

It looks good at first sight, but looks can be deceiving as there are only 8 physical channels for the ink flow to the print head. In the image below you will see that the R3000 now has a compartment for each cartridge it uses.

This meant when you needed to use either cartridge, and the other cartridge was in place, you physically had to remove it and swap them. One much complained about feature of the R2880 was having only a single compartment for the Photo Black and Matte Black ink cartridges.
#Ink for epson stylus photo r3000 pro
Feature wise the R3000 is a 13″ version of the larger 17″ Epson Stylus Pro 3880 colour inkjet printer. The R3000 is in theory a replacement for the older Epson 2880, although Epson continues to sell the popular R2880.

#Ink for epson stylus photo r3000 plus
Its use of Epson UltraChrome K3 with Vivid Magenta pigment ink, combined with Epson’s innovative MicroPiezo AMC print head, enables the R3000 to produce gallery-quality black-and-white output, plus vivid color prints with breathtaking blues and violets. Since its launch in 2011, the Epson Photo Stylus R3000 printer has set a high standard in affordable printing of exhibition quality artwork and photography. Not only do they produce some impressive large format inkjet printers, but they also produce the premium grade ink (and paper) that you are going to need for your projects. When it comes to fine art (and photography) printing, there is one company that always comes to mind – EPSON. So why not invest in your very own printer? But soon the costs are going to mount up. You could always send a hi-res file to one of the many specialist online print companies and have them print and mail back a high quality print. There comes a point for every illustrator, when you will need to print out your latest commission and hand it over to your client …so what are your options?
