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Consumer Reports: Save On Printer Ink

PITTSBURGH (KDKA) - When it's time to buy new ink cartridges for your printer, the cost can be a real shock.

Did you know your printer is gobbling up ink that never lands on a page? Well, Consumer Reports' recently tested nearly 30 big-name printers and found exactly that.

Keeping a printer full of ink is one of life's really annoying expenses.

You may not realize it, but printer ink is one of the most expensive liquids you can buy. In fact, ounce for ounce, it can cost more than fine champagne.

So, when Consumer Reports' readers complained their printer ink seemed to be disappearing, testers got on the case.

"Ink is used as the printer prepares to print after not being used for a while. So if you print infrequently, that could mean more ink used for maintenance chores like cleaning the print heads," Paul Reynolds with Consumer Reports.

Consumer Reports designed a special test to see how much ink was actually making it onto paper. Testers printed 30 pages of text or color graphics intermittently over a three-week period.

Some printers were much less efficient with ink. The worst offenders used as much as $120 a year in ink that never gets used to print anything. They were the HP Officejet Pro 8600 and the Lexmark OfficeEdge Pro 4000.

Test data also showed most brands had printers that used a lot of ink for maintenance, as well as ones that were easy on ink.

"If they can keep ink usage down for some, they should be able to keep it down for all their printers," Reynolds said.

But one brand stood out - Brother.

All three of the Brother printers tested were frugal with ink at start-up and a Consumer Reports Best Buy the Brother DCP-J140W at $80.

You can save on ink no matter which printer you own by following this advice from Consumer Reports. First, try to print all at once rather than every few days. Also, leave your printer on between jobs. The tiny amount of standby power used will cost much less than the ink used up when the printer turns on.

For more information, visit Consumer Reports' website here!

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