A Canon BC-02 ink cartridge is typically sold for 15 to 20 dollars, depending on the seller. These cartridges may sometimes go for about 30 to 32 dollars.
A Canon BC-05 is a color ink cartridge used in Canon Bubblejet printers. The models that this cartridge are compatible with are the BJ2000, BJC100, and BJC210.
The Canon BC 20 is an Ink Cartridge that is used in specific Canon printers. This is used to provide ink for the printer to print documents a person wants to receive.
The Canon BC-02 cartridge will provide enough ink to print approximately 500 pages at 5% coverage. What this means, is that each page will have 95% white space and 5% ink coverage. The coverage figure only takes into account basic print, it does not include pictures or bold print, for example.
The BC-02 is an inkjet cartridge for a Canon printer. It is available for purchase at office supply stores such as Staples and Office Depot, as well as online at Inkjet Superstore, directly from Canon, as well as from a variety of companies who sell non-OEM inkjet cartridges.
bc I d on t k no w
Chinese are known to be the first people to use and invent ink. Ink was invented by the Chinese in the 18th Century BC. The first known ink that was used in China was from natural plant dye, animal and mineral inks... India only started using ink in the 4th century BC. The oldest known variety of ink is Chinese Brush Ink which is still used in modern time and Japan and India started using it for writing with small brushes instead of pens. The ink used in early India since at least the 4th century BC was called masi, which was an admixture of several chemical components
All we know is somewhere around 2600 BC and 2697 BC. Historians mainly agree with 2697 BC. The older history is, the less accurate it is.
battery check. if it beeps very loud and fast that means your batteries are good.
sorry but i have got to go and have lunch so 100 bc that's good
It depends exactly what you mean by 'lasting'. I have two samples of Egyptian ink, one from 1230 BC and the other from around 750 BC. I brought a small phial of water from the Nile back home and put two drops of it onto the 1230 BC sample with an eye-dropper. I then got a reed pen from around the same period dipped it in the ink and wrote on some papyrus of about the same age. It wrote as if it had just been prepared - after about 3210 years!
Bc: $57.95 tbc: $85.95 obc: $129.95
History of Chinese inks can be traced back to 12th century BC, with the utilization of natural plant (plant dyes), animal (squid ink), and mineral inks based on such materials as graphite that were ground with water and applied with ink brushes. Evidence for the earliest Chinese inks, similar to modern inksticks, is around 256 BC in the end of the Warring States Period and produced using manual labour from soot and animal glue. The India ink used in ancient India since at least the 4th century BC was called masi which was made of burnt bones, tar, pitch, and other substances. Indian documents written in Kharosthi with ink have been unearthed in Chinese Turkestan. The practice of writing with ink and a sharp pointed needle was common in early South India.