My printer is not a high end machine (it's a six ink Epson Expression Photo XP-960) but I'm happy with what I can get out of it. Usually anyway, not today though, a B&W image is coming out with a magenta cast.
I've read that such a cast can be caused by double colour management but that's not the cause here, the the Epson driver is definitely set to 'No Colour Management'. I've also read that if 'Epson Print Preview' is enabled that can break the CM, by triggering the printer to invoke CM even though the driver is set to 'No CM'. That also is not the case either, Epson Print Preview is not in use.
My monitor is a Dell U2413, which has been hardware calibrated to its native gamut, and if the X-Rite software is to be believed that exceeds Adobe RGB. However, it makes no difference if I set the monitor to use that profile or I use either of the monitor's factory settings for sRGB or Adobe RGB, in all cases the image looks OK on screen. Plus when I sample the colour at various point across the image, the RGB channels, as I'd expect for a B&W image, all show the same numbers.
Trial and error has eventually revealed that if I shift the tint of the white balance to -5% (I'm using Affinity Photo 2), i.e. towards the green, the change on screen is virtually imperceptible but resulting print looks OK.
Given that, am I right to conclude that my problem is that the Epson supplied paper profile is not accurate enough for my printer? I don't have a device to create my own paper profile, nor do I know anyone who does so I can't investigate that theory. Or is the problem that I need to get new eyes / a new monitor, to be able to better see the virtually imperceptible need for a tweak to the tint of the white balance?
Thanks