E series rebooting problem. Who's dealing with it?

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  • tech51
    replied
    Re: E series rebooting problem. Who's dealing with it?

    Don't know about the USA but these ssd boards are now available in the U.K. as a spare part and can be ordered as such.
    However this is closely monitored by the parts department to avoid any stockpiling or selling on to unauthorised dealers.
    I certainly wouldn't risk my job by selling them on....

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  • Don N.
    replied
    Re: E series rebooting problem. Who's dealing with it?

    Clear the meters? Doesn't that conflict with what others have said... that the meters would be preserved if you install a new SSD, or cleanse/reset an mfb if necessary? I didn't know there was any scenario that would end in new meters unless several NEW boards were installed.
    Regardless, the machine is customer property, regardless if it's me or anyone. Replacement parts should be made available through dealers, or wholesale channel. ESPECIALLY when they know there was a big batch if bad ssd's sold.
    If this were the automobile market, KMBS would be lambasted!

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  • Albonline
    replied
    Re: E series rebooting problem. Who's dealing with it?

    Originally posted by Don N.
    I guess there's the rub... 28 years of being an indy and other than sending them business like software solutions that I don't sell, the number of times I've had to get an authorized dealer/tech on my equipment is...zero. It's not about pride. It's the fact that I can do the work myself but Konica and their auth. dealerships don't want to sell the parts without labor. It reeks of class action. (and if I blow the equipment up, that's my problem. It's DOA anyway, so what are they accomplishing?)
    with the discontinuation of hard counters ,the point of this is to ensure the meter count history of a given unit/sn. we all know there are those who would just clear the meters and call it new or refurbed.

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  • Don N.
    replied
    Re: E series rebooting problem. Who's dealing with it?

    Originally posted by Albonline
    call a certified service agent in. they have to open a ticket with km ssd listing sn, meters, symptoms. the only way i've seen these shipped is through ssd tickets being filed.
    I guess there's the rub... 28 years of being an indy and other than sending them business like software solutions that I don't sell, the number of times I've had to get an authorized dealer/tech on my equipment is...zero. It's not about pride. It's the fact that I can do the work myself but Konica and their auth. dealerships don't want to sell the parts without labor. It reeks of class action. (and if I blow the equipment up, that's my problem. It's DOA anyway, so what are they accomplishing?)

    Leave a comment:


  • Albonline
    replied
    Re: E series rebooting problem. Who's dealing with it?

    Originally posted by rrrohan
    pay KM tech to do. still better than having them collect dust even if it does cost a bit in labour

    call a certified service agent in. they have to open a ticket with km ssd listing sn, meters, symptoms. the only way i've seen these shipped is through ssd tickets being filed.

    Leave a comment:


  • Don N.
    replied
    Re: E series rebooting problem. Who's dealing with it?

    Originally posted by 907tec
    Don, the problem is...this process is not nearly as easy as you think it is. KM (and all manufacturers, I would wager) keeps strict control over the availability of NVRAM/SSDB/etc, for obvious reasons. You are asking for a Technician, a Service Manager, and a Dealership to put their respective necks on the line for a couple hundred bucks. It's simply not worth the potential heat from KM. Professional courtesy is nice and all, but you are not accounting for the risk involved for the participating dealer.
    Hey, I appreciate your feedback. You're right. I just don't get it. No one's asking a dealer to do anything wrong. Copiers get sold and moved from state to state. That's legal. The buyers and sellers and even the original owners that move them own the equipment, regardless of who sold it. It's not stolen, or black or grey market, although a lot of authorized dealers treat off lease equipment like it is. They tell my customers its "legacy" or "discontinued", even with 4+ years of support left. They are not even on KM's 3 year end of life list. For a dealer to be told by KM that there's a problem supporting a machine they didn't happen to sell is ridiculous. Say I buy a Smith & Wesson pistol in Montana and move to Florida, and I need service, especially for a problem that has a factory bulletin out on it. Say my local dealer didn't address the issue within a year. I can go to any S&W dealer and get the part, order it from S&W, or have them fix it if it's beyond my ability - MY CHOICE. Not everyone has a contract, and that's not illegal. Not every dealer addressed every machine under contract, and that's not the owner's fault. So the problem is with KM, and/or it's authorized dealers. They can point to their SSD vendors but it's still on them. Putting a time limit on the repair action is on them too. KM has the parts, and has recently provided them to their authorized dealers (still at no charge, but cost is irrelevant). I want to purchase said parts from any authorized dealer that will sell them, and pay their reasonable asking price. So far no dealer wants to take the time. You say they are taking a risk. From my view, the risk is that they are busy and it's off the beaten path, and they need to get their priority contract calls done. They consider this a favor, and a pain. A per-call customer is already low priority. A "legacy" machine and a tedious order process make it all the more so.
    Please explain the risk, because no-one's trying to game the system. I'm just trying to fix three of KM's lost and abandoned mistakes that I legally purchased with a verifiable chain of custody. I genuinely thank you for your insight.

    Leave a comment:


  • 907tec
    replied
    Re: E series rebooting problem. Who's dealing with it?

    Don, the problem is...this process is not nearly as easy as you think it is. KM (and all manufacturers, I would wager) keeps strict control over the availability of NVRAM/SSDB/etc, for obvious reasons. You are asking for a Technician, a Service Manager, and a Dealership to put their respective necks on the line for a couple hundred bucks. It's simply not worth the potential heat from KM. Professional courtesy is nice and all, but you are not accounting for the risk involved for the participating dealer.
    Last edited by 907tec; 01-31-2018, 01:34 AM.

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  • Don N.
    replied
    Re: E series rebooting problem. Who's dealing with it?

    Originally posted by rrrohan
    pay KM tech to do. still better than having them collect dust even if it does cost a bit in labour
    I may have to, but that would be a first since I know how to do the work, and there are three of them...
    Looking at it from their point of view financially, I'm awestruck at the missed opportunity here. Part of me also misses the professional courtesy we used to enjoy among competing dealers. I have sent them business and they have sent me some too, since my niche is used and theirs is new.

    Leave a comment:


  • rrrohan
    replied
    Re: E series rebooting problem. Who's dealing with it?

    Originally posted by Don N.
    7 months later and no dealer will take the time to order SSD boards. Even with the prospect of making hundreds of dollars. I'm told the boards are still free to them, even this far outside of the bulletin date. I understand there needs to be a tech ticket opened, a phone call made, some questions answered, serial #'s provided, paperwork done, bad boards returned. Still, at say, $200 a clip, x the 3 that I need, that's $600 "profit". These dead c224e's are really expensive parts machines.
    pay KM tech to do. still better than having them collect dust even if it does cost a bit in labour

    Leave a comment:


  • Don N.
    replied
    Re: E series rebooting problem. Who's dealing with it?

    7 months later and no dealer will take the time to order SSD boards. Even with the prospect of making hundreds of dollars. I'm told the boards are still free to them, even this far outside of the bulletin date. I understand there needs to be a tech ticket opened, a phone call made, some questions answered, serial #'s provided, paperwork done, bad boards returned. Still, at say, $200 a clip, x the 3 that I need, that's $600 "profit". These dead c224e's are really expensive parts machines.

    Leave a comment:


  • Don N.
    replied
    Re: E series rebooting problem. Who's dealing with it?

    Originally posted by Albonline
    these ssd's have no published pn. they are shipped from kbm usa to dealers or branches on a as needed basis with km service being directly involved. support agent, ticket number, and service manager involved to get one.
    As an indy, I would greatly appreciate anyone able to get two of these c224e ssd's for me. We can provide serial # and pay via your preferred method.
    Thank you.

    Leave a comment:


  • Albonline
    replied
    Re: E series rebooting problem. Who's dealing with it?

    Originally posted by Don N.
    Recently started to refurb the 4e's. C220 series were good to us, but near end of life. We've got 3 c224e's and 1 224e in shop. Only one has the blue dot. One that is in group B of the bulletin 9132 was working until I tried to upgrade the fw. I don't think it being at function ver. 3 has anything to do with it. Maybe it's day to die. Power cycles about every 5~10 min. I cant get part # verified for the ssd board, or, can't buy it from distributor channel. I have found:
    A5C1H02D02
    or
    A5C1H02DE5
    or
    U226-1090

    Can someone help me order these?
    I'm going to do the SSD board tool procedure on every machine that needs it, but it's too late for this one from what I gather.
    Thanks so much.


    these ssd's have no published pn. they are shipped from kbm usa to dealers or branches on a as needed basis with km service being directly involved. support agent, ticket number, and service manager involved to get one.

    Leave a comment:


  • Don N.
    replied
    Re: E series rebooting problem. Who's dealing with it?

    Recently started to refurb the 4e's. C220 series were good to us, but near end of life. We've got 3 c224e's and 1 224e in shop. Only one has the blue dot. One that is in group B of the bulletin 9132 was working until I tried to upgrade the fw. I don't think it being at function ver. 3 has anything to do with it. Maybe it's day to die. Power cycles about every 5~10 min. I cant get part # verified for the ssd board, or, can't buy it from distributor channel. I have found:
    A5C1H02D02
    or
    A5C1H02DE5
    or
    U226-1090

    Can someone help me order these?
    I'm going to do the SSD board tool procedure on every machine that needs it, but it's too late for this one from what I gather.
    Thanks so much.

    Leave a comment:


  • blackcat4866
    replied
    Re: E series rebooting problem. Who's dealing with it?

    Thanks for posting back your results. =^..^=

    Leave a comment:


  • Qball
    replied
    Re: E series rebooting problem. Who's dealing with it?

    The SSD board worked for me. Had an issue after it came up. I wasn't able to log into service mode and under utility only 2 options were available. Ended up having to do a logical format on the HDD. Then all was well.

    Sent from my SM-G900V using Tapatalk

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