parts of the rollers look like wrinkled skin. is it normal?
Well that answers the "Are you a tech?" question.
Ok. I am glad to hear that through a process of elimination and some hard thinking you where able to figure out that I am not a tech. This canon copier was given to me by a company that went out of business. I have 3 businesses myself and thought I could actually put this machine to work. It only has 18k prints on it. I have always worked on things myself and do not see a reason to pay $150 per hour for someone to tell me the rollers are bad. Forgive me for not knowing a correct terminology concerning this copier. I guess I could pick up a book... I might call a tech to clean the machine once I have replaced parts. Sooo, can someone please offer some constructive advice other than call a tech? I know the rollers are bad, but is there anything else that I should be concerned about before I order parts? Thank you.
again a model number would help us help you...well some of us anyway.
Accidents don't just happen. They must be carelessly planned.
this is not one of canon's best machines...actually it might one of the worst. That being said it can be a good machine when ran and maintained properly. Order a new fuser assembly and drum since it has been sitting for a long time. You can get part number from precission rollers website. Time will tell if you need to replace some other items from it sitting so long.
And you may want to see if you can get a tech to work on it on the side for you. This unit is not friendly to those who are not trained on it. Developer units tend to leak and cause a mess...and the ITB unit can be a big pain accessing as well.
Accidents don't just happen. They must be carelessly planned.
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