man I keep missing this stuff...
title of thread should be high humidity...
I am trying to wrap my mind around this humidity thing...
tell me if I make any sense...
I arrive at a customer site... I find the paper is curling... on all machines at the location...
I find the humidity in the environment to be about 45% with a digital meter and the same in the machine with the same meter... temp 27 degrees c
paper is curling excessively on this model after 20 pages...
I find that putting new paper into the machine clears up the issue...
I run a service mode test i believe its 137 and find the internal humidity is 23% and external is 44%...
seems ok to me...
I spoke with supervisor and customer and got them to understand that there was high humidity...
honestly I said the words but I just couldn't grasp the concept...
I sat down and thought about it and here is my best understanding let me know if I am off...
if the humidity is high the paper curls...
if it is low the paper thickens and jams...
if paper is stored on floor... it is more likely to draw humidity...
ac removes humidity from the air...
if ac is turned off at nights... humidity builds
if ac is not working properly... humidity builds...
if a cold front comes through... this puts stress on ac... humidity builds...
if possible raise temp of ac to compensate for building humidity...
empty machine of paper at night to compensate for building humidity...
only load paper still sealed when ready to print...
use tray heaters if possible to compensate for building humidity...
add a dehumidifier to the environment...
store paper in an environment that reduces humidity in paper possibly a closet designed for that purpose...
if machine says it has low relative humidity
yet paper is humid and machine does not have tray heater...
this heating could be a passive effect caused by the machine doing its thing...
which would explain why the top of the stack of the paper left in the machine... has no jams... until it gets to print 20 sheets deep... the top layer would have dried out passively... while the rest would still retain the humidity... remember trays aren't sealed and the low humidity is a passive effect... so as the machine naturally dissipates the humidity... it draws more in... and the paper is sucking it up at a rate far higher than the passive dehumidifying effect... its also drying it out from the top of the stack... remember
hot drier air is rising while the cold drier more humid air is moving to take its place...
explaining what happens when you turn off the ac and the copier at nights and it gets humid inside the copier...
if a tray heater was installed it would be drying it out from the bottom... in an active fashion...
now if a copier is in a more humid environment than b copier and both have no tray heater... and copier b uses paper at the same rate as a... and uses the same paper and copier b is much better sealed... and has a much better passive dehumidifying effect... its possible that copier b could have less curl...
thats my thoughts... let me know if any of this makes any sense...
thanks...
title of thread should be high humidity...
I am trying to wrap my mind around this humidity thing...
tell me if I make any sense...
I arrive at a customer site... I find the paper is curling... on all machines at the location...
I find the humidity in the environment to be about 45% with a digital meter and the same in the machine with the same meter... temp 27 degrees c
paper is curling excessively on this model after 20 pages...
I find that putting new paper into the machine clears up the issue...
I run a service mode test i believe its 137 and find the internal humidity is 23% and external is 44%...
seems ok to me...
I spoke with supervisor and customer and got them to understand that there was high humidity...
honestly I said the words but I just couldn't grasp the concept...
I sat down and thought about it and here is my best understanding let me know if I am off...
if the humidity is high the paper curls...
if it is low the paper thickens and jams...
if paper is stored on floor... it is more likely to draw humidity...
ac removes humidity from the air...
if ac is turned off at nights... humidity builds
if ac is not working properly... humidity builds...
if a cold front comes through... this puts stress on ac... humidity builds...
if possible raise temp of ac to compensate for building humidity...
empty machine of paper at night to compensate for building humidity...
only load paper still sealed when ready to print...
use tray heaters if possible to compensate for building humidity...
add a dehumidifier to the environment...
store paper in an environment that reduces humidity in paper possibly a closet designed for that purpose...
if machine says it has low relative humidity
yet paper is humid and machine does not have tray heater...
this heating could be a passive effect caused by the machine doing its thing...
which would explain why the top of the stack of the paper left in the machine... has no jams... until it gets to print 20 sheets deep... the top layer would have dried out passively... while the rest would still retain the humidity... remember trays aren't sealed and the low humidity is a passive effect... so as the machine naturally dissipates the humidity... it draws more in... and the paper is sucking it up at a rate far higher than the passive dehumidifying effect... its also drying it out from the top of the stack... remember
hot drier air is rising while the cold drier more humid air is moving to take its place...
explaining what happens when you turn off the ac and the copier at nights and it gets humid inside the copier...
if a tray heater was installed it would be drying it out from the bottom... in an active fashion...
now if a copier is in a more humid environment than b copier and both have no tray heater... and copier b uses paper at the same rate as a... and uses the same paper and copier b is much better sealed... and has a much better passive dehumidifying effect... its possible that copier b could have less curl...
thats my thoughts... let me know if any of this makes any sense...
thanks...
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