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Electronics Repair (sci.electronics.repair) Discussion of repairing electronic equipment. Topics include requests for assistance, where to obtain servicing information and parts, techniques for diagnosis and repair, and annecdotes about success, failures and problems. |
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#1
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I have an ancient HP Color Laserjet 3600N, I picked up a few months
back. Nice printer. So nice, that after a few months, I took the plunge and bought a bunch of toner cartridges for the thing. As luck would have it, it has just thrown up a fuser error (50.8). At first, the error was intermittant, now it is permanent. Questions: * Service data source? * Can the fuser be repaired? The cost of a fuser here in Australia is astronomical? * Is the fuser a 230VAC one (Australia is a 230VAC nation), or can I just buy a new fuser (or re-built one) from eBay? * I assume there is some kind of feedback system (NTC or PTC element) and that is what has failed, rather than the heater (the fuser still gets hot)? Any suggestions will be welcome. After spending almost 300 Bucks on toner, I am keen to keep this sucker going for another few years. I'd prefer not to spend 500 Bucks on a new fuser though. TIA -- Trevor Wilson www.rageaudio.com.au --- This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software. https://www.avast.com/antivirus |
#2
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On 21/02/16 17:22, Trevor Wilson wrote:
I have an ancient HP Color Laserjet 3600N, I picked up a few months back. Nice printer. So nice, that after a few months, I took the plunge and bought a bunch of toner cartridges for the thing. As luck would have it, it has just thrown up a fuser error (50.8). At first, the error was intermittant, now it is permanent. Questions: * Service data source? * Can the fuser be repaired? The cost of a fuser here in Australia is astronomical? * Is the fuser a 230VAC one (Australia is a 230VAC nation), or can I just buy a new fuser (or re-built one) from eBay? * I assume there is some kind of feedback system (NTC or PTC element) and that is what has failed, rather than the heater (the fuser still gets hot)? Just a couple of random thoughts... I've disassembled a couple of mono HP laser printers. The fuser is heated by a long halogen lamp inside a thin-walled metal (aluminium?) tube, which is coated with something very slick, perhaps PTFE. The thermo switch is just an on-off bi-metal thing that rides against the fuser tube - with surprisingly little signs of wear on the ones I took apart. Bottom line, you should see bright light from the end of the fuser tube when it fires up, and perhaps you can measure the current draw? The fuser is very... central. Lots of disassembly to get to it. Clifford Heath. |
#3
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On Sun, 21 Feb 2016 17:22:31 +1100, Trevor Wilson wrote:
I have an ancient HP Color Laserjet 3600N, I picked up a few months back. Nice printer. So nice, that after a few months, I took the plunge and bought a bunch of toner cartridges for the thing. As luck would have it, it has just thrown up a fuser error (50.8). At first, the error was intermittant, now it is permanent. Questions: * Service data source? good luck. I've looked for HP service manuals over the years and the ones on offer are nothing more than user manuals. * Can the fuser be repaired? The cost of a fuser here in Australia is astronomical? * Is the fuser a 230VAC one (Australia is a 230VAC nation), or can I just buy a new fuser (or re-built one) from eBay? Should be a bog standard part throughout the world. They just swap power supplies for each market. * I assume there is some kind of feedback system (NTC or PTC element) and that is what has failed, rather than the heater (the fuser still gets hot)? Any suggestions will be welcome. After spending almost 300 Bucks on toner, I am keen to keep this sucker going for another few years. I'd prefer not to spend 500 Bucks on a new fuser though. Lol, I've got $1,000 of inkjet ink here that I'll never get to use. Then there is the $800 of backup tapes with few uses, Lol, I've even got ~50 Nec Pinwriter ribbons that will never get used and there is two working printers still. TIA |
#4
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On 02/20/2016 10:22 PM, Trevor Wilson wrote:
I have an ancient HP Color Laserjet 3600N, I picked up a few months back. Nice printer. So nice, that after a few months, I took the plunge and bought a bunch of toner cartridges for the thing. As luck would have it, it has just thrown up a fuser error (50.8). At first, the error was intermittant, now it is permanent. Questions: * Service data source? * Can the fuser be repaired? The cost of a fuser here in Australia is astronomical? * Is the fuser a 230VAC one (Australia is a 230VAC nation), or can I just buy a new fuser (or re-built one) from eBay? * I assume there is some kind of feedback system (NTC or PTC element) and that is what has failed, rather than the heater (the fuser still gets hot)? Any suggestions will be welcome. After spending almost 300 Bucks on toner, I am keen to keep this sucker going for another few years. I'd prefer not to spend 500 Bucks on a new fuser though. TIA If your machine engine is anything like the Laserjet 4/5 I have those service manuals and can send them to you - at least you would have an idea about how the fuser is put together on another model... John :-#)# -- (Please post followups or tech inquiries to the USENET newsgroup) John's Jukes Ltd. 2343 Main St., Vancouver, BC, Canada V5T 3C9 (604)872-5757 or Fax 872-2010 (Pinballs, Jukes, Video Games) www.flippers.com "Old pinballers never die, they just flip out." |
#5
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On 21/02/2016 17:22, Trevor Wilson wrote:
I have an ancient HP Color Laserjet 3600N, I picked up a few months back. Nice printer. So nice, that after a few months, I took the plunge and bought a bunch of toner cartridges for the thing. As luck would have it, it has just thrown up a fuser error (50.8). At first, the error was intermittant, now it is permanent. Questions: * Service data source? * Can the fuser be repaired? The cost of a fuser here in Australia is astronomical? * Is the fuser a 230VAC one (Australia is a 230VAC nation), or can I just buy a new fuser (or re-built one) from eBay? * I assume there is some kind of feedback system (NTC or PTC element) and that is what has failed, rather than the heater (the fuser still gets hot)? Any suggestions will be welcome. After spending almost 300 Bucks on toner, I am keen to keep this sucker going for another few years. I'd prefer not to spend 500 Bucks on a new fuser though. TIA Anything useful here for you? http://www.fixyourownprinter.com/?pr...e arch=Search Colin --- This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software. https://www.avast.com/antivirus |
#6
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In sci.electronics.repair John Robertson wrote:
If your machine engine is anything like the Laserjet 4/5 I have those service manuals and can send them to you - at least you would have an idea about how the fuser is put together on another model... I don't see how those would be close, the 4's and 5's were single toner cartridge mono printers and the 3600n is a 4 cart color. It's easily 2x taller and much more complex with the paper path and toner loading. I don't have a manual either but I beleive on a 3600 the fuser is a user replacement part. There is some way of getting the old one out and new one in without disassembly of the printer itself. It looks like a toner cartridge, a little smaller. Even if the OP thinks it's getting warm, it still is likely to be defective. Those things, if they don't get to temp within a period of time, it'll show as a failure, too much current draw from it coming on and off too rapidly is also shown as a failure. If it's showing a fuser failure on the lcd panel, the best move is to replace it and see what happens. Personally I think the OP sort of made a mistake trying to get it going via the purchase of the toner carts. If it was the other way around, had good toner carts but a fuser error, it would of been worth the risk. Those printers don't get better with age. Even if a replacement fuser is around $100(USD), likely it'll start having paper feed problems because of the rollers and depending on the number of prints already on it, whatever they use for the "drum" is going to start streaking or print bands. It's not ancient, unless you call 10 years that, but those aren't your mothers laserprinters either. I'm just saying all those (the 3500 and 3600) are probably at the end of their lifespan now. One thing with those that always drove me nuts is the fact that even if one color cart (like yellow) runs out, the whole printer locks up until it's replaced, even if you just want to do a black and white invoice. There is a way around that, if you prepare it in advance, but then the printer lives in this "test mode" which gets annoying. One other comment about the carts he purchased, unless someone is looking for them, they are worthless. I just tossed a 3500N last month for all the above reasons and had 10 carts. 2 brand new in the box from HP direct, the 4 that were in the printer (half to 100% full) and 4 spent ones. After checking with a half dozen "we buy old toner and ink cart" places, 3 of them offer nothing and didn't want any of them, two others offered nothing but would send a label (recycle y'all) and only one place offered nothing for the spent ones, 50 cents for the still usable ones and get this, a whole dollar for the unopened factory ones. -bruce |
#7
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![]() "Clifford Heath" wrote in message ... .. . . I've disassembled a couple of mono HP laser printers. The fuser is heated by a long halogen lamp inside a thin-walled metal (aluminium?) tube, which is coated with something very slick, perhaps PTFE. The thermo switch is just an on-off bi-metal thing that rides against the fuser tube - with surprisingly little signs of wear on the ones I took apart. When I got "fuser error" on an ancient mono HP Laserjet, I also found that fusers were expensive, although I did also turn up some place that sold replacement heating elements. For that model, there was a ceramic element and a thermistor in the fuser. However, my tests and measurements showed no obvious problem with the fuser and I came to the conclusion that the problem was in the controller board. I established that power was getting supplied to the heater, but ended up replacing the control board with one from another printer which itself was actually working but had seen a lot more use than the first one. For the record, the repaired Laserjet still works today - it is way over 20 years old now. |
#8
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On Sun, 21 Feb 2016 17:22:31 +1100, Trevor Wilson
wrote: * Service data source? http://www.FixYourOwnPrinter.com http://www.fixyourownprinter.com/?printer_brand=9&printer_series=61&printer=1988&Se arch=Search http://support.hp.com/us-en/product/HP-Color-LaserJet-3000-Printer-series/501044/model/501046/manuals http://www.PrinterWorks.com http://www.lbrty.com http://partsurfer.hp.com http://partsurfer.hp.com/Search.aspx?type=PROD&SearchText=Q5987A Service Manual: http://support.hp.com/us-en/product/HP-Color-LaserJet-3000-Printer-series/501044/model/501046/manuals There are also dealers on eBay selling manuals on CD or download. * Can the fuser be repaired? The cost of a fuser here in Australia is astronomical? Yes, it can be repaired with a rebuild kit. http://www.ebay.com/sch/i.html?_nkw=hp+color+laserjet+fuser+rebuild The rebuild kits do NOT include a heater and are therefore indpendent of line voltage. If you've never done it before and/or lack specific instructions, I suggest you go for a rebuild or exchange fuser instead. http://h20564.www2.hp.com/hpsc/doc/public/display?docId=emr_na-c00508146 For 220VAC the fuser PN is RM1-2743-000 For 117VAC the fuser PN is RM1-2665-000 * Is the fuser a 230VAC one (Australia is a 230VAC nation), or can I just buy a new fuser (or re-built one) from eBay? That's NOT an either-or type choice. Yes, you can buy a rebuilt fuser on eBay, but it has to be 220VAC type for AU. * I assume there is some kind of feedback system (NTC or PTC element) and that is what has failed, rather than the heater (the fuser still gets hot)? If the temperature sensing circuit has had a failure, you'll get an error message on the display during boot up. There is also an overtemp thermostat to prevent meltdown. The usual failures that I see are hardened toner buildup on the fingers that peel the paper away from the fuser roller, a fried fuser film sleeve, and worn gear teeth. Any suggestions will be welcome. After spending almost 300 Bucks on toner, I am keen to keep this sucker going for another few years. I'd prefer not to spend 500 Bucks on a new fuser though. $500 for a fuser is far too much. http://www.amazon.com/s/?ie=UTF8&keywords=hp+3600n+fuser No clue about AU prices. For 220VAC, email the vendor. Most rebuilders carry both voltages or can possibly swap out the heater element. -- Jeff Liebermann 150 Felker St #D http://www.LearnByDestroying.com Santa Cruz CA 95060 http://802.11junk.com Skype: JeffLiebermann AE6KS 831-336-2558 |
#9
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On 22/02/2016 7:16 AM, Jeff Liebermann wrote:
On Sun, 21 Feb 2016 17:22:31 +1100, Trevor Wilson wrote: * Service data source? http://www.FixYourOwnPrinter.com http://www.fixyourownprinter.com/?printer_brand=9&printer_series=61&printer=1988&Se arch=Search http://support.hp.com/us-en/product/HP-Color-LaserJet-3000-Printer-series/501044/model/501046/manuals http://www.PrinterWorks.com http://www.lbrty.com http://partsurfer.hp.com http://partsurfer.hp.com/Search.aspx?type=PROD&SearchText=Q5987A Service Manual: http://support.hp.com/us-en/product/HP-Color-LaserJet-3000-Printer-series/501044/model/501046/manuals There are also dealers on eBay selling manuals on CD or download. * Can the fuser be repaired? The cost of a fuser here in Australia is astronomical? Yes, it can be repaired with a rebuild kit. http://www.ebay.com/sch/i.html?_nkw=hp+color+laserjet+fuser+rebuild The rebuild kits do NOT include a heater and are therefore indpendent of line voltage. If you've never done it before and/or lack specific instructions, I suggest you go for a rebuild or exchange fuser instead. http://h20564.www2.hp.com/hpsc/doc/public/display?docId=emr_na-c00508146 For 220VAC the fuser PN is RM1-2743-000 For 117VAC the fuser PN is RM1-2665-000 * Is the fuser a 230VAC one (Australia is a 230VAC nation), or can I just buy a new fuser (or re-built one) from eBay? That's NOT an either-or type choice. Yes, you can buy a rebuilt fuser on eBay, but it has to be 220VAC type for AU. * I assume there is some kind of feedback system (NTC or PTC element) and that is what has failed, rather than the heater (the fuser still gets hot)? If the temperature sensing circuit has had a failure, you'll get an error message on the display during boot up. There is also an overtemp thermostat to prevent meltdown. The usual failures that I see are hardened toner buildup on the fingers that peel the paper away from the fuser roller, a fried fuser film sleeve, and worn gear teeth. Any suggestions will be welcome. After spending almost 300 Bucks on toner, I am keen to keep this sucker going for another few years. I'd prefer not to spend 500 Bucks on a new fuser though. $500 for a fuser is far too much. http://www.amazon.com/s/?ie=UTF8&keywords=hp+3600n+fuser No clue about AU prices. For 220VAC, email the vendor. Most rebuilders carry both voltages or can possibly swap out the heater element. **Awesome! Thanks for the info and the links. -- Trevor Wilson www.rageaudio.com.au --- This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software. https://www.avast.com/antivirus |
#10
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"Trevor Wilson" wrote in message ...
On 22/02/2016 7:16 AM, Jeff Liebermann wrote: On Sun, 21 Feb 2016 17:22:31 +1100, Trevor Wilson wrote: * Service data source? http://www.FixYourOwnPrinter.com http://www.fixyourownprinter.com/?printer_brand=9&printer_series=61&printer=1988&Se arch=Search http://support.hp.com/us-en/product/HP-Color-LaserJet-3000-Printer-series/501044/model/501046/manuals http://www.PrinterWorks.com http://www.lbrty.com http://partsurfer.hp.com http://partsurfer.hp.com/Search.aspx?type=PROD&SearchText=Q5987A Service Manual: http://support.hp.com/us-en/product/HP-Color-LaserJet-3000-Printer-series/501044/model/501046/manuals There are also dealers on eBay selling manuals on CD or download. * Can the fuser be repaired? The cost of a fuser here in Australia is astronomical? Yes, it can be repaired with a rebuild kit. http://www.ebay.com/sch/i.html?_nkw=hp+color+laserjet+fuser+rebuild The rebuild kits do NOT include a heater and are therefore indpendent of line voltage. If you've never done it before and/or lack specific instructions, I suggest you go for a rebuild or exchange fuser instead. http://h20564.www2.hp.com/hpsc/doc/public/display?docId=emr_na-c00508146 For 220VAC the fuser PN is RM1-2743-000 For 117VAC the fuser PN is RM1-2665-000 * Is the fuser a 230VAC one (Australia is a 230VAC nation), or can I just buy a new fuser (or re-built one) from eBay? That's NOT an either-or type choice. Yes, you can buy a rebuilt fuser on eBay, but it has to be 220VAC type for AU. * I assume there is some kind of feedback system (NTC or PTC element) and that is what has failed, rather than the heater (the fuser still gets hot)? If the temperature sensing circuit has had a failure, you'll get an error message on the display during boot up. There is also an overtemp thermostat to prevent meltdown. The usual failures that I see are hardened toner buildup on the fingers that peel the paper away from the fuser roller, a fried fuser film sleeve, and worn gear teeth. Any suggestions will be welcome. After spending almost 300 Bucks on toner, I am keen to keep this sucker going for another few years. I'd prefer not to spend 500 Bucks on a new fuser though. $500 for a fuser is far too much. http://www.amazon.com/s/?ie=UTF8&keywords=hp+3600n+fuser No clue about AU prices. For 220VAC, email the vendor. Most rebuilders carry both voltages or can possibly swap out the heater element. **Awesome! Thanks for the info and the links. -- Trevor Wilson www.rageaudio.com.au --- This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software. https://www.avast.com/antivirus Hope this helps: http://ridl.cfd.rit.edu/products/man...e_Manual.p df Kenny Cargill |
#11
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On 22/02/2016 7:16 AM, Jeff Liebermann wrote:
On Sun, 21 Feb 2016 17:22:31 +1100, Trevor Wilson wrote: * Service data source? http://www.FixYourOwnPrinter.com http://www.fixyourownprinter.com/?printer_brand=9&printer_series=61&printer=1988&Se arch=Search http://support.hp.com/us-en/product/HP-Color-LaserJet-3000-Printer-series/501044/model/501046/manuals http://www.PrinterWorks.com http://www.lbrty.com http://partsurfer.hp.com http://partsurfer.hp.com/Search.aspx?type=PROD&SearchText=Q5987A Service Manual: http://support.hp.com/us-en/product/HP-Color-LaserJet-3000-Printer-series/501044/model/501046/manuals There are also dealers on eBay selling manuals on CD or download. * Can the fuser be repaired? The cost of a fuser here in Australia is astronomical? Yes, it can be repaired with a rebuild kit. http://www.ebay.com/sch/i.html?_nkw=hp+color+laserjet+fuser+rebuild The rebuild kits do NOT include a heater and are therefore indpendent of line voltage. If you've never done it before and/or lack specific instructions, I suggest you go for a rebuild or exchange fuser instead. http://h20564.www2.hp.com/hpsc/doc/public/display?docId=emr_na-c00508146 For 220VAC the fuser PN is RM1-2743-000 For 117VAC the fuser PN is RM1-2665-000 * Is the fuser a 230VAC one (Australia is a 230VAC nation), or can I just buy a new fuser (or re-built one) from eBay? That's NOT an either-or type choice. Yes, you can buy a rebuilt fuser on eBay, but it has to be 220VAC type for AU. * I assume there is some kind of feedback system (NTC or PTC element) and that is what has failed, rather than the heater (the fuser still gets hot)? If the temperature sensing circuit has had a failure, you'll get an error message on the display during boot up. There is also an overtemp thermostat to prevent meltdown. The usual failures that I see are hardened toner buildup on the fingers that peel the paper away from the fuser roller, a fried fuser film sleeve, and worn gear teeth. Any suggestions will be welcome. After spending almost 300 Bucks on toner, I am keen to keep this sucker going for another few years. I'd prefer not to spend 500 Bucks on a new fuser though. $500 for a fuser is far too much. http://www.amazon.com/s/?ie=UTF8&keywords=hp+3600n+fuser No clue about AU prices. For 220VAC, email the vendor. Most rebuilders carry both voltages or can possibly swap out the heater element. **Looks like my only solution is this: * Buy a replacement fuser and hope that is the only fault. Cost will exceed AUS$300.00. * Buy a new printer. I found a multifunction device from HP, which would do the job. Model MFP M177FW. RRP AUS$329.00. For a few more Bucks (about AUS$300.00), I could buy a Dell C2665dnf. Thoughts? There's a Samsung in the mix, but I purchased a Samsung a couple of years back. Atrocious POS. A simple paper jam would typically take 30 mins to clear. After owning 4 HP printers, I have always found that paper jams are quickly and easily cleared. I a leaning towards HP for that reason. -- Trevor Wilson www.rageaudio.com.au --- This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software. https://www.avast.com/antivirus |
#12
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Trevor Wilson wrote:
I have an ancient HP Color Laserjet 3600N, I picked up a few months back. Nice printer. So nice, that after a few months, I took the plunge and bought a bunch of toner cartridges for the thing. As luck would have it, it has just thrown up a fuser error (50.8). At first, the error was intermittant, now it is permanent. Questions: * Service data source? * Can the fuser be repaired? The cost of a fuser here in Australia is astronomical? * Is the fuser a 230VAC one (Australia is a 230VAC nation), or can I just buy a new fuser (or re-built one) from eBay? * I assume there is some kind of feedback system (NTC or PTC element) and that is what has failed, rather than the heater (the fuser still gets hot)? Ok, if the fuser heater is still working, then find the sensor (there will usually be two, a control thermostat and a safety thermostat). Trace the wires back to whatever board controls the fuser, and reseat the connectors. That may fix it. If not, pull that board and look for crumbling solder joints on the connectors. If nothing there, then dismantle the fuser and check that the sensors still have contact with the fuser roller, aren't covered in melted toner, etc. Then, you have to decide whther to replace the sensors or the control board. And, the most awesome resource is : http://www.fixyourownprinter.com/ They have discussions and instruction on how to fix all sorts of problems. Jon |
#13
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On Mon, 22 Feb 2016 10:05:32 +1100, Trevor Wilson wrote:
There's a Samsung in the mix, but I purchased a Samsung a couple of years back. Atrocious POS. A simple paper jam would typically take 30 mins to clear. This is where simple text can not convey my similar loathing. Our Samsung color laser seems to be racking up ~ $200/1,000 pages printed. After owning 4 HP printers, I have always found that paper jams are quickly and easily cleared. I a leaning towards HP for that reason. Our HP5simx went to ****ty print and the "service/maintenace" was ~$500 about a decade ago. Sits idle atm, despite having a new full toner cartridge in it. Once HP could lock you it to their toner cartridges, the $ went through the roof. The real HP POS is/was the 4V. Its sinuous paper path was never popular and even the service techs hated it. The first time it locked onto a mysterious error, I paid for a expensive service call. Now, it is just another POS for deconstruction. |
#14
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On Mon, 22 Feb 2016 10:05:32 +1100, Trevor Wilson
wrote: On 22/02/2016 7:16 AM, Jeff Liebermann wrote: Yes, it can be repaired with a rebuild kit. http://www.ebay.com/sch/i.html?_nkw=hp+color+laserjet+fuser+rebuild **Looks like my only solution is this: * Buy a replacement fuser and hope that is the only fault. Cost will exceed AUS$300.00. * Buy a new printer. I found a multifunction device from HP, which would do the job. Model MFP M177FW. RRP AUS$329.00. For a few more Bucks (about AUS$300.00), I could buy a Dell C2665dnf. Thoughts? Sigh. 1. You didn't bother to mention what is wrong with the fuser. It might be an easy fix requiring a minimum of parts and expertise. Extract the fuser and look at it. Most problems can be found by visual inspection. 2. Dell printers are VERY proprietary. Obtaining parts are almost impossible. I hate them. 3. Consumer grade HP printers, including the MFP M177FW are mostly junk. They are built flimsy, have designed in wear problems, and rattle badly when printing. Same problem with parts as Dell except that you can sometimes find the larger sub-assemblies with HP. The US$300 entry price is reasonable. Replacement carts vary from US$50 (eBay) to US$250 (HP). You'll get about 1000 pages per cart at 5% coverage, yielding a cost per page of US$0.05 to US$0.25 per page depending on where you buy the cartridge. However, if you're printing full page 8x10 photos, your costs will be over 10 times higher due to increased coverage. Do the math before you take the plunge. There's a Samsung in the mix, but I purchased a Samsung a couple of years back. Atrocious POS. A simple paper jam would typically take 30 mins to clear. Yep. Also some difficulties finding replacement cartridges. I have to deal with an office full of them. I think there are about 20 Samsung printers scattered around. I fix them by cannibalism. Eventually I'll run out of parts printers, which is fine with me. After owning 4 HP printers, I have always found that paper jams are quickly and easily cleared. I a leaning towards HP for that reason. I used to thing that paper jams were normal for laser printers. Then, I got a lecture on how they work, why they jam, and what can be done to solve the problem. Very roughly, I keep the machine clean, replace the rubber feed rollers and friction pads regularly, and make an effort not to let the paper absorb moisture or form any shape besides flat. I also clean the stripper fingers, fuser roller, and plastic parts that contact the paper. On printers that I've worked over, and my own, I don't see very many paper jams. -- Jeff Liebermann 150 Felker St #D http://www.LearnByDestroying.com Santa Cruz CA 95060 http://802.11junk.com Skype: JeffLiebermann AE6KS 831-336-2558 |
#15
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On Mon, 22 Feb 2016 01:39:34 -0000 (UTC), news13
wrote: Our HP5simx went to ****ty print and the "service/maintenace" was ~$500 about a decade ago. Sits idle atm, despite having a new full toner cartridge in it. Once HP could lock you it to their toner cartridges, the $ went through the roof. The HP 5si is an a very old printer and about the size and weight of half a refrigerator (without the Mopier options). I dealt with a few of those (and the 4si predecessor) many years ago. During tax season it ran continuously like a printing press. Keeping it clean and cool were the major problems. Every year, I would tear the printers down completely, clean out the accumulated crud, replace all the rubber parts, and especially clean the fuser. Then the printer would get hot from running all day, the paper would stick to the fuser and cause a paper jam. The residue from the melted toner would stick to the fuser roller, causing subsequent pages to have "ghost" impressions. I couldn't fix the design and additional cooling was futile, so I purchased some spare fuser assemblies and had them ready for a quick swap. It was easy but leather welding gloves were helpful. The 5si printers were eventually replaced with 4250 and 4300 printers, which were faster, cheaper, better, cooler, but noisier. The real HP POS is/was the 4V. Its sinuous paper path was never popular and even the service techs hated it. The first time it locked onto a mysterious error, I paid for a expensive service call. Now, it is just another POS for deconstruction. Yeah, but if you wanted B size prints (11x17") the 4V and 4MV were all that could be found. The neighboring architects and planners that wanted big prints without going to the expense of a plotter, both used HP 4V printers. I would have to clean or fix them occasionally, but nothing out of the ordinary. The serpentine paper path above the paper tray is still with us on todays printers. It's about the only way to obtain multiple paper trays and duplex (double sided) printing without requiring a much larger footprint. The price you pay is replacing the feed roller(s) and friction pad(s) quite often. If you didn't clean and/or replace these about every 10,000 pages, you're going to see feed problems. -- Jeff Liebermann 150 Felker St #D http://www.LearnByDestroying.com Santa Cruz CA 95060 http://802.11junk.com Skype: JeffLiebermann AE6KS 831-336-2558 |
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On 22/02/2016 1:28 PM, Jeff Liebermann wrote:
On Mon, 22 Feb 2016 10:05:32 +1100, Trevor Wilson wrote: On 22/02/2016 7:16 AM, Jeff Liebermann wrote: Yes, it can be repaired with a rebuild kit. http://www.ebay.com/sch/i.html?_nkw=hp+color+laserjet+fuser+rebuild **Looks like my only solution is this: * Buy a replacement fuser and hope that is the only fault. Cost will exceed AUS$300.00. * Buy a new printer. I found a multifunction device from HP, which would do the job. Model MFP M177FW. RRP AUS$329.00. For a few more Bucks (about AUS$300.00), I could buy a Dell C2665dnf. Thoughts? Sigh. 1. You didn't bother to mention what is wrong with the fuser. It might be an easy fix requiring a minimum of parts and expertise. Extract the fuser and look at it. Most problems can be found by visual inspection. **The fuser appears to be OK, but then, without a manual, I cannot measure what is inside the fuser to determine what, if anything, may be faulty. My biggest fear is that the fuser may not be faulty and that it may be something else. For that, I require a schematic. 2. Dell printers are VERY proprietary. Obtaining parts are almost impossible. I hate them. **OK. Scratch the Dell. 3. Consumer grade HP printers, including the MFP M177FW are mostly junk. They are built flimsy, have designed in wear problems, and rattle badly when printing. Same problem with parts as Dell except that you can sometimes find the larger sub-assemblies with HP. The US$300 entry price is reasonable. Replacement carts vary from US$50 (eBay) to US$250 (HP). You'll get about 1000 pages per cart at 5% coverage, yielding a cost per page of US$0.05 to US$0.25 per page depending on where you buy the cartridge. However, if you're printing full page 8x10 photos, your costs will be over 10 times higher due to increased coverage. Do the math before you take the plunge. **If I print photos, I use an ink jet printer (which is now my back-up printer for general purpose use). I've never seen a colour laser printer that can match even a relatively inexpensive ink jet. There's a Samsung in the mix, but I purchased a Samsung a couple of years back. Atrocious POS. A simple paper jam would typically take 30 mins to clear. Yep. Also some difficulties finding replacement cartridges. I have to deal with an office full of them. I think there are about 20 Samsung printers scattered around. I fix them by cannibalism. Eventually I'll run out of parts printers, which is fine with me. After owning 4 HP printers, I have always found that paper jams are quickly and easily cleared. I a leaning towards HP for that reason. I used to thing that paper jams were normal for laser printers. Then, I got a lecture on how they work, why they jam, and what can be done to solve the problem. Very roughly, I keep the machine clean, replace the rubber feed rollers and friction pads regularly, and make an effort not to let the paper absorb moisture or form any shape besides flat. I also clean the stripper fingers, fuser roller, and plastic parts that contact the paper. On printers that I've worked over, and my own, I don't see very many paper jams. **In fairness, paper jams in all my HP lasers have been extremely rare. FWIW: I've owned LJIIP, LJIIIP, LJVMP (still own that one - still works, but nothing talks to it, except IR). -- Trevor Wilson www.rageaudio.com.au --- This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software. https://www.avast.com/antivirus |
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On Mon, 22 Feb 2016 14:59:33 +1100, Trevor Wilson
wrote: **The fuser appears to be OK, but then, without a manual, I cannot measure what is inside the fuser to determine what, if anything, may be faulty. My biggest fear is that the fuser may not be faulty and that it may be something else. For that, I require a schematic. Ok, you've decided that you want a new printer and you're not supplying enough information to even diagnose the alleged fuser problem. If you can't describe what's wrong with the fuser, could you at least describe what inspired you to purchase a new printer? **If I print photos, I use an ink jet printer (which is now my back-up printer for general purpose use). I've never seen a colour laser printer that can match even a relatively inexpensive ink jet. I have, but only after calibration, loading the correct color profile into the computah, and using glossy paper: https://www.google.com/#q=color+laser+printer+calibration Unless your ink sprayer is using archival quality ink, that doesn't fade in sunlight, you're gorgeous inkjet prints will fade. The colors also run when the paper gets wet, but unless you live in a high humidity environment, that's unlikely to happen. **In fairness, paper jams in all my HP lasers have been extremely rare. FWIW: I've owned LJIIP, LJIIIP, LJVMP (still own that one - still works, but nothing talks to it, except IR). Retch. The LJIIp was the worlds slowest small laser printer in its day. It also had the irritating habit of destroying the driver board that spins the scanning mirror. Pre-warming the fuser on startup would take over a minute for a cold start. The LJIIIp was a slightly faster version of the worlds slowest small laser printer. I've only worked on one LJ5mp and don't recall what I hated about it. I do recall hauling a fairly large number of 5p, 6p, 5mp, and 6mp printers to the recyclers after everyone agreed that they were not worth resurrecting. Favorite printer (with some caveats) is the HP 2300DN and DTN. http://802.11junk.com/jeffl/hp2200/hp2200.html If you want cheap, one of the low end Brother AIO printers: http://www.staples.com/Brother-Refurbished-MFC-7360N-Laser-Multifunction-Printer/product_424336 If this were my problem, I would fix the color laserjet 3600N fuser, refill your existing carts with more toner, and get some reset chips to deal with HP ecologically disgusting refill protection: http://www.ebay.com/sch/i.html?_nkw=hp+3600+toner In my never humble opinion, the 3600N is better than any of the alternatives you've listed, and will probably last forever if you take care of it. -- Jeff Liebermann 150 Felker St #D http://www.LearnByDestroying.com Santa Cruz CA 95060 http://802.11junk.com Skype: JeffLiebermann AE6KS 831-336-2558 |
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On Sun, 21 Feb 2016 18:44:35 -0800, Jeff Liebermann wrote:
Yeah, but if you wanted B size prints (11x17") the 4V and 4MV were all that could be found. That was why I got it. A3 over here. If you didn't clean and/or replace these about every 10,000 pages, you're going to see feed problems. Naah, never got to that count. It was the continual error codes. Need passed and it just became easier to buy something else. Bottom feeder crap these days as I don't have the $$$ paying demand for printing. Back then, the real problem was getting someone who would share information and then getting supplies of parts. Internet sources have come on a bit since then. |
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On Saturday, February 20, 2016 at 10:49:32 PM UTC-8, news13 wrote:
On Sun, 21 Feb 2016 17:22:31 +1100, Trevor Wilson wrote: I have an ancient HP Color Laserjet ... it has just thrown up a fuser error * Can the fuser be repaired? The cost of a fuser here in Australia is astronomical? * Is the fuser a 230VAC one (Australia is a 230VAC nation), or can I just buy a new fuser (or re-built one) from eBay? Should be a bog standard part throughout the world. They just swap power supplies for each market. The fuser heater is directly driven by AC; it will be a 230V lamp-like unit and possibly driven by a different switch (relay, or triac) than used in other countries. I'd look for a relay and think about how to clean it and burnish the contacts, and clean connectors, first. Fuser heaters used to be common, inexpensive replacement items (on LaserJet 4 machines, about $15 US). The whole fuser didn't need to be replaced to swap out the heater. |
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On 22/02/2016 4:06 PM, Jeff Liebermann wrote:
On Mon, 22 Feb 2016 14:59:33 +1100, Trevor Wilson wrote: **The fuser appears to be OK, but then, without a manual, I cannot measure what is inside the fuser to determine what, if anything, may be faulty. My biggest fear is that the fuser may not be faulty and that it may be something else. For that, I require a schematic. Ok, you've decided that you want a new printer and you're not supplying enough information to even diagnose the alleged fuser problem. If you can't describe what's wrong with the fuser, could you at least describe what inspired you to purchase a new printer? **Every reference points towards me buying a new fuser. The cheapest option will be more than AUS$300.00. And that may not fix the fault. I'd prefer not to spend a huge chunk of cash on an ancient, but quite decent, printer. That said, I have just located a service manual for the 3000, 3600 & 3800 (but not the 'N' variant). It is a very large file and will take some time to complete, but, hopefully, will shed some light on what is inside the fuser and how to pull the damned thing apart. **If I print photos, I use an ink jet printer (which is now my back-up printer for general purpose use). I've never seen a colour laser printer that can match even a relatively inexpensive ink jet. I have, but only after calibration, loading the correct color profile into the computah, and using glossy paper: https://www.google.com/#q=color+laser+printer+calibration Unless your ink sprayer is using archival quality ink, that doesn't fade in sunlight, you're gorgeous inkjet prints will fade. The colors also run when the paper gets wet, but unless you live in a high humidity environment, that's unlikely to happen. **In fairness, paper jams in all my HP lasers have been extremely rare. FWIW: I've owned LJIIP, LJIIIP, LJVMP (still own that one - still works, but nothing talks to it, except IR). Retch. The LJIIp was the worlds slowest small laser printer in its day. It also had the irritating habit of destroying the driver board that spins the scanning mirror. Pre-warming the fuser on startup would take over a minute for a cold start. The LJIIIp was a slightly faster version of the worlds slowest small laser printer. **Nonetheless, the little HP Laserjets never gave me a moment's trouble. Slow, but reliable (for me). I've only worked on one LJ5mp and don't recall what I hated about it. I do recall hauling a fairly large number of 5p, 6p, 5mp, and 6mp printers to the recyclers after everyone agreed that they were not worth resurrecting. Favorite printer (with some caveats) is the HP 2300DN and DTN. http://802.11junk.com/jeffl/hp2200/hp2200.html If you want cheap, one of the low end Brother AIO printers: http://www.staples.com/Brother-Refurbished-MFC-7360N-Laser-Multifunction-Printer/product_424336 If this were my problem, I would fix the color laserjet 3600N fuser, refill your existing carts with more toner, and get some reset chips to deal with HP ecologically disgusting refill protection: http://www.ebay.com/sch/i.html?_nkw=hp+3600+toner In my never humble opinion, the 3600N is better than any of the alternatives you've listed, and will probably last forever if you take care of it. **OK. I will take that approach. I should be able to survive on what I have lying around for the present. I just found a Brother laser printer, which should do most of my printing needs for the next few weeks (it'll take that long to import a new fuser). -- Trevor Wilson www.rageaudio.com.au --- This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software. https://www.avast.com/antivirus |
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On 22/02/2016 4:06 PM, Jeff Liebermann wrote:
On Mon, 22 Feb 2016 14:59:33 +1100, Trevor Wilson wrote: **The fuser appears to be OK, but then, without a manual, I cannot measure what is inside the fuser to determine what, if anything, may be faulty. My biggest fear is that the fuser may not be faulty and that it may be something else. For that, I require a schematic. Ok, you've decided that you want a new printer and you're not supplying enough information to even diagnose the alleged fuser problem. If you can't describe what's wrong with the fuser, could you at least describe what inspired you to purchase a new printer? **Good news bad news time. I now have the service manual for this device. No useful schematics. Just block diagrams and hundreds of pages of mechanical drawings and photos. Quite comprehensive in it's own way. The good news is that I now have a proper interpretation of the fault code. 50.8 = Low fuser temperature (Subthermistor) Would I be crazy to buy one of these? http://www.ebay.com/itm/RM1-2764-RM1...AOSwnDxUgFp 3 -- Trevor Wilson www.rageaudio.com.au --- This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software. https://www.avast.com/antivirus |
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On 21/02/16 06:22, Trevor Wilson wrote:
I have an ancient HP Color Laserjet 3600N, I picked up a few months back. Nice printer. So nice, that after a few months, I took the plunge and bought a bunch of toner cartridges for the thing. As luck would have it, it has just thrown up a fuser error (50.8). At first, the error was intermittant, now it is permanent. Questions: * Service data source? * Can the fuser be repaired? The cost of a fuser here in Australia is astronomical? * Is the fuser a 230VAC one (Australia is a 230VAC nation), or can I just buy a new fuser (or re-built one) from eBay? * I assume there is some kind of feedback system (NTC or PTC element) and that is what has failed, rather than the heater (the fuser still gets hot)? Any suggestions will be welcome. After spending almost 300 Bucks on toner, I am keen to keep this sucker going for another few years. I'd prefer not to spend 500 Bucks on a new fuser though. You are patient. These things are sloooooowww. Whatever, keep a lookout on the secondhand market for these. I find the current HP driver that allegedly works on Windows 7 rather buggy, and as part of a company job I did building a 2012R2 print server, we decided the best course of upgrade action was to unfortunately throw out the printers. I bet others came to that conclusion. -- Adrian C |
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On 23/02/16 09:13, Trevor Wilson wrote:
The good news is that I now have a proper interpretation of the fault code. 50.8 = Low fuser temperature (Subthermistor) Can you measure the actual temperature of the fuser and compare it with what the manual says? It'd be a shame to buy a whole new fuser if it's only the thermister that's bad. Clifford Heath. |
#24
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On 2/21/2016 2:22 PM, Trevor Wilson wrote:
I have an ancient HP Color Laserjet 3600N, I picked up a few months back. Nice printer. So nice, that after a few months, I took the plunge and bought a bunch of toner cartridges for the thing. As luck would have it, it has just thrown up a fuser error (50.8). At first, the error was intermittant, now it is permanent. Questions: Did you phone/email HP Australia if not US? Maybe that's why the printer was discarded in the first place.... -- @~@ Remain silent. Nothing from soldiers and magicians is real! / v \ Simplicity is Beauty! May the Force and farces be with you! /( _ )\ (Fedora release 23) Linux 4.3.5-300.fc23.x86_64 ^ ^ 06:27:01 up 6 days 13:21 0 users load average: 1.00 1.02 1.05 ä¸å€Ÿè²¸! ä¸è©é¨™! 䏿´äº¤! 䏿‰“交! 䏿‰“劫! ä¸è‡ªæ®º! è«‹è€ƒæ…®ç¶œæ´ (CSSA): http://www.swd.gov.hk/tc/index/site_...sub_addressesa |
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On Tue, 23 Feb 2016 08:43:37 +1100, Trevor Wilson
wrote: On 22/02/2016 4:06 PM, Jeff Liebermann wrote: Ok, you've decided that you want a new printer and you're not supplying enough information to even diagnose the alleged fuser problem. If you can't describe what's wrong with the fuser, could you at least describe what inspired you to purchase a new printer? **Every reference points towards me buying a new fuser. The cheapest option will be more than AUS$300.00. And that may not fix the fault. I'd prefer not to spend a huge chunk of cash on an ancient, but quite decent, printer. That said, I have just located a service manual for the 3000, 3600 & 3800 (but not the 'N' variant). It is a very large file and will take some time to complete, but, hopefully, will shed some light on what is inside the fuser and how to pull the damned thing apart. Somehow, I seem to have missed the part where you describe what inspired you to purchase a new printer and what failure mode you're experiencing with the fuser. Perhaps it can be repaired. I think you'll find the rebuild kit I previously mentioned a better and cheaper alternative at $80: http://www.ebay.com/sch/i.html?_nkw=hp+color+laserjet+fuser+rebuild -- Jeff Liebermann 150 Felker St #D http://www.LearnByDestroying.com Santa Cruz CA 95060 http://802.11junk.com Skype: JeffLiebermann AE6KS 831-336-2558 |
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On Tue, 23 Feb 2016 09:13:00 +1100, Trevor Wilson
wrote: **Good news bad news time. I now have the service manual for this device. No useful schematics. Just block diagrams and hundreds of pages of mechanical drawings and photos. Quite comprehensive in it's own way. The good news is that I now have a proper interpretation of the fault code. 50.8 = Low fuser temperature (Subthermistor) Thank you for delivering the error message. http://www.all-laser.com/a50service/ I've seen that error message on other model HP printers. In my experience, it can be anything from a loose connection on the ends of the ceramic slab heater element, to cracks in the heater element. Also, caked on toner onto the thermistor temp sensor will cause a low temp reading. Measure the resistance of the heater element from end to end and you should see about 15 for 117V and twice that for 220V. I think I know where I can find a 3800 to measure, or just ask in the HP forums or FixYourOwnPrinter forums. This article suggests that it might be low line voltage: http://www.fortwayneprinterrepair.com/wordpress/2011/11/06/hp-color-laserjet-3000-3600-3800-and-cp3505-50-1-fuser-error/ Also see: http://www.fixyourownprinter.com/posts/42184 I'll try to find the unspecified service note, but so far, I'm not having any luck finding it. Meanwhile, dig through this mess on 50.1 errors and see what you can excavate: https://www.google.com/search?q=hp+color+laserjet+50.1+fuser+error Would I be crazy to buy one of these? http://www.ebay.com/itm/RM1-2764-RM1...AOSwnDxUgFp 3 Good find. I missed that one. Yes, that should work for 220V. I checked the numbers. Since the rebuild kit does NOT include a heater element, the replacment from China may be your only reasonable option. -- Jeff Liebermann 150 Felker St #D http://www.LearnByDestroying.com Santa Cruz CA 95060 http://802.11junk.com Skype: JeffLiebermann AE6KS 831-336-2558 |
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On Mon, 22 Feb 2016 16:19:46 -0800, Jeff Liebermann
wrote: Meanwhile, dig through this mess on 50.1 errors and see what you can excavate: https://www.google.com/search?q=hp+color+laserjet+50.1+fuser+error Sorry. 50.8, not 50.1. That's what happens when I get interrupted: https://www.google.com/search?q=hp+color+laserjet+50.8+fuser+error Replacing the fuser does not guarantee a fix: http://www.fixyourownprinter.com/posts/1001356 Take a look at these typical HP fuser thermistors: https://www.google.com/search?tbm=isch&q=HP+fuser+thermistor That a tiny thermistor is wrapped in Kapton or something heat resistant. What happens is that melted toner gets stuck to the face of the thermistor causing the toner to act as an insulator. The thermistor reads a lower temperature than what the fuser roller is actually running, causing the fuser to become excessively hot. Eventually, the fuser gets too hot and cracks the heater element, producing an error message. If you're lucky, and catch it before the heater cracks, just cleaning the ossified toner off the face of the thermistor is usually sufficient to fix the problem. This web site offers anything between 20 and 1000 ohms as acceptable heater resistance for 220V: http://mindmachine.co.uk/products/HP_Error_50X.html#diagnosing-fuser-faults I still can't find a good target value for the 3600. -- Jeff Liebermann 150 Felker St #D http://www.LearnByDestroying.com Santa Cruz CA 95060 http://802.11junk.com Skype: JeffLiebermann AE6KS 831-336-2558 |
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On Mon, 22 Feb 2016 16:39:10 -0800, Jeff Liebermann
wrote: One more and I'll go away and do something useful. I think the HP Color LaserJet 3600N has three thermistors on the fuser roller. The main one is in the middle. The other two, at each end of the fuser roller, are called sub-thermistors. One of them is covered with toner crud, or has otherwise failed. Be sure to check the fuser film for mechanical damage. -- Jeff Liebermann 150 Felker St #D http://www.LearnByDestroying.com Santa Cruz CA 95060 http://802.11junk.com Skype: JeffLiebermann AE6KS 831-336-2558 |
#29
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On 23/02/2016 11:19 AM, Jeff Liebermann wrote:
On Tue, 23 Feb 2016 09:13:00 +1100, Trevor Wilson wrote: **Good news bad news time. I now have the service manual for this device. No useful schematics. Just block diagrams and hundreds of pages of mechanical drawings and photos. Quite comprehensive in it's own way. The good news is that I now have a proper interpretation of the fault code. 50.8 = Low fuser temperature (Subthermistor) Thank you for delivering the error message. **It is the same as the one I supplied in my original post. http://www.all-laser.com/a50service/ I've seen that error message on other model HP printers. In my experience, it can be anything from a loose connection on the ends of the ceramic slab heater element, to cracks in the heater element. Also, caked on toner onto the thermistor temp sensor will cause a low temp reading. Measure the resistance of the heater element from end to end and you should see about 15 for 117V and twice that for 220V. I think I know where I can find a 3800 to measure, or just ask in the HP forums or FixYourOwnPrinter forums. **As soon as I figure out how to dismantle the fuser, I will check those things. This article suggests that it might be low line voltage: http://www.fortwayneprinterrepair.com/wordpress/2011/11/06/hp-color-laserjet-3000-3600-3800-and-cp3505-50-1-fuser-error/ **Unlikely in my case. Also see: http://www.fixyourownprinter.com/posts/42184 I'll try to find the unspecified service note, but so far, I'm not having any luck finding it. Meanwhile, dig through this mess on 50.1 errors and see what you can excavate: https://www.google.com/search?q=hp+color+laserjet+50.1+fuser+error Would I be crazy to buy one of these? http://www.ebay.com/itm/RM1-2764-RM1...AOSwnDxUgFp 3 Good find. I missed that one. Yes, that should work for 220V. I checked the numbers. Since the rebuild kit does NOT include a heater element, the replacment from China may be your only reasonable option. **That was my thinking. I figure that I should probably replace the heater, if I am overhauling the fuser. Anyway, thanks for all your assistance. I'll keep you posted. -- Trevor Wilson www.rageaudio.com.au --- This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software. https://www.avast.com/antivirus |
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On Tue, 23 Feb 2016 16:12:08 +1100, Trevor Wilson
wrote: **It is the same as the one I supplied in my original post. Oops. I just went back and looked and there it was. My appologies. -- Jeff Liebermann 150 Felker St #D http://www.LearnByDestroying.com Santa Cruz CA 95060 http://802.11junk.com Skype: JeffLiebermann AE6KS 831-336-2558 |
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In sci.electronics.repair Trevor Wilson wrote:
**Every reference points towards me buying a new fuser. The cheapest option will be more than AUS$300.00. And that may not fix the fault. I'd prefer not to spend a huge chunk of cash on an ancient, but quite decent, printer. That said, I have just located a service manual for the 3000, 3600 & 3800 (but not the 'N' variant). It is a very large file and will take some time to complete, but, hopefully, will shed some light on what is inside the fuser and how to pull the damned thing apart. For what it's worth, there is no difference between the N and non-N versions, mechanically. The N version means it's network (ethernet) compatable instead of USB only. Either it's built in or uses something like the en3700 adapter. -bruce |
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On Tue, 23 Feb 2016 12:10:46 -0000, MJC
wrote: In article , says... ... Measure the resistance of the heater element from end to end and you should see about 15 for 117V and twice that for 220V. Oh, same current and thus twice the power? Mike. Ooops. Some day, I'll learn to do arithmetic. Power = Volt^2 / Resistance For equal power at both line voltages: P = 117^2 / 15 = 913 watts (cold) 913 = 220^2 / R R = 220^2 / 913 = 53 ohms -- Jeff Liebermann 150 Felker St #D http://www.LearnByDestroying.com Santa Cruz CA 95060 http://802.11junk.com Skype: JeffLiebermann AE6KS 831-336-2558 |
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Trevor Wilson wrote:
So, any luck on that printer? Jon |
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Trevor Wilson wrote:
On 4/03/2016 9:17 AM, Jon Elson wrote: Trevor Wilson wrote: So, any luck on that printer? Jon **Thanks for asking. I've decided to head in a completely different direction. I've been able to source one of these: http://au.pcmag.com/hp-laserjet-ente...500-color-mfp- m575dn/1374/review/hp-laserjet-enterprise-500-color-mfp-m575dn# for AUS$400.00. It has full toner cartridges (except one, which is at 20%). It has a full service history (it came from a large corporation, that has swapped out all it's printers from one section) and was factory serviced a couple of months ago. I'll be checking print quality and collecting it next week. Well, that may be a good plan if you really need a color laser. I got a color laser off the loading dock at work, it had a sticky clutch solenoid, and after fixing that, it generally works. But, the print quality is mediocre, and it uses a HUGE amount of toner every time you turn it on, or if it has sat for more than 30 minutes, it has to "recalibrate". But, I've had good luck fixing the 2 monochrome printers we have here. Jon |
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