IRC3220 Colour Adjustment

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  • abbas
    Technician
    • Jan 2010
    • 39

    [Misc] IRC3220 Colour Adjustment

    Pls HElp... Very Urgent...
    I'm in a troublewith the colour adjustment of Canon IRC 3220 machine using service mode.
    any pls help me...
    its quite very urgent

    pllsssss....pllsssss...
  • hknwbec
    Trusted Tech
    • Jan 2010
    • 214

    #2
    Here is one simple adjustment that you can try. Step 1 - Press * ( Additional Function ), Step 2- Select Auto Gradation Adjustment , Step 3 - Select Full Adjustment, And then you follow it instruction until Finished. It would be better if you attach the copy for reference.

    Comment

    • teckat
      Field Supervisor
      Site Contributor
      10,000+ Posts
      • Jan 2010
      • 16092

      #3
      Originally posted by abbas
      Pls HElp... Very Urgent...
      I'm in a troublewith the colour adjustment of Canon IRC 3220 machine using service mode.
      any pls help me...
      its quite very urgent

      pllsssss....pllsssss...

      if u have a Fiery connected/ use the Kodak gray scale/ procedure- under Printer tab


      what are your Color image issues ??


      color quality/blur/faded/missing color/light/dark/ ????
      **Knowledge is time consuming, exhausting and costly for a trained Tech.**

      Comment

      • SCREWTAPE
        East Coast Imaging
        Site Contributor
        2,500+ Posts
        • Jan 2009
        • 3396

        #4
        If your values are off in service mode for your color, check out your service mode values from the door. There should be a couple of sheets behind the panel that's on your front door.
        Do not make any adjustments for your color in service mode if your not quite sure about what your doing.
        Canon Copier Repair Service. Sales, Parts & Toner. NYC/NJ area. Contact:East Coast Imaging Solutions,LLC

        Comment

        • teckat
          Field Supervisor
          Site Contributor
          10,000+ Posts
          • Jan 2010
          • 16092

          #5
          color-wheel-subt&#11.jpg

          ADDED NOTE:
          The tiny yellow dots that appear on documents produced by many color laser printers and copiers. These yellow dots form a coded pattern on every page the printer produces and can be used to identify specific details about a document; for example, the brand, model, and serial number of the device that printed it and when it was printed. In short, the printer dots are a surveillance tool that can link each printed page to the printer that printed it.

          guide..JPG
          Computer graphics software is used to overlay the black dots in the microscope image with larger yellow dots for greater visibility. iRC3200/3220 has yellow dots
          spy-vs-spy_tofu_&#11.JPG

          The top most row and left most column are a parity row and column for error correction. They help verify that the forensic information has been read accurately (and, if a single dot has been read incorrectly, to identify the location of the error). The rows and columns all have odd parity: that is, every column contains an odd number of dots, and every row (except the topmost row) contains an odd number of dots. If any row or column appears to contain an even number of dots, it has been read incorrectly.
          Each column is read top-to-bottom as a single byte of seven bits (omitting the first parity bit); the bytes are then read right-to-left. The columns (which we have chosen to number from left to right) have the following meanings:
          • 15: unknown (often zero; constant for each individual printer; may convey some non-user-visible fact about the printer's model or configuration)
          • 14, 13, 12, 11: printer serial number in binary-coded-decimal, two digits per byte (constant for each individual printer; see below)
          • 10: separator (typically all ones; does not appear to code information)
          • 9: unused
          • 8: year that page was printed (without century; 2005 is coded as 5)
          • 7: month that page was printed
          • 6: day that page was printed
          • 5: hour that page was printed (may be UTC time zone, or may be set inaccurately within printer)
          • 4, 3: unused
          • 2: minute that page was printed
          • 1: row parity bit (set to guarantee an odd number of dots present per row)

          The printer serial number is a decimal number of six or eight digits; these digits are coded two at a time in columns 14, 13, 12, and 11 (or possibly just 13, 12, and 11); for instance, the serial number 00654321 would be coded with column values 00, 65, 43, and 21.
          Last edited by teckat; 05-10-2010, 01:19 AM.
          **Knowledge is time consuming, exhausting and costly for a trained Tech.**

          Comment

          • SCREWTAPE
            East Coast Imaging
            Site Contributor
            2,500+ Posts
            • Jan 2009
            • 3396

            #6
            I should've ask. Are you having registration issues. Are your colors not uniform.
            Attached Files
            Canon Copier Repair Service. Sales, Parts & Toner. NYC/NJ area. Contact:East Coast Imaging Solutions,LLC

            Comment

            • clc1000

              #7
              color registration problem

              deassembly all 4 laser unit turn the lens mover motor gear to see start point at the hole on the motor install plate, then reassemly all 4 laser unit turn on copier make auto gradation full adjust

              Comment

              • teckat
                Field Supervisor
                Site Contributor
                10,000+ Posts
                • Jan 2010
                • 16092

                #8
                Originally posted by clc1000
                deassembly all 4 laser unit turn the lens mover motor gear to see start point at the hole on the motor install plate, then reassemly all 4 laser unit turn on copier make auto gradation full adjust

                you are replying to a post that is over two months old

                Head-Bang..JPG
                **Knowledge is time consuming, exhausting and costly for a trained Tech.**

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                • Kapten
                  Technician
                  50+ Posts
                  • Apr 2009
                  • 52

                  #9
                  Clean the itb driveroller.
                  Take out the itb and clean the belt insida and the drive rollers.

                  Comment

                  • teckat
                    Field Supervisor
                    Site Contributor
                    10,000+ Posts
                    • Jan 2010
                    • 16092

                    #10
                    Originally posted by Kapten
                    Clean the itb driveroller.
                    Take out the itb and clean the belt insida and the drive rollers.


                    look at original post date/ over two months old> 5-09-2010

                    abbas has left the building
                    /
                    ELVIS..jpg
                    **Knowledge is time consuming, exhausting and costly for a trained Tech.**

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