment and all).
Make no doubt, that unless your power lines are designed with this use in mind, you won't hit the maximum speeds. Using the TP-Link software, I'd consistently see speeds around 148 Mbps. Not too shabby. Running some speed tests showed I was getting about equivalent for what WiFi was getting. Granted, I don't have the fastest home internet so it is hard to say which will come out ahead with only a 7 Mbps connection.
Setup is easy as plugging in both adapters, pushing the button on one then doing the same for the other.