I am pretty sure that over the years I have been doing this, I have only blamed the paper for the machine 's problem a handful of times. I always believed that too many techs use paper as an excuse, when the machine could have been fixed. I have had customers tell me that another tech told them it was the paper, and I would smile and tell them to watch me fix it, because I am a real tech. If the paper is bad, you should be able to see it and prove it.
On Ft. Bragg, they are required to use recycled paper. The law requires government to use recycled, even though it cost a lot more. My state is VERY humid. Usually when I am showing the customer how to identify bad paper that is too humid, I can point to the ends curling up after going through the fuser, and the finished product looking like laundry that has not been ironed. The big thick separator fingers that Konica now uses, have been great, and rarely fail.
THE ISSUE...
Over the past couple of months, 2 of my Bizhub 600's have turned into a pain in my ass. The first one is my most used machine and has about 3 million on it. It sits in what was an old motel room about 6 feet from the door that seems to be open all day long. I fought it and changed stuff and made adjustments until it quit. I assume it quit, I had a second machine moved out there to take off some of the load, it may be dead and they just haven't called, but when last I was there, it ran.
Problem child #2 has been having this issue for about the same amount of time. I would get the call for it being jammed, find one in the cleaning section, remove it and it would run fine for a while. This machine is in a modern building, at the end of a hall, about 50 feet from a door that is open most of the time. On this machine, the total meter is 750,000. The transfer sep unit only has 3000 on it. The drum sep fingers were traded with a working machine. I have jacked up the manual voltage adjustment to the max.
While I was there on Tuesday , I just had a gut feeling it was paper. Opening fresh paper of theirs did no good. It would not pass 3 sheets without trying to eat one. I went to the shop and got a ream of our paper, Members Mark from Sam's Club, went back and ran 25 copies. I put their paper in and it sucked one up. I cleared it and put mine back in, ran 50 copies. Put their paper back in and it jammed. Traded it out again and it ran with my paper.
Now here is part of the problem. Why is this underused machine doing this? The paper shows none of the usual signs of being crappy. It comes out of the machine crisp and flat, no curled corners. Do any of you folks have a magical set of numbers to set your voltages too on a Bizhub 600 to run shitty paper, because tech support was no help. I still don't think it is all in the paper because I have dealt with much worse.
On Ft. Bragg, they are required to use recycled paper. The law requires government to use recycled, even though it cost a lot more. My state is VERY humid. Usually when I am showing the customer how to identify bad paper that is too humid, I can point to the ends curling up after going through the fuser, and the finished product looking like laundry that has not been ironed. The big thick separator fingers that Konica now uses, have been great, and rarely fail.
THE ISSUE...
Over the past couple of months, 2 of my Bizhub 600's have turned into a pain in my ass. The first one is my most used machine and has about 3 million on it. It sits in what was an old motel room about 6 feet from the door that seems to be open all day long. I fought it and changed stuff and made adjustments until it quit. I assume it quit, I had a second machine moved out there to take off some of the load, it may be dead and they just haven't called, but when last I was there, it ran.
Problem child #2 has been having this issue for about the same amount of time. I would get the call for it being jammed, find one in the cleaning section, remove it and it would run fine for a while. This machine is in a modern building, at the end of a hall, about 50 feet from a door that is open most of the time. On this machine, the total meter is 750,000. The transfer sep unit only has 3000 on it. The drum sep fingers were traded with a working machine. I have jacked up the manual voltage adjustment to the max.
While I was there on Tuesday , I just had a gut feeling it was paper. Opening fresh paper of theirs did no good. It would not pass 3 sheets without trying to eat one. I went to the shop and got a ream of our paper, Members Mark from Sam's Club, went back and ran 25 copies. I put their paper in and it sucked one up. I cleared it and put mine back in, ran 50 copies. Put their paper back in and it jammed. Traded it out again and it ran with my paper.
Now here is part of the problem. Why is this underused machine doing this? The paper shows none of the usual signs of being crappy. It comes out of the machine crisp and flat, no curled corners. Do any of you folks have a magical set of numbers to set your voltages too on a Bizhub 600 to run shitty paper, because tech support was no help. I still don't think it is all in the paper because I have dealt with much worse.
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