Hi,
Do not perform any more cleanings especially power cleaningas at this stage. Usually no more than two or three cleanings should be made consecutively and I suggest always making some prints between cleanings.
If you do not notice any banding or other artifacts when printing normal images, I would suggest you to continue printing. In most cases a small clog will sort itself in a couple of days and the sooner the more you print.
If there are visible problems in the prints, take some cheap paper and print ten to thirty ordinary photographs or maybe granger rainbows. Then print a nozzle check. If the problem persists, print some more. Repeat this the next day. Start and end the printing session with printing a nozzle check. If the same clog still persists after maybe four days of printing, make another attempt at ordinary cleaning.
Hope this helps.
I love and hate 4880. Love because it makes nice prints. Hate because it clogs all the time unless I print every single day. To this day according to my archived printed nozzle checks, exactly half of the ink that has gone through this machine has gone to waste ink tank. Something to think about unless printing is the main job or hobby.
Cheers,
J
ps. One of the most annoying things with Epson 4880 is the auto cleaning function. This produces roughly half of the clogs (or ink starvation or whatever causes the dropouts) in my machine. After making several perfect prints the machine suddenly starts the cleaning cycle and then there's a channel or two missing. Makes me crazy. Right now I'm staring yet another auto cleaning disaster. One conclusion: Epson 4880 is a piece of junk. And with this particular machine, room humidity makes no difference on clogging. Cleaning the wiper helps a bit but does not cure it. This machine is a large complicated waste ink tank. It would be so much easier to just buy some ink cassettes and throw them in the litter. Would at least save some time.