Adaptive Ink |
Adaptive Ink Adaptive Ink, LLC 6 months of success Littleton, Colorado |
30th of Jun, 2011 by User963228 |
My previous report for Adaptive Ink is missing on Ripoff Report. I'll include it again following my addition to the original report. I have had the Adaptive Ink Mini Pro Series CISS system installed on my HP 8500A printer for 6 months. The cartridges are the HP 940 small series. I initially question the success of the Adaptive Ink product and am surprised to see a lot of printing. I bought the 1/2 cup ink bottles and the black is now 1/3 full. The colors are 50% full. So a lot of ink has gone through the printer. After 6 months the HP 8500A printer went bad. Tech support insisted I needed to change the ink cartridges. So I installed HP 940XL cartridges in each of the 4 slots. I assumed Adaptive Ink was not responsible for all the extra printing I got so I left it off the larger XL cartridges. Well the old defective printer used up a lot of ink trying to set itself up. By the time I put those 940XL cartridges in the new replacement printer they were said to be 50% full for the yellow. Keep in mind I had not printed anything yet from these cartridges. So I proceed to print and after 2 weeks the printer comes to a halt and says I am out of ink. It absolutely will not print. I weigh the cartridge and I believe it really is empty. Lets add up the time here. I get 6 months of printing with the small cartridges using Adaptive Ink supply. Then I get 2 weeks of use out of the large 940XL cartridges and they are empty. I complained to HP and they are sending me replacement cartridges, only the smaller size. So I put my old small cartridges back in the printer along with the Adaptive Ink system and I print out far more than I did with the 940XL cartridges. I really printed a large amount of graphic material. So I think the Adaptive Ink system is incredible. We still have a problem with Adaptive Ink and others continue to complain about it. Adaptive Ink has terrible customer relations. They have done a very good job on an engineering level. No matter how good they do, they will have problems because the manufacturer of any ink cartridge puts a computer chip in the cartridge. There may be no way for anyone to completely get around the programming. The programming on one set of print cartridges may be different than on another. The software in the printer may be different and may change when you do a software update. I want very much to support Adaptive Ink. I totally support what they are doing. I identify with the difficult job they have. I am disappointed in their unfortunate customer relations. I have read several responses from Adaptive Ink to several people and it is sad. I believe there is a way to be professional and still survive. That survival would require a little understanding by the general public in the difficulty Adaptive Ink is confronted with. I mean most stores have one isle just for ink cartridges and the cost to actually produce ink is cheap. The people selling the ink want a large markup and greed is powerful. The actual markup on ink from manufacture to the retail price is 10,000 percent. So Adaptive Ink might do a great job and then the printer manufacturer will put up road blocks. Then we will blame Adaptive Ink. This is not fair. The Adaptive Ink customer correspondence makes it worse. What we need is a list of printers that Adaptive Ink is having success with. I am successful with the HP 8500A but that could change at any time. HP will not allow this to exist on a large scale. The following is my article from 5 months ago. I am using the HP Officejet Pro 8500A printer. I have the Adaptive Ink Mini-Pro Series CISS external ink supply installed. A new HP 940 cartridge contains the following information: Intended for single use only. I have no idea what will happen when the printer ink cartridge chip activates for low ink. Inquiries to Adaptive Ink yield no information. Five emails to Adaptive ink prior to purchase resulted in 4 good responses concerning the purchase of a printer and the selection of external ink supplies. After the purchase of the Mini-Pro Series CSS I sent 2 emails asking about the operation of the printer and the external ink supply when the printer indicates "low ink" or "out of ink". I asked about the dates on the cartridge. I have received no response. I made phone calls prior to the purchase and got good response but all phone responses are return calls. They never pick up the phone when you are calling. I made 3 phone calls after receiving the ink supply and left a message regarding the exact nature of the external ink supply and the printer when low ink indicator activates. I got a response once because they did not know what my question was. Once I asked the question about low ink activation they told me they did not have time to talk about it and would call back the next day. Then they spent time talking about other things. They did not call back. I also told them I needed additional information to write my review and no information has been provided. All indications here say I will have unpleasant results when the low indicator is activated by the HP ink cartridge chip. One online response is given concerning Adaptive Ink and Adaptive Ink acknowledges their problem and ask the customer to call back again. Of course we know they will not pick up the phone or return the call. They are using deceptive methods to generate a good public image but it is the place of the consumer to offer that advise on any public forum for opinions and reviews. The existing data is as follows: Purchased HP Officejet Pro 8500A on Monday, December 04, 2010 at Sam's for $240. Seventeen days later the ink left according to the HP8500A printer readout is approximately 70%. The Mini-Pro Series CISS plastic ink container has lost 5.1 grams total weight for all colors. This indicates ink is being sucked into the printer ink cartridges from the Mini-Pro Series CISS. Original color cartridges that came with printer: HP 940 cartridge date on cartridge is 2013/03/06 Warranty ends 2012/09/09 as per date on packaging. Original black cartridge that came with printer HP 940 cartridge date on cartridge 2013/03/05 Warranty ends 2012/08/30 Original HP 940 cartridge weight after about 10 low coverage prints. Please use this information if you are checking the weight of your cartridge after extensive use or when it indicates low ink. Note; this is not the higher volume 940XL cartridge. Blue 1.48 oz or 45.9 grams, Monday, December 06, 2010 Red 1.47 oz or 45.9 grams, Monday, December 06, 2010 Yellow 1.51 oz or 47.1 grams, Monday, December 06, 2010 Black 2.24 oz or 69.7 grams Monday, December 06, 2010 Adaptive Mini-Pro Series CISS supply Installed Saturday, December 11, 2010 Weight of ink supply container upon initial installation = 324 grams + or - tension on ink tubing. (11.76 oz) Tuesday, December 28, 2010. Weight when about 70% of ink is left according to printer computations = 318.6 grams(11.28 oz). Therefore the Mini-Pro Series CISS ink supply container has lost 5.1 grams total for all colors after 17 days of use. The HP8500A indicates about 30% of ink used on cartridge. Bottle of Adaptive Ink Weight (use for reference after weighing an empty bottle.) Black ink bottle full weighs 151.8 grams Yellow ink bottle full weighs 154.4 grams Blue ink bottle full weighs 149.2 grams Red ink bottle full weighs 151.6 grams Total amount of all colors = 607 grams including plastic container bottle. The HP Officejet Pro 8500A came out in October or November of 2010. It is too early for most results. According to the amount of ink used by the 8500A computations it is economical without an external ink supply. So far, I have printed about 100 4" x 6" high quality photos and about 400 written pages. If there is really 70% ink left, this is good compared to my previous printers. There is no reason to get in a hurry since the external ink supply can always be added later when more reviews are in. Even with no external ink supply, HP has improved the cost of ink. I'll submit a review of the HP8500A printer in a few days. So far, I really like it. I will update this message board as needed. As things presently stand I would wait until March or April of 2011 to see the results before doing business with Adaptive Ink. At present, their business practices are highly suspect. |
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