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UPS: "Do not connect laser printer..."
What is it about laser printers that causes UPS manufacturers to recommend
they not be powered by a "stepped approximation to sine" UPS? It's a SMSP, isn't it? What makes it special such that it needs sine-only? No such caution re. computers, etc... Thanks. |
UPS: "Do not connect laser printer..."
notme wrote:
What is it about laser printers that causes UPS manufacturers to recommend they not be powered by a "stepped approximation to sine" UPS? It's a SMSP, isn't it? What makes it special such that it needs sine-only? No such caution re. computers, etc... Modified sine is often just full peak on, pause, full negative peak, pause, and so on. That can mess with PFC circuitry and also stresses rectifiers at the line input more than a sine. However, RVers and traveling sales folks do sometimes use modified sine inverters. What really wreaks havoc is a printer that has a powerful fuser which draws short but huge bursts of current. That can cause the inverter inside the UPS to choke. -- Regards, Joerg http://www.analogconsultants.com/ "gmail" domain blocked because of excessive spam. Use another domain or send PM. |
UPS: "Do not connect laser printer..."
On Sun, 19 Jul 2009 08:21:20 -0700, notme wrote:
What is it about laser printers that causes UPS manufacturers to recommend they not be powered by a "stepped approximation to sine" UPS? It's a SMSP, isn't it? What makes it special such that it needs sine-only? No such caution re. computers, etc... Thanks. Possibly because some laser printers have 1000 watt fusing elements and most home UPS units can't provide that much power? John |
UPS: "Do not connect laser printer..."
On Jul 19, 11:21*am, notme wrote:
What is it about laser printers that causes UPS manufacturers to recommend they not be powered by a "stepped approximation to sine" UPS? It's a SMSP, isn't it? What makes it special such that it needs sine-only The main heater (the one that fuses the toner so it sticks to the paper) is usually run on a thermostat, using a big SCR (triac, to be more specific). Those SCRs can trigger on fast-rising spikes on the power line, by capacitive coupling from cathode to gate, so steps in the power-in voltage are contraindicated. Items like a computer PS, which converts AC to DC before using the power, aren't picky. |
UPS: "Do not connect laser printer..."
"whit3rd" wrote in message ... On Jul 19, 11:21 am, notme wrote: What is it about laser printers that causes UPS manufacturers to recommend they not be powered by a "stepped approximation to sine" UPS? It's a SMSP, isn't it? What makes it special such that it needs sine-only The main heater (the one that fuses the toner so it sticks to the paper) is usually run on a thermostat, using a big SCR (triac, to be more specific). Those SCRs can trigger on fast-rising spikes on the power line, by capacitive coupling from cathode to gate, so steps in the power-in voltage are contraindicated. So a heater of that sort takes its power directly from the line? |
UPS: "Do not connect laser printer..."
On Sun, 19 Jul 2009 16:19:04 +0000 (UTC), "Geoffrey S. Mendelson"
wrote: wrote: Possibly because some laser printers have 1000 watt fusing elements and most home UPS units can't provide that much power? They go out of their way to hide it. A friend of mine moved here with a 120 volt industrial strength HP laser printer. The specs said 325 watts, the current draw was listed as 8 amps max on the last page of the manual. Nothing much hidden the 8 Amps, 120 volts, 960 watts. That's damned close to a thousand watts, IMHO. My current small Samsung printer never actually says what it draws, but the web page and manual made a big point about it drawing 6 watts in standby. Since we print around 5 times a week, the standby current matters more than the max draw, but I would not want to plug it into a UPS. Geoff. |
UPS: "Do not connect laser printer..."
I wrote: They go out of their way to hide it. A friend of mine moved here with a 120 volt industrial strength HP laser printer. The specs said 325 watts, the current draw was listed as 8 amps max on the last page of the manual. PeterD wrote: Nothing much hidden the 8 Amps, 120 volts, 960 watts. That's damned close to a thousand watts, IMHO. My point was that the 8 amps was only on the last page of the manual, not anywhere else, including the web page, sticker on the printer, specs page at the begining of the manual and so on. Geoff. -- Geoffrey S. Mendelson, Jerusalem, Israel N3OWJ/4X1GM |
UPS: "Do not connect laser printer..."
On Jul 19, 1:19*pm, "Michael Robinson" wrote:
"whit3rd" wrote in message ... On Jul 19, 11:21 am, notme wrote: What is it about laser printers that causes UPS manufacturers to recommend they not be powered by a "stepped approximation to sine" UPS? It's a SMSP, isn't it? What makes it special such that it needs sine-only The main heater (the one that fuses the toner so it sticks to the paper) is usually run on a thermostat, using a big SCR (triac, to be more specific). *Those SCRs can trigger on fast-rising spikes on the power line, by capacitive coupling from cathode to gate, so steps in the power-in voltage are contraindicated. So a heater of that sort takes its power directly from the line? Do inkjet printers handle the simily waveform well? |
UPS: "Do not connect laser printer..."
On Sun, 19 Jul 2009 14:19:10 -0400, Michael Robinson wrote:
The main heater (the one that fuses the toner so it sticks to the paper) is usually run on a thermostat, using a big SCR (triac, to be more specific). Those SCRs can trigger on fast-rising spikes on the power line, by capacitive coupling from cathode to gate, so steps in the power-in voltage are contraindicated. So a heater of that sort takes its power directly from the line? There's no reason to use DC, particularly if it means that you need a 1kW PSU instead of 200W. |
UPS: "Do not connect laser printer..."
On Sun, 19 Jul 2009 16:19:04 +0000 (UTC), "Geoffrey S. Mendelson"
wrote: wrote: Possibly because some laser printers have 1000 watt fusing elements and most home UPS units can't provide that much power? They go out of their way to hide it. A friend of mine moved here with a 120 volt industrial strength HP laser printer. The specs said 325 watts, the current draw was listed as 8 amps max on the last page of the manual. Only 8 amps? HP is usually fairly good about supplying power consumption specs. For example, for the HP LJ 3200 all in one, see: http://h20000.www2.hp.com/bizsupport/TechSupport/Document.jsp?objectID=bpl08239&locale=en_US&taskId =101&prodSeriesId=24354&prodTypeId=18972#A8 Inrush Current: (Duration: significantly 1 second) Model A (120V): 23 A peak (20 deg C, from cold start) Model AB (240V): 40 A peak (20 deg C, from cold start) With a 23A inrush current, the UPS is gonna go into shutdown, blow a fuse, or somehow complain. (I haven't tried it). What I find amusing is that in order to get an Energy Start rating, the printer must reduce average consumption to below 50% of normal power consumption. This is usually done with a power save shut down and an "instant on" feature. However, to get reasonable startup time, the initial inrush current is really high. My current small Samsung printer never actually says what it draws, but the web page and manual made a big point about it drawing 6 watts in standby. Since we print around 5 times a week, the standby current matters more than the max draw, but I would not want to plug it into a UPS. My clamp-on amps guesser has a peak hold function. I'll try it out on some of my LaserJet printers in the office and see what it shows. -- Jeff Liebermann 150 Felker St #D http://www.LearnByDestroying.com Santa Cruz CA 95060 http://802.11junk.com Skype: JeffLiebermann AE6KS 831-336-2558 |
UPS: "Do not connect laser printer..."
Greegor wrote:
Do inkjet printers handle the simily waveform well? Inkjet printers use very low power stepper motors to move the head and paper, and very tiny heaters to make the ink bubble up. They run off of low power DC. The power supply in the printer (or external on most of my inkjets) very happily converts the output of a UPS to the DC that it needs. The difference with laser printers is that the toner only sticks to the paper as long as there is an electrical charge. To keep it falling off of the paper after a few minutes, it has to be melted onto the paper. The technical term used is "fused" and the part of the printer is called a "fuser". They could of as easily called it "ironing" and an "iron", (as in an iron-on T shirt pattern) but that would have been too simple and not sound important enough. :-) Geoff. -- Geoffrey S. Mendelson, Jerusalem, Israel N3OWJ/4X1GM |
UPS: "Do not connect laser printer..."
On a sunny day (Mon, 20 Jul 2009 11:14:04 +0000 (UTC)) it happened "Geoffrey
S. Mendelson" wrote in : Greegor wrote: Do inkjet printers handle the simily waveform well? Inkjet printers use very low power stepper motors to move the head and paper, and very tiny heaters to make the ink bubble up. Epson inkjets do not use heat at all, but piezo elements to push the ink out. Better, allows more more types if ink, and is faster, and allows for better control of the droplets. Yes I have couple of Epsons:-) But their service sucks as it is non-existing. |
UPS: "Do not connect laser printer..."
On Sun, 19 Jul 2009 20:39:05 +0000 (UTC), "Geoffrey S. Mendelson"
wrote: I wrote: They go out of their way to hide it. A friend of mine moved here with a 120 volt industrial strength HP laser printer. The specs said 325 watts, the current draw was listed as 8 amps max on the last page of the manual. PeterD wrote: Nothing much hidden the 8 Amps, 120 volts, 960 watts. That's damned close to a thousand watts, IMHO. My point was that the 8 amps was only on the last page of the manual, not anywhere else, including the web page, sticker on the printer, specs page at the begining of the manual and so on. Geoff. Ah, I see your point. |
UPS: "Do not connect laser printer..."
Meat Plow wrote:
On Sun, 19 Jul 2009 08:55:05 -0700, Joerg wrote: What really wreaks havoc is a printer that has a powerful fuser which draws short but huge bursts of current. That can cause the inverter inside the UPS to choke. chaCHING! Collect your prize at the door. What did I win? Can one drink it? -- Regards, Joerg http://www.analogconsultants.com/ "gmail" domain blocked because of excessive spam. Use another domain or send PM. |
UPS: "Do not connect laser printer..."
Meat Plow wrote:
On Mon, 20 Jul 2009 10:11:37 -0700, Joerg wrote: Meat Plow wrote: On Sun, 19 Jul 2009 08:55:05 -0700, Joerg wrote: What really wreaks havoc is a printer that has a powerful fuser which draws short but huge bursts of current. That can cause the inverter inside the UPS to choke. chaCHING! Collect your prize at the door. What did I win? Can one drink it? How about a bottle of Macallan 1926 single malt? Nice! But a 1978 Montrachet or a nice bottle of Chateau d'Yquem would also do :-) -- Regards, Joerg http://www.analogconsultants.com/ "gmail" domain blocked because of excessive spam. Use another domain or send PM. |
UPS: "Do not connect laser printer..."
Jan Panteltje wrote:
On a sunny day (Mon, 20 Jul 2009 11:14:04 +0000 (UTC)) it happened "Geoffrey S. Mendelson" wrote in : Greegor wrote: Do inkjet printers handle the simily waveform well? Inkjet printers use very low power stepper motors to move the head and paper, and very tiny heaters to make the ink bubble up. Epson inkjets do not use heat at all, but piezo elements to push the ink out. Better, allows more more types if ink, and is faster, and allows for better control of the droplets. Yes I have couple of Epsons:-) But their service sucks as it is non-existing. I had an Epson. Replacement ink cartridges were cheaper than other brands too, because the piezos were permanent parts of the printer and not built into the cartridges. I didn't use it often enough, and when the nozzles clogged up, the printer's life was over. |
UPS: "Do not connect laser printer..."
Torn Lawence wrote:
I had an Epson. Replacement ink cartridges were cheaper than other brands too, because the piezos were permanent parts of the printer and not built into the cartridges. I didn't use it often enough, and when the nozzles clogged up, the printer's life was over. You can clean them with a dilute solution of ammonia in water, but that's no longer legal here. :-( There are actually print head cleaning solutions, but I have not bought any in a long time. Geoff. -- Geoffrey S. Mendelson, Jerusalem, Israel N3OWJ/4X1GM |
UPS: "Do not connect laser printer..."
On a sunny day (Mon, 20 Jul 2009 12:03:18 -0700) it happened Torn Lawence
wrote in : Jan Panteltje wrote: On a sunny day (Mon, 20 Jul 2009 11:14:04 +0000 (UTC)) it happened "Geoffrey S. Mendelson" wrote in : Greegor wrote: Do inkjet printers handle the simily waveform well? Inkjet printers use very low power stepper motors to move the head and paper, and very tiny heaters to make the ink bubble up. Epson inkjets do not use heat at all, but piezo elements to push the ink out. Better, allows more more types if ink, and is faster, and allows for better control of the droplets. Yes I have couple of Epsons:-) But their service sucks as it is non-existing. I had an Epson. Replacement ink cartridges were cheaper than other brands too, because the piezos were permanent parts of the printer and not built into the cartridges. I didn't use it often enough, and when the nozzles clogged up, the printer's life was over. Yes, those cartridges are expensive, but I have been using this system for some years: https://www.continuousink.com/home.html mainly to print to DVDs. Now printing costs very little, and the printheads are still the original ones. The way that system works is by using special cartridges that suck ink via silicone tubes from big external ink tanks. About 20x cheaper then the normal Epson ink. It takes care of the counter chips too. If the heads are clogged it is now less costly to run the cleaning program a few times too. |
UPS: "Do not connect laser printer..."
Torn Lawence wrote:
Jan Panteltje wrote: On a sunny day (Mon, 20 Jul 2009 11:14:04 +0000 (UTC)) it happened "Geoffrey S. Mendelson" wrote in : Greegor wrote: Do inkjet printers handle the simily waveform well? Inkjet printers use very low power stepper motors to move the head and paper, and very tiny heaters to make the ink bubble up. Epson inkjets do not use heat at all, but piezo elements to push the ink out. Better, allows more more types if ink, and is faster, and allows for better control of the droplets. Yes I have couple of Epsons:-) But their service sucks as it is non-existing. I had an Epson. Replacement ink cartridges were cheaper than other brands too, because the piezos were permanent parts of the printer and not built into the cartridges. I didn't use it often enough, and when the nozzles clogged up, the printer's life was over. I have an Epson all-in-one, which works great except that if even one ink colour is low, it won't let you do _anything_. On Saturday it wouldn't even let me _scan_ until I replaced the yellow ink. Cheers Phil Hobbs -- Dr Philip C D Hobbs Principal ElectroOptical Innovations 55 Orchard Rd Briarcliff Manor NY 10510 845-480-2058 hobbs at electrooptical dot net http://electrooptical.net |
UPS: "Do not connect laser printer..."
Phil Hobbs wrote:
I have an Epson all-in-one, which works great except that if even one ink colour is low, it won't let you do _anything_. On Saturday it wouldn't even let me _scan_ until I replaced the yellow ink. I had that same problem with an HP6100. It told me it was out of black ink and when I put a new cartridge in, it did an alignment page. It printed out some black lines and then failed. It never told me that it was out of color ink too. I was about to throw it away when I found an unopened set of catridges and replaced the color one just because I had it. It did the alignment and now it is working. I really did not care very much about the printing, I wanted to use it as a black and white fax machine. Without two working cartridges (black and color), it won't funtion at all. :-( Geoff. -- Geoffrey S. Mendelson, Jerusalem, Israel N3OWJ/4X1GM |
UPS: "Do not connect laser printer..."
notme wrote:
What is it about laser printers that causes UPS manufacturers to recommend they not be powered by a "stepped approximation to sine" UPS? It's a SMSP, isn't it? What makes it special such that it needs sine-only? No such caution re. computers, etc... The big difference is that lasers usually have a mains powered quartz lamp inside the fuser assembly to cook the toner onto the paper. My guess would be that the lamp puts a huge current spike on the mains each time it powers up, which is every minute or so. If so, that spike might overload the UPS. -- W . | ,. w , "Some people are alive only because \|/ \|/ it is illegal to kill them." Perna condita delenda est ---^----^--------------------------------------------------------------- |
UPS: "Do not connect laser printer..."
Meat Plow wrote:
On Mon, 20 Jul 2009 10:11:37 -0700, Joerg wrote: Meat Plow wrote: On Sun, 19 Jul 2009 08:55:05 -0700, Joerg wrote: What really wreaks havoc is a printer that has a powerful fuser which draws short but huge bursts of current. That can cause the inverter inside the UPS to choke. chaCHING! Collect your prize at the door. What did I win? Can one drink it? How about a bottle of Macallan 1926 single malt? Sounds good to me! -- W . | ,. w , "Some people are alive only because \|/ \|/ it is illegal to kill them." Perna condita delenda est ---^----^--------------------------------------------------------------- |
UPS: "Do not connect laser printer..."
Joerg wrote:
Meat Plow wrote: On Mon, 20 Jul 2009 10:11:37 -0700, Joerg wrote: Meat Plow wrote: On Sun, 19 Jul 2009 08:55:05 -0700, Joerg wrote: What really wreaks havoc is a printer that has a powerful fuser which draws short but huge bursts of current. That can cause the inverter inside the UPS to choke. chaCHING! Collect your prize at the door. What did I win? Can one drink it? How about a bottle of Macallan 1926 single malt? Nice! But a 1978 Montrachet or a nice bottle of Chateau d'Yquem would also do :-) I'd prefer the Scotch, myself. -- W . | ,. w , "Some people are alive only because \|/ \|/ it is illegal to kill them." Perna condita delenda est ---^----^--------------------------------------------------------------- |
UPS: "Do not connect laser printer..."
|
UPS: "Do not connect laser printer..."
Greegor wrote:
On Jul 19, 1:19 pm, "Michael Robinson" wrote: "whit3rd" wrote in message ... On Jul 19, 11:21 am, notme wrote: What is it about laser printers that causes UPS manufacturers to recommend they not be powered by a "stepped approximation to sine" UPS? It's a SMSP, isn't it? What makes it special such that it needs sine-only The main heater (the one that fuses the toner so it sticks to the paper) is usually run on a thermostat, using a big SCR (triac, to be more specific). Those SCRs can trigger on fast-rising spikes on the power line, by capacitive coupling from cathode to gate, so steps in the power-in voltage are contraindicated. So a heater of that sort takes its power directly from the line? Do inkjet printers handle the simily waveform well? It shouldn't be an issue at all for inkjets, only lasers. -- W . | ,. w , "Some people are alive only because \|/ \|/ it is illegal to kill them." Perna condita delenda est ---^----^--------------------------------------------------------------- |
UPS: "Do not connect laser printer..."
Geoffrey S. Mendelson wrote:
Torn Lawence wrote: I had an Epson. Replacement ink cartridges were cheaper than other brands too, because the piezos were permanent parts of the printer and not built into the cartridges. I didn't use it often enough, and when the nozzles clogged up, the printer's life was over. You can clean them with a dilute solution of ammonia in water, but that's no longer legal here. :-( You're kidding! Why not? There are actually print head cleaning solutions, but I have not bought any in a long time. Betcha they're just water & ammonia. -- W . | ,. w , "Some people are alive only because \|/ \|/ it is illegal to kill them." Perna condita delenda est ---^----^--------------------------------------------------------------- |
UPS: "Do not connect laser printer..."
Bob Larter wrote:
You're kidding! Why not? My guess is that someone thinks you can mix ammonia and various household items to make a bomb, but what I think happened is that someone who can't read the Hebrew warnings on the bottle cleaned their toilet with ammonia and clorox and they had to evacuate the whole neighborhood. Now the most exotic toilet cleaner you can buy is something called "hot water" (may cham) which is a mild dilution of hydrochloric acid. So mild, I don't think it will cause skin burns. Geoff. -- Geoffrey S. Mendelson, Jerusalem, Israel N3OWJ/4X1GM |
UPS: "Do not connect laser printer..."
"Geoffrey S. Mendelson" wrote in message ... Greegor wrote: Do inkjet printers handle the simily waveform well? Inkjet printers use very low power stepper motors to move the head and paper, and very tiny heaters to make the ink bubble up. They run off of low power DC. The power supply in the printer (or external on most of my inkjets) very happily converts the output of a UPS to the DC that it needs. The difference with laser printers is that the toner only sticks to the paper as long as there is an electrical charge. To keep it falling off of the paper after a few minutes, it has to be melted onto the paper. The technical term used is "fused" and the part of the printer is called a "fuser". They could of as easily called it "ironing" and an "iron", (as in an iron-on T shirt pattern) but that would have been too simple and not sound important enough. :-) Geoff. -- Geoffrey S. Mendelson, Jerusalem, Israel N3OWJ/4X1GM Not quite their fault for using that terminology, though. It's borrowed from the photocopier industry, where the same principle is used in exactly the same way. I doubt that iron-on T-shirt patterns were around - certainly not to the general public - when the toner / fuser technique was first established by Xerox or whoever it was ... :-) Arfa |
UPS: "Do not connect laser printer..."
"Torn Lawence" wrote in message net... Jan Panteltje wrote: On a sunny day (Mon, 20 Jul 2009 11:14:04 +0000 (UTC)) it happened "Geoffrey S. Mendelson" wrote in : Greegor wrote: Do inkjet printers handle the simily waveform well? Inkjet printers use very low power stepper motors to move the head and paper, and very tiny heaters to make the ink bubble up. Epson inkjets do not use heat at all, but piezo elements to push the ink out. Better, allows more more types if ink, and is faster, and allows for better control of the droplets. Yes I have couple of Epsons:-) But their service sucks as it is non-existing. I had an Epson. Replacement ink cartridges were cheaper than other brands too, because the piezos were permanent parts of the printer and not built into the cartridges. I didn't use it often enough, and when the nozzles clogged up, the printer's life was over. An Epson printer's life is over the moment you make your first print ... I have lost count of the number of them that I have drop-kicked down the garden. The trouble with them is, they are full of features, and cheap, so every time I wear out an HP after 6 or 7 years, I get enticed into buying another Epson, thinking that they can't still be in business by being stupid enough not to have finally sorted out the irretrievably clogged head syndrome ... How wrong and stupid *I* continue to be :-\ Arfa |
UPS: "Do not connect laser printer..."
"Geoffrey S. Mendelson" wrote in message ... Phil Hobbs wrote: I have an Epson all-in-one, which works great except that if even one ink colour is low, it won't let you do _anything_. On Saturday it wouldn't even let me _scan_ until I replaced the yellow ink. I had that same problem with an HP6100. It told me it was out of black ink and when I put a new cartridge in, it did an alignment page. It printed out some black lines and then failed. It never told me that it was out of color ink too. I was about to throw it away when I found an unopened set of catridges and replaced the color one just because I had it. It did the alignment and now it is working. I really did not care very much about the printing, I wanted to use it as a black and white fax machine. Without two working cartridges (black and color), it won't funtion at all. :-( Geoff. -- Geoffrey S. Mendelson, Jerusalem, Israel N3OWJ/4X1GM I have always found the management software on my HPs to be very good. The 5180 all-in-one that I'm currently using, informs you as soon as the ink in any cartridge drops below about 85% at a guess, and continues to do so until that cartrige is empty. It does this via both a screen pop-up on the computer that's requesting service from it (it's a network device), and a message on its own little LCD screen. It will then continue to give you the option to print in black only - assuming it's not the black that's run out of course - before finally shutting down completely, presumably to keep enough ink in the pipes etc to prevent drying out. If I've ever hit this condition, and not had a replacement cartridge in the drawer, I've always just gone to the store and bought one, so I don't know if scanning stops as well. Arfa |
UPS: "Do not connect laser printer..." -- Epsons; RX-580
On Mon, 20 Jul 2009 17:35:39 -0400, Phil Hobbs wrote:
I have an Epson all-in-one, which works great except that if even one ink colour is low, it won't let you do _anything_. On Saturday it wouldn't even let me _scan_ until I replaced the yellow ink. A friend gave me an Epson RX-580 with some clogging, and most carts were nearly empty. Same story. Nasty of them! Doesn't generate good will. Btw, figuring that it was worth it, I dismantled the RX-580 just to see and learn as much as I could. If you have any problems with the printer's feed, etc. mechanism, may the Creator's grace be with you! They are awesomely inaccessible. The excess-ink absorbing block is simply huge, btw. -- Nicabod =+= Waltham, Mass. |
UPS: "Do not connect laser printer..."
On a sunny day (Tue, 21 Jul 2009 09:31:08 +0100) it happened "Arfa Daily"
wrote in : "Torn Lawence" wrote in message tnet... Jan Panteltje wrote: On a sunny day (Mon, 20 Jul 2009 11:14:04 +0000 (UTC)) it happened "Geoffrey S. Mendelson" wrote in : Greegor wrote: Do inkjet printers handle the simily waveform well? Inkjet printers use very low power stepper motors to move the head and paper, and very tiny heaters to make the ink bubble up. Epson inkjets do not use heat at all, but piezo elements to push the ink out. Better, allows more more types if ink, and is faster, and allows for better control of the droplets. Yes I have couple of Epsons:-) But their service sucks as it is non-existing. I had an Epson. Replacement ink cartridges were cheaper than other brands too, because the piezos were permanent parts of the printer and not built into the cartridges. I didn't use it often enough, and when the nozzles clogged up, the printer's life was over. An Epson printer's life is over the moment you make your first print ... Bull**** :-) I have lost count of the number of them that I have drop-kicked down the garden. Well, do they grow there???? The trouble with them is, they are full of features, and cheap, so every time I wear out an HP after 6 or 7 years, I get enticed into buying another Epson, thinking that they can't still be in business by being stupid enough not to have finally sorted out the irretrievably clogged head syndrome ... How wrong and stupid *I* continue to be :-\ Na, my oldest Epson is a Stylus Color 460, is older then your HPs, works OK, apart from a bad contact in the chip socket that requires re-inserting the big DIL chip every now and then, should really fix this some time. But it is noisy. My Epson R200 is also many years old, end very very quiet. Arfa |
UPS: "Do not connect laser printer..."
"Jan Panteltje" wrote in message ... On a sunny day (Tue, 21 Jul 2009 09:31:08 +0100) it happened "Arfa Daily" wrote in : "Torn Lawence" wrote in message stnet... Jan Panteltje wrote: On a sunny day (Mon, 20 Jul 2009 11:14:04 +0000 (UTC)) it happened "Geoffrey S. Mendelson" wrote in : Greegor wrote: Do inkjet printers handle the simily waveform well? Inkjet printers use very low power stepper motors to move the head and paper, and very tiny heaters to make the ink bubble up. Epson inkjets do not use heat at all, but piezo elements to push the ink out. Better, allows more more types if ink, and is faster, and allows for better control of the droplets. Yes I have couple of Epsons:-) But their service sucks as it is non-existing. I had an Epson. Replacement ink cartridges were cheaper than other brands too, because the piezos were permanent parts of the printer and not built into the cartridges. I didn't use it often enough, and when the nozzles clogged up, the printer's life was over. An Epson printer's life is over the moment you make your first print ... Bull**** :-) Your opinion my friend, but there are many many other dissatisfied owners who would not agree with you ... I have lost count of the number of them that I have drop-kicked down the garden. Well, do they grow there???? Indeed they do not. They rot gently away, which is the best thing that they can possibly do ... The trouble with them is, they are full of features, and cheap, so every time I wear out an HP after 6 or 7 years, I get enticed into buying another Epson, thinking that they can't still be in business by being stupid enough not to have finally sorted out the irretrievably clogged head syndrome ... How wrong and stupid *I* continue to be :-\ Na, my oldest Epson is a Stylus Color 460, is older then your HPs, works OK, apart from a bad contact in the chip socket that requires re-inserting the big DIL chip every now and then, should really fix this some time. But it is noisy. My Epson R200 is also many years old, end very very quiet. I think then, that you have been very very lucky. Perhaps the ones you have are so old that they come from a time when Epson could still build printers that were not worthless junk, designed to gobble as much ink as they possibly can, from every cartridge fitted, when the jets on the end of just one of them, have clogged. In fact, I think you are the first person I have ever come across, who has not had a bad experience with one (cue hundreds of lurkers to now come out of the woodwork, protesting what marvellous machines they are ...) Arfa |
UPS: "Do not connect laser printer..."
On Mon, 20 Jul 2009 11:56:18 -0700, Joerg wrote:
Meat Plow wrote: On Mon, 20 Jul 2009 10:11:37 -0700, Joerg Meat Plow wrote: On Sun, 19 Jul 2009 08:55:05 -0700, Joerg What really wreaks havoc is a printer that has a powerful fuser which draws short but huge bursts of current. That can cause the inverter inside the UPS to choke. chaCHING! Collect your prize at the door. What did I win? Can one drink it? How about a bottle of Macallan 1926 single malt? Nice! But a 1978 Montrachet or a nice bottle of Chateau d'Yquem would also do :-) I can get an "almost half-gallon" (1.75L) of Prestige Vodka for $8.99 plus tax. ;-) Cheers! Rich |
UPS: "Do not connect laser printer..."
On Sun, 19 Jul 2009 08:21:20 -0700, notme wrote:
What is it about laser printers that causes UPS manufacturers to recommend they not be powered by a "stepped approximation to sine" UPS? It's a SMSP, isn't it? What makes it special such that it needs sine-only? No such caution re. computers, etc... "Do not look into laser beam with remaining eye." ;-) Cheers! Rich |
UPS: "Do not connect laser printer..."
On Tue, 21 Jul 2009 20:35:16 GMT, Rich Grise
wrote: On Mon, 20 Jul 2009 11:56:18 -0700, Joerg wrote: Meat Plow wrote: On Mon, 20 Jul 2009 10:11:37 -0700, Joerg Meat Plow wrote: On Sun, 19 Jul 2009 08:55:05 -0700, Joerg What really wreaks havoc is a printer that has a powerful fuser which draws short but huge bursts of current. That can cause the inverter inside the UPS to choke. chaCHING! Collect your prize at the door. What did I win? Can one drink it? How about a bottle of Macallan 1926 single malt? Nice! But a 1978 Montrachet or a nice bottle of Chateau d'Yquem would also do :-) I can get an "almost half-gallon" (1.75L) of Prestige Vodka for $8.99 plus tax. ;-) Listerine is $5 at WallyWorld. |
UPS: "Do not connect laser printer..."
On Tue, 21 Jul 2009 07:59:03 +0000 (UTC), "Geoffrey S. Mendelson"
wrote: Bob Larter wrote: You're kidding! Why not? My guess is that someone thinks you can mix ammonia and various household items to make a bomb, Ah, but you can! I did it all the time when I was in high school. Nitrogen triiodide is fun stuff. ;-) but what I think happened is that someone who can't read the Hebrew warnings on the bottle cleaned their toilet with ammonia and clorox and they had to evacuate the whole neighborhood. They don't believe in Darwin there either? Now the most exotic toilet cleaner you can buy is something called "hot water" (may cham) which is a mild dilution of hydrochloric acid. So mild, I don't think it will cause skin burns. Likely a good cleaner, though. |
UPS: "Do not connect laser printer..."
"krw" wrote in message ... On Tue, 21 Jul 2009 07:59:03 +0000 (UTC), "Geoffrey S. Mendelson" wrote: Bob Larter wrote: You're kidding! Why not? My guess is that someone thinks you can mix ammonia and various household items to make a bomb, Ah, but you can! I did it all the time when I was in high school. Nitrogen triiodide is fun stuff. ;-) NTI is WICKED stuff ! We used to make it by mixing a very strong household cleaner called Handy Andy with pure iodine crystals 'borrowed' from the biology department. For some reason, the ones there were a lot more pure than any iodine crystals or liquid derivatives available for theft in the chemistry department ... Once it had been made, and passed through a filter paper, we used to put it into corked boiling tubes (bigger than half inch test tubes), and carry it around the school with us in our inside pockets. A good splat of the stuff on the floor in the corridor, would just about dry in a lesson period, to the point where it was unstable. At the end of the lesson, let the teacher leave the class first ... Oh the bang, and that luvverly cloud of purple smoke rising to the ceiling, and the crackles underfoot for days afterward when walking down that corridor. The fun of laughing at the caretaker and his assistant trying to remove the purple stain blasted into the surface of the tiles ... Then there was the joy of making delayed fuses for tuppeny bangers by soaking string in .... potassium nitrate .... was it ? Tape a couple of inches to the top of a banger, then set light to it and leave it under a seat at the back of the cinema at the midnight movie. Plenty of time to return to your own seat before it went off. Oh happy happy days. What joyous things we learnt in 'real' schools all those years ago ! Thanks for reminding me of my mis-spent youth. :-)) Arfa |
UPS: "Do not connect laser printer..."
On Wed, 22 Jul 2009 00:49:53 +0100, "Arfa Daily"
wrote: "krw" wrote in message .. . On Tue, 21 Jul 2009 07:59:03 +0000 (UTC), "Geoffrey S. Mendelson" wrote: Bob Larter wrote: You're kidding! Why not? My guess is that someone thinks you can mix ammonia and various household items to make a bomb, Ah, but you can! I did it all the time when I was in high school. Nitrogen triiodide is fun stuff. ;-) NTI is WICKED stuff ! We used to make it by mixing a very strong household cleaner called Handy Andy with pure iodine crystals 'borrowed' from the biology department. For some reason, the ones there were a lot more pure than any iodine crystals or liquid derivatives available for theft in the chemistry department ... Hmm, mine was biological grade too, though only because I had no access to "chemicals" in high school. ;-) I used a 28% solution of ammonia water I bought by the gallon in a local drug store. About ten years ago my mother's best friend married a retired pharmacist (can't get away with anything, forever). He remembered me and once when we were visiting, my mother asked "what in the world" I did with all that ammonia water. My mother was ~85 at that time. ;-) Once it had been made, and passed through a filter paper, we used to put it into corked boiling tubes (bigger than half inch test tubes), and carry it around the school with us in our inside pockets. A good splat of the stuff on the floor in the corridor, would just about dry in a lesson period, to the point where it was unstable. At the end of the lesson, let the teacher leave the class first ... Oh the bang, and that luvverly cloud of purple smoke rising to the ceiling, and the crackles underfoot for days afterward when walking down that corridor. The fun of laughing at the caretaker and his assistant trying to remove the purple stain blasted into the surface of the tiles ... Then there was the joy of making delayed fuses for tuppeny bangers by soaking string in .... potassium nitrate .... was it ? Tape a couple of inches to the top of a banger, then set light to it and leave it under a seat at the back of the cinema at the midnight movie. Plenty of time to return to your own seat before it went off. NTI is soluble in alcohol and perfectly stable as long as it's "wet". An artist's paint brush and a classroom lock can generate loads of fun. My senior year, I also had a master key to the interior locks in the high school. That was fun too. Oh happy happy days. What joyous things we learnt in 'real' schools all those years ago ! Yeah. Kids today... Thanks for reminding me of my mis-spent youth. :-)) You forgot? |
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