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It's a proximity sensor so it can wake up in 1 second when someone goes to use it, doesn't actually wake the machine up without been touched just allows almost instant startup.
It gets things started but does not bring the display up until you either set an original in the DF, lift the DF or touch the display. The Aficio 551/700 had a motion sensor that brought the machine completely out of sleep mode every time anyone walked past it. It was a major pain in the ass.
It gets things started but does not bring the display up until you either set an original in the DF, lift the DF or touch the display. The Aficio 551/700 had a motion sensor that brought the machine completely out of sleep mode every time anyone walked past it. It was a major pain in the ass.
I remember that.
Not exactly your basic crowd pleaser.
“I think you should treat good friends like a fine wine. That’s why I keep mine locked up in the basement.” - Tim Hawkins
Excuse me, but I did not understand why the sensor does not activate the machine?
thanks for your patience
It's purpose is purely for background pre-recovery. Not to actually wake the machine from sleep / energy save.
The idea being from the end users perspective is the machine reaches the ' Ready ' state almost instantly.
When in fact it actually had a few seconds head start when it detected motion up to 6ft away.
Knowledge not shared, is eventually knowledge that becomes lost... like tears in the rain.
Fully qualified technician for Ricoh - Canon - Sharp - HP - Brother
Back in the day of the 551/700 we mentioned before, the machine actually did come completely awake, with the display turning back on.
Not only was it a waste of energy, but it used to freak people out.
We had more than a few calls for "It's turning itself on! Make it stop!"
BTW...There is an explanation in the service manual as to how the feature operates, I think it is about 3 pages. I actually sent those pages to a customer who was asking about it.
“I think you should treat good friends like a fine wine. That’s why I keep mine locked up in the basement.” - Tim Hawkins
It looks like the sensor pre-triggers the android waking up in the background when someone approaches the machine without switching on the display.
Hard to explain for end user. The machine is ready to use just after screen touching without a lag
We have two machines out with this sensor but we have disabled it as they are both in very high traffic areas and we were concerned what the constant heating cycles might do to the machine.
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