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Dick March 13th 07 12:01 AM

HP Printer
 
does anyone know what part I need to replace to make this printer work ?
The Make: HP
The Model PSC 1610
Age : About two years

The Problem: Keeps taking paper in ,it goes in to far and reports a paper
jam.
If you push the OK button,it spits the paper out and takes in a new sheet of
paper.
It does this without being hooked up to the computer.

Thanks,
Dick



Homer J Simpson March 13th 07 12:37 AM

HP Printer
 

"Dick" wrote in message
news:rRlJh.8361$t8.3869@trndny02...

does anyone know what part I need to replace to make this printer work ?
The Make: HP
The Model PSC 1610
Age : About two years

The Problem: Keeps taking paper in ,it goes in to far and reports a paper
jam.
If you push the OK button,it spits the paper out and takes in a new sheet
of paper.
It does this without being hooked up to the computer.


Tried running a cleaning sheet through it?

Also fixyourownprinter.com




AZ Nomad March 13th 07 02:38 AM

HP Printer
 
On Tue, 13 Mar 2007 00:01:27 GMT, Dick wrote:


does anyone know what part I need to replace to make this printer work ?
The Make: HP
The Model PSC 1610
Age : About two years


The Problem: Keeps taking paper in ,it goes in to far and reports a paper
jam.
If you push the OK button,it spits the paper out and takes in a new sheet of
paper.
It does this without being hooked up to the computer.


Look up the model number on the back and buy one of those. Unplug
all the cables and throw out the big box in the middle. Replace it with
the part you just purchased.


Homer J Simpson March 13th 07 05:50 AM

HP Printer
 

"Lionel" wrote in message
...

BTW, HPs advice on cleaning the paper rollers is typically wimpy. Over
many years of fixing paper feed problems in inkjets, lasers, copiers &
faxes, I've found that rollers tend to harden on the surface, which
makes them shiny, & prone to slipping on the paper. The manufacturer
will always advise you to replace the roller, but it's rarely
neccessary. I've found that they can easily be reconditioned by
scrubbing the hardened/shiny area with a calico rag that's been
moistened with acetone (eg; nail polish remover or laquer thinner).
This gets the rubber nice & 'grippy' again, & will generally give you
another year or two out of the roller.


There is a rubber tire reconditioner used for record players (the cheap kind
with a rubber tire). Don't know what's in it though.




Ron(UK) March 13th 07 03:33 PM

HP Printer
 
Homer J Simpson wrote:


There is a rubber tire reconditioner used for record players (the cheap kind
with a rubber tire). Don't know what's in it though.

The stuff I`ve had for donkey's years contains xylene - very nasty
stuff - works a treat tho.

Ron(UK)


--
Lune Valley Audio
Public Address Systems
Hire Sales Maintenance
www.lunevalleyaudio.com


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