Also with these beasts, IIRC, there's possibly some involvement from the
logic circuits telling the PSU to turn on certain sections. This *can* be
just poor ribbon cable connections or open circuits.
Dave
<newsg...@erickotz.com> wrote in message
news:1123170414....@o13g2000cwo.googlegroups.com...
I am not sure where you are, but in the US a refurb C4265-69006 power supply is
available from HP for $101 with return of the bad unit. See
http://partsurfer.hp.com/cgi-bin/spi/main?sel_flg=partinfo&template=main&cpric=&psrchmode=&partsrch=C4265-69006
or go to http://partsurfer.hp.com and search for the LaserJet 8150.
Regards,
Bob Headrick, not speaking for my employer HP
Regards
Also, can anyone reccomend a good site on preventive maintence on these
printers? Unfortunately, service contracts were allowed to lapse on
these printers and I suspect these printers have been neglected, so I
would be interested in any tips/maintaince we can do (other than the
obvious of installing maintaince kits) to help keep them working well.
vacuuming that out on a regular basis otherwise just clean up any dust
or toner
that is sitting inside the printer cavity.
Tony[/quote:6fb92d6a7f]
You must work on lightly used 5Si, 8000, 8100 and 8150 series machines
to say that - I do at least 5 a day for a series of bank mortgage
offices thru central Ky and a lot can go wrong with them if they are
put to the test. Yes the most general thing is maintenance kits
especially if cheapo kits (non-OEM) are used, they will generally
fail well before 350k but HP kits seem to run into 500k before
problems arise other than worn rollers - the blue tabbed rollers in
trays 2, 3 and optional 2000 or dual 500 sheet lower units. They wear
smooth and give (usually) a 13.1 jam without paper in the path. Other
common problems is the one listed - 50.1 fuser error, usually caused
by broken solder joints on the LVPS at the triac connections. 99.9%
of the time a reflow of the joints corrects the problem. As for the
$101 C4265-69006 LVPS - HP has had those non-stock for a long time
now (I've been checking for 6 months now), I think they list them but
don't use the number unless they have to send one out at their cost.
I haven't heard of anyone that has ordered and gotten one either.
Other problems are dried rollers, thru age or environment more than
wear and tear. The 2nd pass roller at the top of the PIU gets hard
and dried on the tires, the small molded rollers in the right door
get hard and slick, the rollers int he face down outfeed assy also
get hard and dried. I rebuild the PIU and outfeed with parts from
PartsMart in Georgia rather than buying a whole PIU or outfeed
(except for the mortgage office jobs - they buy the parts and want
whole assemblies ordered for speed despite paying me flat rate).
Registration rollers (rubber underneath) are also prone to getting
slick causing registration (top of form) errors. Greying of the
background is the HVPS going bad if you change toner, then transfer
roller, and it doesn't cure it. Side skew of the border especially
on letter where a box is around it like a paper path test sheet is a
bad carrier for the transfer roller so I try to get HP kits for my
own clients but I see this problem a lot with the aftermarket kits
supplied for the mortgage office jobs due to cheap quality and
generally a transfer roller only without the new black and stainless
carrier.
The 2000 sheet feeder option in itself is another PITA when they do
start having problems.
Fair enough, BTW I didn't recommend non-OEM maintenance kits. My largest 8150
customer, a university with 50+ 8150 printers (plus heaps,of other models) all
with 2000 sheet bins is always quoted OEM kit pricing, ever since they tried a
different service ecompany who use non-OEM kits and had premature failures.
Some of the printers have page counts of more than 3 million and they move them
around to try to even out the usage. For the usage they have the printers are
very reliable, I have had a small number of PIU, DC controller and HVPS
failures but these are rare. We do have some strange happenins as you would
expect in a university, like the support person who could not get the toner
cartridge to fit in the fuser slot. Yes the 2000 sheet feeders are difficult to
fix but hey that's what we're here for I guess.
Tony
If other voltages are there then you can be pretty certain that the
SMPS is working, you will need a test meter and have some basic
knowledge, prior to rectification from the 'chopper transformer' the
voltage will be around 18 KHz AC not the usual 50 or 60 Hz mains
power frequency and will prove difficult to measure on most basic
test meters, the DC side after rectification is easily measured.
Any electrolytic capacitors with gunge coming from them or swollen
tops are easily seen and could also be the cause.
The fuser is a heater is the fuser element intact, again this could
esily be tested with an 'El cheapo' test meter on the resistance
range, infact this ought to be the first thing to look at.
Davy
Their 5si's are avg 3 mil page counts, the 8150's go usually 1 mil to
4 depending on the dept. So far only one was pulled from service -
water pipe broke overhead and leaked into the unit all night with
power applied. It was a 5si so they replaced it with a new 8150N.
Davy I'm not sure of your point but I am aware of the LVPS providing
other than fuser voltages and how it works, I was an electronics
technician for nuclear missile systems in the USAF for 20 yrs - 8 of
that I taught theory, troubleshooting and repair (not bragging just
giving you background but I am proud of my service) and since 10 yrs
in the field so I do a lot of bench and field repairs. I do
appreciate the info. I always check the fuser resistances and I have
a working core that I hang onto to use for troubleshooting and as a
temp fuser while waiting for new parts to keep people printing.
Testing hot fusers's resistances isn't always accurate anyway. Looked
at my logs and of the last 85 printers I've worked (8150's) with 50.1
errors only one was a fuser, 84 were repaired with an LVPS. Of the
84, 79 of them were contract work so I was unable to attempt solder
repair but using a jeweler's loupe I could see badly cracked joints
on all of them. The remainding 5 for locals were sucessfully repaired
by resoldering. In all this time only one has needed any fuses and
that was the AC inlet fuse.
Since you in the UK use a different model LVPS and fuser for 220V
operation you may also not experience the same problems that we do in
North America with the RG5-4300 and RG5-4357 solder joints and
consequently the 110v fusers. If you don't have very many problems I
wish HP would hire the same vendor to make new replacements, they
seem to have it right on the 220's.
Tony wrote:
>*customer*,
>
*TONY DA TIGER IS IN DA BUSINESS*
Certainly not arguing with you, your approach to give the customer a choice but
to also provide professional advice is perfect.
I have seen maybe 1 or 2 fuser errors that were not related to the fuser
itself, maybe that is because we are 220 volts here.
Tony
Tony wrote:
DATS *NOT *U TONY DA TIGER
Yeah...I've never been able to follow that brainless drivel about being
in the business, as opposed to what? To not being in the business and
knowing nothing?
Well that one statement clearly points out what a complete moron
measershithead really is.
Clueless and brainless.
Frank
Irwin Peckinloomer wrote:
PECKERBLOOMER IS BACK
Frank wrote:
> Irwin Peckinloomer wrote:
>
>> In article <Ubc0f.227$we3...@newssvr13.news.prodigy.com>,
>> inkys...@oem.com says...
>>
>>> *TONY DA TIGER IS IN DA BUSINESS*
>>>
>>
>> Therefore he might know something, unlike an inexperienced
>> poser/lurker like Measley!
>
> Yeah...I've never been able to follow that brainless drivel about
> being in the business, as opposed to what? To not being in the
> business and knowing nothing?
> Well that one statement clearly points out what a complete moron I
> really am.
> Clueless and brainless. Frank