This one had an unexpected conclusion:
So yes, it's a P3055dn with the LCT, and the enduser only uses it to print checks. And it works fine if you load only 800 or so checks, but if you load the full 1360 right up to the line, you get "Load paper in cassette 1 Letter Plain." or a paper skew.
She hands me 1000 or so checks and says: "... the paper is nothing special ...". It looks pretty special to me: 8 1/2" x 11" Letter, sure, but pre-printed on both sides, pre-perforated all the way around the edges and two lines down the middle, and pre-gummed around the edges. When you stack 1360 pages in the tray the additional thickness attributable to the perforations and gum add 10mm to the height at the front and rear edges. When it lifts, the upturned front edge hits the feed shaft before it touches the pickup roller and raising the two together, so the pickup roller isn't even contacting the stack. The printer is too dumb to identify a jam, but it assumes that the paper must be out, and recommends loading paper to the other tray.
Let's see:
So if the check paper is 105.87gsm, the stack should be (0.147mm x 1360 = 200mm) plus 10mm more for perforations and glue (0.0073mm x 1360 = 10mm). Each sheet is 0.1543mm at the edge, 0.147mm at the center. And we'd like the center of this 1360 sheet stack to be 10mm taller for the stack to be flat... how can we do that?
What if you were to cut a couple pieces of handy cardboard, 11" x 4" and 11" x 3", stacked them on the lift plate in the feed direction down the center and taped them down (like they could blow away with 1360 pieces of paper on them). The center of the stack is ~7mm taller, and it seems to solve the issue. To be thorough, I removed most of the paper leaving 50 or so sheets, and they all feed out (except for the cardboard of course), then you get the same "Load paper ..." message, and by then you actually need paper.
Customer is good with it. The other choice is just loading less checks, or finding some flat ones. =^..^=
So yes, it's a P3055dn with the LCT, and the enduser only uses it to print checks. And it works fine if you load only 800 or so checks, but if you load the full 1360 right up to the line, you get "Load paper in cassette 1 Letter Plain." or a paper skew.
She hands me 1000 or so checks and says: "... the paper is nothing special ...". It looks pretty special to me: 8 1/2" x 11" Letter, sure, but pre-printed on both sides, pre-perforated all the way around the edges and two lines down the middle, and pre-gummed around the edges. When you stack 1360 pages in the tray the additional thickness attributable to the perforations and gum add 10mm to the height at the front and rear edges. When it lifts, the upturned front edge hits the feed shaft before it touches the pickup roller and raising the two together, so the pickup roller isn't even contacting the stack. The printer is too dumb to identify a jam, but it assumes that the paper must be out, and recommends loading paper to the other tray.
Let's see:
So if the check paper is 105.87gsm, the stack should be (0.147mm x 1360 = 200mm) plus 10mm more for perforations and glue (0.0073mm x 1360 = 10mm). Each sheet is 0.1543mm at the edge, 0.147mm at the center. And we'd like the center of this 1360 sheet stack to be 10mm taller for the stack to be flat... how can we do that?
What if you were to cut a couple pieces of handy cardboard, 11" x 4" and 11" x 3", stacked them on the lift plate in the feed direction down the center and taped them down (like they could blow away with 1360 pieces of paper on them). The center of the stack is ~7mm taller, and it seems to solve the issue. To be thorough, I removed most of the paper leaving 50 or so sheets, and they all feed out (except for the cardboard of course), then you get the same "Load paper ..." message, and by then you actually need paper.
Customer is good with it. The other choice is just loading less checks, or finding some flat ones. =^..^=
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