Magenta fade and poor printing
I have a HP 2600n colour laser printer, which I have had for
around 5 years and it has proven to be a very reliable printer. However
recently we noticed that the colour printing quality was not as good as it used
to be. To start investigating I printed a demo page (press left and right arrow
together).
The demo page showed that there were slight problems with
the alignment of the four different coloured toners. It also shows, but is not
as easy to spot, a problem with the magenta toner. You think that the magenta
is OK as the soldier’s tunic is red so you assume that the magenta is working
fine.
To further prove that there was a problem I went to this
page from Refresh Cartridges and printed out the test page for colour
laser printers. What that showed was that the magenta was fading on the left of
the page.
Doing a quick search I found that this is a very common
fault with this printer and the other printers that are based on the same
workings such as the HP 2605 and HP 1600 and the Canon LBP5000. The problem is
due to dust on one of the mirrors that the laser beam is reflected off on its
way to the toner cartridge.
The optical box that contains the lasers, lenses and mirrors
is not sealed against ingress of dust, and as the printer has fans to cool the
internal workings of the printer, the result is that the fans suck dust in from
outside the printer and deposit it inside the printer. If I was a cynical
person I might think that the printer was specifically designed that way to try
and get people to buy a new printer, after buying a new magenta cartridge that didn't fix the fading problem!
The optical box looks complicated, and it is, but it’s not
as complicated as it seems on first glance. There is basically one set of
mirrors and lenses that have been copied another three times to give a set of
lasers, lenses and mirrors for each of the four different colours.
Each one of the four different coloured sections is made up
of the following basic components:
- Laser – covered by shutter in picture
- Lens
- Rotating mirror – only one per pair of colours
- Lens
- Mirror – this is where most of the dust will be
- Compensating lens
- Calibration detector – only one per pair of detectors
The laser beam is emitted from the laser through the lens which focuses the beam on to the rotating mirror which then reflects the
beam through the next lens and onto the mirror. The beam is the reflected
through the compensating lens and onward to the toner cartridge. If you
look carefully at the lens before the rotating mirror, you will see that there
are actually three lenses moulded in to the plastic. Two of them are the lens
that the two laser beams pass through before hitting the rotating mirror. The
third one focuses the beam on to the calibration detector which is located back
on the pcb.
All the lenses are made of plastic and care must be taken in
cleaning them as they are easily scratched. The mirrors are also delicate as
the reflective surface is on top of the glass and not behind the glass in a
normal mirror. The magenta and yellow mirrors are particularly susceptible because
the face upwards and any dust floating down will settle on them.
I came across an
excellent site that takes you through the fix step by step. I am not going to
repeat the steps but just going to point you towards the excellent site.
I recommend that you follow the instructions on the above
site and then read the extra problems that I overcame.
The
good news was the magenta was OK all across the page; the bad news was the four
colours were completely out of alignment.
I tried calibrating the printer, and although that changed
the alignment of the colours it still was not correct. After more searching on
line I tried a “Super NVRAM reset” by holding both arrow keys down whilst turning
on the printer. According to all the warnings I found on line this reset clears
all the non-volatile memory in the printer which could also wipe the record of
the number of pages that have been printed. In my case the page count was not
reset.
After doing the NVram reset the alignment was back as it
should be hooray!
The print demo page also looks a lot better, there are reds
all across the picture, the colours are aligned and you can even read the name
on the side of the train!