 Hey guys, Kevin here. Today, we're going to do a color printing test on the Canon TS8220. Canon has this new series of PGI280 CLI281 cartridges that has those PIXMA printers using it. TS8220 is before the TS8320. And right now, you can see that basically the both printers are the same. So I'm assuming if I reveal this one, it will be the same as TS8320. In the last video, I'm going to put a link above. The other way compared the Canon TS6320, which is used the same cartridge except a blue cartridge. It doesn't have the blue cartridge. I use the way plotted on a lab space. If you're not familiar lab space, vertically, this is the lightness. It's from really, really white to really, really dark. And the A-axis is from green to red. And the B-axis is from blue to yellow. And this is the old colors that this Canon printer can produce. And when we compare to a real photo printer, and the wireframe is the real photo printer, in the last video, we can show with regular cartridges, without blue cartridges. You can see the wireframe. This is much, much wider gamut than the Canon. So the Canon is not, by itself, it's not the ideal color printer. So let's see if we can improve that with blue cartridge. This is the magic cartridge going to save the day. Let's see what a narrow gamut doing in real life. So on the left is the TS63030 that doesn't have the blue cartridge. And on the right, we have a real photo printer. You can see the life one look like a TV anchor. Look like she has some makeup. And her skin is kind of like a fake. On the right, it's more real. It's more three-dimensional. Just pay attention to her cheekbone. You can see how three-dimensional it is. Versus this one, it's like a totally plastic surgery. In the real photo printer, those patches, they are really evenly distributed. You don't see a big block of patches anywhere. And we already know the blue will be bad. And you can see the patch. And a couple colors just lumped together. And the lightness is not enough either. The grays, you have to mixing up the other colors. Do you see it right here? Pay attention to region 102 to 216. You can see the Canon is from white just to gray to dark. And the real printer, you have more transitions. Okay, let's see if we add a blue cartridge and that will fix the problem. Overall, she's looking a little bit more real now. Let's see if the blue cartridge fixed that ugly patch right here. You can see the patch is a lot more even. So that's a big improvement. And notice the improvement from the red to yellow and the expired yellow is a lot more even than before, that's unexpected. And when you compare it to the real printer, real photo printer, not real printer, not real photo printer. And it's, I mean, the six cartridge, that blue cartridge really did some trick. It look almost like a real photo printer now. I'm happy. Talks cheap. Let's make a real ACC and put it on the lab. This is our old five cartridge system. And let's put the six cartridge system down with test today. You can see just like the voice, what we've seen in the picture, the red and the yellow, that region improved a lot. That's really surprising. What one small cartridge can do. And it beef up a lot on the blue side. So this is the improvement you got from investing one more cartridge. Now let's put down the real photo printer. And now the real printer is a wireframe again. So you can see even with one extra blue cartridge, the Canon still has problem with the blue side. And let's do a cross section. So you can see, so in the cross section, you can see the outside layer as the real photo printer. And this is the, this one is the blue cartridge added. And the inside is the old five cartridge system. So the current Canon is halfway between the two, between the best and the worst. You can see that the separation going into be pretty consistent across all the line is. And when the line is changed, your six cartridge, five cartridge, they are converged at some point. So it doesn't make a difference if you add an actual cartridge or not. However, for the real photo printer, it's always better than this. So my conclusion is I'm gonna suggest this six cartridge system to amateur or somebody just started with a limited budget. And yes, you can use this printer and print some photos even maybe do a little bit of commercial and selling those photos. But in the long run, you have to have a real photo printer. Hope you enjoyed this video. Cheers.