Hi,
We have two units Ricoh mp2851 copier with fax board.
Faxing out is okay but cannot receive incoming fax.
Previously the copier is able to received incoming fax
Any setting to check or components to replace.
thanks,
Al.
Hi,
We have two units Ricoh mp2851 copier with fax board.
Faxing out is okay but cannot receive incoming fax.
Previously the copier is able to received incoming fax
Any setting to check or components to replace.
thanks,
Al.
Call the fax line with your cell phone, does it pickup the line.
I have always a simple corded analog telephone with some adapters/fax cables in my company car for issues like. It's a simple but effective check of the analog line.
Have you checked the line?
Machine is in automatic fax receive mode?
If you call the fax no does machine hang up?
call your cell phone from the fax and check the caller id to make sure it is the right number. They may have had some recent phone service and now their "dedicated fax line" is no longer on the phone number they think it is.
Are you standing in front of the 2851 so as to confirm that it is the machine that is answering? I have had customers who had one or more old machine elsewhere in the building connected to the same line. They had done this so that the other locations could fax out. Worked fine as long as none of them were set to answer.
You mean the FAX is not picking up the incoming ring tone ? AKA a deft FAX.
I assume the line is a single ring tone FAX line with out DUET.(ie. Two distinctive ring tones on the same line) ?
Telco line/cable attenuation may have changed.
If you plug a manual hand set into the FAX line and the line is clear with out noise/sperry,
then it might be an impedance matching problem the physical line.
Is the fax received all okay but being storing to secure memory for later manual print out ?
Inauguration to the "AI cancel-culture" fraternity 1997...
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The ring you hear is generated at your VOIP modem card and/or the the phone company central office. It's a misconception to think that the ring you are hearing is generated by the receiving fax, It is not. If nothing was connected to the line, you would still hear a ring.
In a situation where you have as many as (4) faxes connected to the same phone line, yes a fax will answer, just not the one you are standing in front of. It's a fax Rx lottery: which fax can pick up faster?
Back to the analog handset: It's fully possible that A) the line at your end never rings or never rings in a way the fax recognizes, or B) that you are experiencing one-way communication. In either case you won't know anything until you connect a handset and dial a call, and receive a call.
Customers do this all the time: blame the fax machine when 95% of the errors occur in the lines. Find out if the lines are working first. =^..^=
If you'd like a serious answer to your request:
1) demonstrate that you've read the manual
2) demonstrate that you made some attempt to fix it.
3) if you're going to ask about jams include the jam code.
4) if you're going to ask about an error code include the error code.
5) You are the person onsite. Only you can make observations.
blackcat: Master Of The Obvious =^..^=
Did they recently switch to voip, if so you may want to try these settings:
ECM: 1-104-002 (com. swich 1) change bit 0 to 0
Cable EQ Settings: 1-105-008 (G3 switch 7) change bits 0,1,2 and 3 to 1
V.8 Protocol: 1-105-004 (G3 switch 3) change bit 2 to 0
Modem Speed TX: 1-105-006 (G3 switch 5) change bit 0,1 and 3 to 0. Change bit 2 to 1
Modem Speed RX: 1-105-007 (G3 switch 6) change bit 0,1, and 3 to 0. Change bit 2 to 1
check whether the reception file setting in facsimile features was set to store instead of print.
check parameter setting switch 10 bit 5 whether or not to print store received documents, 0 for off and 1 for on
check parameter setting switch 11 bit 6 whether to print or store the incoming fax , 0 for off and 1 for on
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