woodss
11-06-2005, 03:10 PM
I would like to know, what kind of steps and tips you can give me to install a instant on fuser flim in general.
What are the dos and donts?
I have never done this before nor had the opportunity too.
Reason being a technician isnt experienced in some printer models is that they never have the opportunity he or she hasn't had the opportunity to work on them yet.
My Experiences
I am still a hobbyist, whom has been doing this kind of work at home during the evenings from school as a hobby since I was 17 / 18, now this may sound unusuall to some, particularly doctors, however the best technicians are people who had this as a hobby first, all started to simply to prevent old printers to be in landfill, for the first 18 months from early 2001 to late 2002 I was working mainly on series II and III printers mainly because at the time thats all I had, and yes I still work on these,Parts for these are discontinued years ago by OEM, however many aftermarket manufacturers still have these available.
I work on printers that usually now that most printer service technicians don't bother repairing, if a person wants to learn about how to repair printers, The laserjet II, III and 4/5 series are about the best to learn from, these a older machines however these are machines that work on and on, there is plenty of series II, III and 4/5 printers that work, these are good for people and charities and non profit organizations, the college that I go too still have 4/5 series LaserJets still working in the staff offices,HP has discontinued the OEM parts for the 4/5 in Australia, I buy aftermarket for these printers now, I would prefer OEM always do but sometimes you have to use aftermarket when OEM isnt available
However these are disappering slowly, however we all know that its the fuser and output rollers that mainly fail on these machines, I am doing the people and the environment a favor, when usually when these machines fail they end up at a workshop junk heap or ends up at the local city dump "TIP" if I spend time at the city dump I might find some of these printers and take them home, service them and get them going again, but the printers of these that I repair mainly have paper jam, fuser and gear train failures.
I heard on TV a week ago that to get a good honest car service person is like winning the lottery, well we all know as technicians that there are bad printer service technicians out there, unhonest and taking advantage of people who simply doesn't know, and this give us good guys a bad name.
I will post more at a later date.
What are the dos and donts?
I have never done this before nor had the opportunity too.
Reason being a technician isnt experienced in some printer models is that they never have the opportunity he or she hasn't had the opportunity to work on them yet.
My Experiences
I am still a hobbyist, whom has been doing this kind of work at home during the evenings from school as a hobby since I was 17 / 18, now this may sound unusuall to some, particularly doctors, however the best technicians are people who had this as a hobby first, all started to simply to prevent old printers to be in landfill, for the first 18 months from early 2001 to late 2002 I was working mainly on series II and III printers mainly because at the time thats all I had, and yes I still work on these,Parts for these are discontinued years ago by OEM, however many aftermarket manufacturers still have these available.
I work on printers that usually now that most printer service technicians don't bother repairing, if a person wants to learn about how to repair printers, The laserjet II, III and 4/5 series are about the best to learn from, these a older machines however these are machines that work on and on, there is plenty of series II, III and 4/5 printers that work, these are good for people and charities and non profit organizations, the college that I go too still have 4/5 series LaserJets still working in the staff offices,HP has discontinued the OEM parts for the 4/5 in Australia, I buy aftermarket for these printers now, I would prefer OEM always do but sometimes you have to use aftermarket when OEM isnt available
However these are disappering slowly, however we all know that its the fuser and output rollers that mainly fail on these machines, I am doing the people and the environment a favor, when usually when these machines fail they end up at a workshop junk heap or ends up at the local city dump "TIP" if I spend time at the city dump I might find some of these printers and take them home, service them and get them going again, but the printers of these that I repair mainly have paper jam, fuser and gear train failures.
I heard on TV a week ago that to get a good honest car service person is like winning the lottery, well we all know as technicians that there are bad printer service technicians out there, unhonest and taking advantage of people who simply doesn't know, and this give us good guys a bad name.
I will post more at a later date.