Im looking for a bit of technical assistance here. Since acquiring my refurbished Xerox 800, I have had problems with the yellow toner coverage. Within 20,000 impression the yellow toner goes out dramatically. I have had technicians say it environmental, so I have adjusted room temperatures to accommodate each time I have been given an operating temperature.
To give you an idea
Temp 23.7 C to 26.9 variance over an 8 week period
R humidity 27% to 36% over the same period.
I have a meter which tracks the temp and relative humidity in the space. All measurements are within the specs according to the operator’s manual. Tech specialist advised 22 degrees C so this was the range for the next 2 days.
Temp 21.7 C to 22.3 variance
R humidity 27% to 31%
I was told that the printer was to be set to system default for inboard / outboard and only the charge corotrons and drums should be changed if the colour went out again. It took 2 days to go out and the technician came and changed the drum and coros again. The photos attached show the result. The darker sheet was the original run after the tech spec adjusted and the lighter when a new drum and coro was changed 3 days later.
My concern is, that for 3 years this problem has been occurring and that it only ever effects the yellow toner. It always gets heavier at the side of the sheet and eventually I have low levels of yellow toner in the centre of the page. What else could be causing this, other than the environmental conditions advised by the tech specialist.
Also, after speaking with a number of print owners who have the same machine without the problem that I have, we are concerned that the temperature and relative humidity tolerance is not as broad as we were led to believe when we acquired the machines. If the xerox 800/1000 are as intolerant of temperature changes that I have stated above, then how can a print business be expected to keep the temperature within such a fine scope without having imaging problems.
I asked a mechanical engineer to come and take a look and advise about how to best manage the environmental conditions to meet the 22 degree stable temperature the technician said was required to guarantee stable colour, and he said due to the heat that the device outputs, a constant 22 degree temperature would be impossible unless I wanted to spend more than the machine was worth install a system that would still be unable to supply a constant level of 22 degrees.
Any advice would be welcome as to whether another underlying problem could be causing this issue.
To give you an idea
Temp 23.7 C to 26.9 variance over an 8 week period
R humidity 27% to 36% over the same period.
I have a meter which tracks the temp and relative humidity in the space. All measurements are within the specs according to the operator’s manual. Tech specialist advised 22 degrees C so this was the range for the next 2 days.
Temp 21.7 C to 22.3 variance
R humidity 27% to 31%
I was told that the printer was to be set to system default for inboard / outboard and only the charge corotrons and drums should be changed if the colour went out again. It took 2 days to go out and the technician came and changed the drum and coros again. The photos attached show the result. The darker sheet was the original run after the tech spec adjusted and the lighter when a new drum and coro was changed 3 days later.
My concern is, that for 3 years this problem has been occurring and that it only ever effects the yellow toner. It always gets heavier at the side of the sheet and eventually I have low levels of yellow toner in the centre of the page. What else could be causing this, other than the environmental conditions advised by the tech specialist.
Also, after speaking with a number of print owners who have the same machine without the problem that I have, we are concerned that the temperature and relative humidity tolerance is not as broad as we were led to believe when we acquired the machines. If the xerox 800/1000 are as intolerant of temperature changes that I have stated above, then how can a print business be expected to keep the temperature within such a fine scope without having imaging problems.
I asked a mechanical engineer to come and take a look and advise about how to best manage the environmental conditions to meet the 22 degree stable temperature the technician said was required to guarantee stable colour, and he said due to the heat that the device outputs, a constant 22 degree temperature would be impossible unless I wanted to spend more than the machine was worth install a system that would still be unable to supply a constant level of 22 degrees.
Any advice would be welcome as to whether another underlying problem could be causing this issue.
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