There is no such thing as permanent, even new rollers are not permanent
I know every machine in my field so not using rejuvenator often but doing PMs. That said it will do excellent job on few odd balls when we service equipment with unknown/lacking service history until we get proper parts.
A tree is known by its fruit, a man by his deeds. A good deed is never lost, he who sows courtesy, reaps friendship, and he who plants kindness gathers love.
Blessed are they who can laugh at themselves, for they shall never cease to be amused.
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I've used Cooper's belt cleaner on feed rollers for years, more as a preventative step, especially on ADF rollers. It helps some to just clean off the junk that collects and sticks to the rubber.
Simple physics tells you that friction will take away the tackier portion of the roller eventually, but cleaning with something made for rubber will at least help with annoyances like jams or non-feed issues.
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I need to clarify something. When I said "permanent", what I was asking is rubber rejuvenator being used as a stop-gap measure until the tech can return with new feed rollers or are you comfortable using it and letting it ride until the roller fails? That's what I was trying to ask.
It's been a long time since I've worked for someone else, but I used to be evaluated on the number of copies between service calls, so it really wasn't to my advantage to use rejuvenator. I just replaced the roller with a new one and went on about my day. And the company I worked for didn't want us to use it unless it was due to not having the roller in car stock.
EDIT: I guess most of you are using rejuvenator to clean rollers that still have good life left. I've seen techs use it on failed rollers and thinking it was gonna last. In my exeperience, that's not a good idea.
Growth is found only in adversity.
What I think many may forget is that as the roller wears down, the circumference get smaller.
And that's the real reason that rollers lose their effectiveness.
Years Ricoh used to put a small bottle of water-less cleaner in their service tech maintenance kits. I was working on a copier once that was having a problem feeding from the bypass. It turned out that they very seldom used the bypass and the the roller had become embedded in dust. Cleaning with glass cleaner did not help but I noticed that had a bottle of the hand cleaner and decided to try it. Worked great. The grit in the hand cleaner was able to lift the embedded dust out of the surface.
Later Ricoh went to including a package with a single Scrubs hand cleaning towels. They also worked on most rollers except the 1M rollers.
I Use Roll-It from Nutone Densi (P/N: 09111)
Btw, I actually use it more for cleaning registration rollers and vertical transports rollers, as well as DF transport rollers
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