I printed two other images this morning - my standard test photo that I always use (my dog in some flowers) and a person.
Comparing all three images in daylight shows up a weakness in the reds and a overbearing yellow, which in combination leads to a bit of a green cast. This leaves us with washed out browns, slightly orangey reds, and blues that lean a touch into the greens.
For the average home user, much of this probably won't be an issue. If the intention is to use this primarily as an office printer then I don't think anyone would concern themselves with it. However, if the intention is to print photographs and to match what you see on the screen, then a custom ICC profile is definitely in order. If you're printing mostly generic scenes that are green-heavy (such as landscapes) then you probably won't worry much about it, but if you're printing people then you probably won't be happy with the result.
I've profiled my inks with my ColorMunki this morning and the colours are now much closer to that which I see on-screen. The print of my dog is probably a touch on the dark side, but it's much easier to brighten an image before printing than it is to try and correct colours. And the print of the person is much more lifelike.
One additional issue is that my DCP-195C looks like it exhibits the "first print" issue that I've detailed before in my dye-sub tests. I suspect that, like dye-sub inks, pigment inks are a little thicker than the printer is happy with. This shows itself by way of an incomplete nozzle check pattern when you first go to print. Once you're printing, however, there is no issue. A more modern Brother printer may not exhibit this issue.
I look forward to hearing your results with your printer.
bigj2552;51708 wrote:oh aye, another question - do you keep you cleaning solution you use IN THE CARTS when you finished cleaning ? - or is it one clean then chuck the stuff ?
and do you also fill the little carts till there full of solution or half fill ?
I fill the carts and then use them as and when I need to. When they get empty, I'll fill them up again. At the price of these carts, I don't need to use the carts for anything else so I just leave them on the shelf until I need to flush the printer again.