Nozzle clogging has become a major problem on my Canon Pixma Pro 100 printer.
Probably should start by saying that overall I've been extremely pleased with the quality of the prints produced. I bought the printer for a surprisingly low price in June 2017. As photo printing goes I suspect that the overall amount of printing that I've done is quite low when compared to others with such a printer. I am an amateur photographer who still prefers paper prints to digital pictures that I think very in appearance based on the screen being used to view them. Also screens tend to be small whereas I like big.
For several years my Pro 100 was very reliable even though there were relatively long periods of time that could normally occur between uses (i.e., printing anything). How long is a bit uncertain but after 3 or 4 years I experienced some nozzle clogging which resulted in poor quality prints along with wasted photo paper. I did discover and use the maintenance operations included in the Canon driver software. These operations included something called Nozzle Cleaning along with another called Deep Cleaning. They also provided test printing that shows the present status for each individual ink tank. These maintenance operations were quite effective in resolving problems for a pretty long time.
However, I've now come to the point where I have one group on ink tanks that won't print anything even though some are new or recently replaced whereas the other group looks normal. Even Deep Cleaning does nothing to even allow something to print for the problem group of tanks.
I've posted this topic on Canon's Community Forums and the responses seem to suggest that such problems are common or maybe even normal and that the printer is at end of life. Given that the Print Head (which contains the nozzles) is removable one might think it would also be normal to replace such parts that are known to wear out with new ones but apparently Canon does NOT sell such parts.
First question would be, is there a solution to this problem? What about the solution proposed in this video which seems harmless if alternative is to trash the printer?
Next question would be, if my printer is at end of life are there better options available when it comes to this issue that do not significantly sacrifice print quality? Note: Interestingly I've never had such a problem on various all-in-one (office) printers that I've owned and used for much longer periods of time. Given that the cost (both purchase price and supplies) look to be much more than what I paid in 2017 this becomes more important.
Next (possibly unrelated) question would be, is it possible to find a printer capable of printing even larger (than 13x19 - A3) prints without sacrificing quality? This would include preserving the quality for smaller size prints as well.