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Senior Member |
(posting here to not clog up a troubleshooting thread)
I agree completely. I had a 250ci throwing donuts everywhere even when U464 AC mag was at -10, and I couldn't convince my boss to try new developers, so I found that U464 AC mag changed some numbers in U140 (dev bias). I started playing with those numbers, but nothing would change. I stumbled upon U119 (set drum) which took 20 seconds and wanted a machine restart. Somehow setting the drum finally applied dev bias. U140 in the service manual lists what everything effects, but doesn't describe what changing these numbers might do. Although I doubt I'd trust them if they did mention it: I've had falcon 2s do the opposite of what the manual said in U101 (dev bias). Now I've got a 500ci spitting out donuts, but +5 AC mag does better than -10, and -10 was supposed to reduce them at the risk of faded colors. Replaced developers and same thing. I still have no idea what AC mag is, why these machines use AC and DC for dev bias, and how donuts even form magically. Yesterday I worked on a 2550 that occasionally misread nothing on the glass as 5.5x8.5. U099 looked like it might have something to do with it, but I couldn't figure out exactly what to change or how the machine interprets those numbers. In the manual, the purpose is: "To adjust the sensitiveness of the sensor and size judgement time if the original size detection sensor malfunctions frequently due to incident light or the like." Sensitiveness and incident light. Obviously. Why didn't I think of that. I just guessed and set the level from 170 to 100 and it seemed better. Why do I have to go to the KM-4230 or Ai2310 manuals to learn about cleaning drawer size PCBs? Why do I have to go to the LDC-650 manual to understand the fax symbols that U670 Protocol List gives me? I have a hard time understanding Vsg, Vt, Vg, etc. as well as all of the electromagnetic stuff in modern imaging units, but I'd love to have explanations in the manuals for all of these settings we have access to. Something like "You should really leave this alone. In the factory, setting this high did XYZ while setting it low did ZYX." So that if we ever come across something bizarre like XYZ, we can try fiddling with that setting instead of shotgun replacing parts or messing with all settings until something works. Granted, there might be a better way of solving the problem. It might be just masking the real problem, like adjusting the center line on the doc feeder when the real problem is the center line on the paper drawer. But I already have the original settings (thank you U000 usb support) if I later find the real fix. Oh, and how about a real list of CFxxx codes and their definitions. And maybe a real way of diagnosing how the main board isn't booting up instead of getting the same code for bad board, bad memory, bad hard drive, bad connection to the panel, etc. |
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