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Whenever I print something the last edge out of the printer looks like somthing dripped on it. Just a clear liquid in several drip spots along the edge. Any Ideas?
Whenever I print something the last edge out of the printer looks like somthing dripped on it. Just a clear liquid in several drip spots along the edge. Any Ideas?
Thanks
That'd be fusing oil methinks, new fuser time.
It's 106 miles to Chicago. We've got a full tank of gas, half a pack of cigarettes, it's dark and we're wearing sunglasses.
There is a cleaning blade on the pressure roller which gets overloaded with silicon oil and paper dust resulting in a greasy paste.
When this happens the blade loses it's abillity to clean and allows to much oil on to the pressure roller and belt and in turn the oil builds up on the pick off pawls.
Hence you get five clear oil spots on the leading edge of the paper.
You can strip the fuser down and clean the blade and surrounding area but it's not a quick job.
Replacing the fuser is preferable as it normally occurs close to yield.
Knowledge not shared, is eventually knowledge that becomes lost... like tears in the rain.
Fully qualified technician for Ricoh - Canon - Sharp - HP - Brother
You could take out the pick off pawls, no problem at all, it will do no harm, it even protects the fusing belt from been stripped up by paper jam. I´ve been doing this for more than three years an the result is five stars.
sigpicWe can all Win, but at the end we all loose.Save the greyhound
It is just oil build up on the lower fingers. After awhile the oil turns to a white grease texture and the oil pools on the lower fingers. You can just clean the fingers off.
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