My Secret To Crafting a Life Of Better Cartridges

By Jeffrey Hatchitt



If you want to recycle a toner cartridge, all you need to do is collect all of your empty cartridges and get them to a collection center. They are then sold off to third party manufacturers to be made into new cartridges. There are a number of steps in the recycling process. These typically involve sorting, quality testing, cleaning, and then finally refilling them with new toner.

Recycling is clearly a much better option for empty toner cartridges than simply disposing of them in a landfill. The number of cartridges that could be kept out of landfills in only one year reaches well into the billions throughout the world. Because a cartridge usually takes about a decade to completely break down, this is a critical sticking point.

The first step in the process is the sorting process, which happens during the collection phase of the cartridges. If a cartridge is damaged beyond repair, it will be sent to a landfill for disposal. Good quality cartridges can be reused. The next step in the process for the good cartridges will be moved along for cleaning and refilling.

After being cleaned up and filled with new toner, the toner cartridges get sent to through inspection again to make sure that they are of the right kind of quality to be used in printers the world over.

The biggest reason anyone would choose to go through all of this work is because they want to make a positive impact on the planet. By using recycled toner cartridges, you are helping to save money for yourself, save the earth's resources for others, and help keep these products out of landfills. For the manufacturer, it turns out that recycling toner cartridges is a cheaper process than using new materials, as the cartridges can be almost entirely recycled part for part.

In the same way that soda can or shopping bag users can get a little bit of money for bringing the bags back, toner cartridge recycling centers have started providing small financial incentives to people who turn in old cartridges. Another method is to use in-store credit for returning empty cartridges. By providing a reason for people to recycle their cartridges, the rate of success ends up being significantly higher than the more invisible manufacturers, who simply rely on good will.

In general, the biggest hindrance to consumers participating in a toner cartridge recycling program is the fear that the toner cartridges will not have the same level of quality as one that you could purchase from a name brand printer manufacturer. The truth is that you will neither lose your quality or your warranty.






About the Author:




No comments:

Post a Comment