I have been experimenting with a mpc7500 that has constantly from new lost its black density after 10k to 15k. This is a well known issue with this model and to date ricoh has not been able to provide any answer. Well this is what I have done and it seems to work. Based on my belief that Ricohs attempt at trickle feed development is a failure I have modified this particular machine - removing drive to the trickle feed out auger. The result of this is that the machine is no longer driving out developer (which it does) any time the developer is rotating. The machine in question has since maintained density and the copy quality has remained steady. Opening up the dev has shown that the height of the developer has remained more consistent, whereas before the dev was down about half of the initial fill. There are no down sides to this mod that I have seen, in fact I expect to see a reduction in waste toner and also a reduction in new toner usage.
So here is how I did it, remove the one way cam that drives the trickle auger from the front of the dev! Thats it. It takes about 5 minutes and you only need to remove the front drum plate to access this part. See pics below. The third picture shows how it looks before you put it back into the machine.
Please let us know if you try this mod and how it goes for you!
Incidentaly I also feel that there is no where near enough carrier in the toner bags to keep up with the amount being depleted from the devs.
Cheers.
So here is how I did it, remove the one way cam that drives the trickle auger from the front of the dev! Thats it. It takes about 5 minutes and you only need to remove the front drum plate to access this part. See pics below. The third picture shows how it looks before you put it back into the machine.
Please let us know if you try this mod and how it goes for you!
Incidentaly I also feel that there is no where near enough carrier in the toner bags to keep up with the amount being depleted from the devs.
Cheers.
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