I am in one location 6 months and then another for 6 months. I now have two Epson printers but the print heads are in the machine and not on the cartridge. This gives me some problems each year when I try to get them in operation after 6 months of disuse.

In the end I don't recommend storing cartridges for 6 months like this, ink can go bad and cause clogging later on so you'd be back in the same boat as with an HP, having to buy cartridges. Perhaps best to go with an HP or perhaps even a dye sub which lends itself well to storage of both papers/inks and printer.


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I am in one location 6 months and then another for 6 months. I now

have two Epson printers but the print heads are in the machine and

not on the cartridge. This gives me some problems each year when I

try to get them in operation after 6 months of disuse.

Thanks everybody. I have 6 months now to make up my mind but will probably get a new machine when I get a new camera in the next couple of months. Thinking serously about the Canon EOS-20D with the 17-85 stabilized lens.

This is a neat idea, and could apply to the HP's as well. However, you wouldn't have to worry about removing the print head, just the cartridge. Take the partially used carts and pop them in the other printer. Let the idle printer sit without carts for 6 months.

So I have a mountain bike that sits idle for months at a time (it's out in California, I live on the east coast). I'll use it for a week or two, then it'll sit in the garage for 6 months while I'm out of town, then I'll use it again when I'm back in town. It's set up as tubeless right now, but the sealant dries out and air leaks while the bike sits unused for 6 months. Adding new sealant and re-mounting the tires is a chore. I don't want to waste time on maintenance when I arrive in town; I want to hit the trails immediately.

Let me tell you about the time I went from flying around the world in the best job imaginable, to being made redundant and working behind a desk. Through to starting a small business, learning from the many failures and then selling said business to a multinational, inside the space of 18 months

I'm 22 and I find myself in the most unrealistic, and over the top job at an Auckland printing company. My role was to create 5-star incentive trips around the world for the top performing sales staff. Every few months my manager and I would jet set off to Barcelona, Bora Bora, Aspen or New Caledonia. Our budgets were big and our minds were left to run wild. We had to, of course trial every trip before the real deal so off we went, testing the over water bungalows, paddle boarding to dinner, snowmobiling through Aspen and taking Bill Gate's helicopter for a scenic tour (only when the private jet was busy).

A few months later my job was (unsurprisingly) made redundant. The worst thing about it was, I wasn't made redundant but my role effectively ceased to exist. I went from the world's most outrageous job to a desk job, overnight.

I was a woman obsessed. Every morning I would get to work (at the printing company) at 6:00am. I would work on the plan, the brand and the website until 8:30am. I would work my regular job and then I would go home, and work on Idle, until midnight. This was my existence for a couple of months.

I registered Idle with the NZ Companies Office, and got my very first customer, December 1st, 2016. Idle was up and running, we had an online presence, great social media engagement and a few interested customers. I was ecstatic! But, again, I didn't really think it would grow beyond that. I was happy. I had gained more in the last 6 months than I had in my 4 years at university.

This was the first three months of starting Idle, over the next 15 months I learnt to wear multiple hats, and dive head first into every challenge that came my way...but that's a story for another time.

Fast forward to today, Idle became one of the first and largest Airbnb Management companies in New Zealand, and as of 2 months ago, Idle was successfully sold to a multinational company from the UK (that's another story).

I will be traveling for 6-8 months and my ink jet printer (HP6600 Officejet) will sit idle. Should I remove the ink cartridges and store them in a plastic sandwhich bag in cool dry dark environment, or just leave them in the printer and turn the printer OFF? What's the recommended policy to not damage the printer or cartridges?

6-8 months is a very long period, I would recommend you to leave your printer to someone who will use it from time to time, leaving printer unused for long period can cause print quality problems, and failing printhead.

How long has it been charging? Lithium batteries do NOT recover from a true full discharge state, nor do they stay healthy if left idle for long periods of time. While six months may not seem like long, depending on the age and health of the battery when you tucked it away, it may be in a bad state now. If it actually drained completely in storage (remember, a battery drains slowly even when idle, from internal oxidation), it is almost certainly not going to recover.

After a week, I checked in on Wylie using the Tesla app. The battery was at 84%, which gave me a hint that my concerns were not realistic. After a month, it was at 79%. After 2 months, it was at 71% and when we arrived home last week, the battery still had a 64% charge remaining.

Since my experience represents a sample size of one, extrapolating from my results is problematic. Still, I had no issues leaving Wylie parked for 3 months, which is comforting since my wife and I go north every summer. Having my neighbor take the car around the block twice a month was nice but not necessary.

Cars are built to be driven, not to make them sit idle for weeks or months. It is important to know that not driving your car for months can affect performance. When a car is left unused then components start to corrode if it is not lubricated properly. Rodents may move in and chew on parts of a car made from organic materials causing damage to a greater extend. The tires and engine of the car need to be replaced if the damage is permanent.

Situations like a vacation or temporarily relocating for work may lead you to leave your car idle for weeks or months. Most modern car can still be started if batteries are recharged. Here are some points you need to check the problems before starting your car:-

If your car is idle for an extended period then there might be an issue with the battery. The car batteries slowly lose their voltage when it is sitting idle. A jump start is necessary when voltage is below the level to start the car battery.

As your car sits idles for a month, the lighter components and the gas eventually evaporates which makes losing its combustibility and less effective. Gas that has started to break down have a distinct foul smell. Old gas turns darker than fresh gasoline and stickiness start to form in the gas.

Leaving your car sitting idle for more than 3 weeks is not ideal. It is a good option to start your vehicle a couple of times in a month when it is not being used. Starting a car and driving for 10 miles can warm up the whole car and can recharge your car engine which will be even useful in future. If you are out of town ask for help from your close friend or relative to spin the car.

For members who seasonally disconnect their service to avoid paying the monthly access charge, a new idle service fee will take effect this fall. The change will help ensure that each member pays their portion of the cost to maintain and operate the distribution infrastructure necessary to deliver electricity to their home, business, farm, or agricultural building.

Beginning this fall, members who elect to disconnect their service for more than 60 days with the intention of reconnecting service within 24 months will be subject to the new fee. For a single phase service, the cost will be $20 per month. For a three-phase service, the cost will be $42.50 per month.

I would second this. Looking for a way that we could audit potentially machines that are no longer in use and the entry in ScreenConnect was never used. We use LabTech integration and while we can uninstall the LT agent it does not remove the ScreenConnect agent.


Probably the easiest way to do this would be if LabTech ran uninstall command it removed SC from PC ( best way to do this would have it set somewhere in labtech what your ScreenIonnect instance ID is so it doesn't potentially remove other vendors SC installs. and then it would run the commands to remove it from the endpoint/server & end the session in ScreenConnect itself so its no longer present.


And for the stuff that slips by having a way to audit this such as a field in the database tab that says find idle sessions that the guest hasn't connected in longer than X would allow us to say if they haven't connected in X or exceeds X period of time we can select all of those and end the sessions (For the machines that probably are no longer active or in use such as they were replaced or died)


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