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G8MNY  > TECH     27.04.24 11:01l 178 Lines 8964 Bytes #999 (0) @ WW
BID : 6384_GB7CIP
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Subj: Xerox Copier Principles
Path: IW8PGT<IZ3LSV<DB0ERF<OK0NAG<OK0NBR<SR1BSZ<IW0QNL<JH4XSY<JE7YGF<LU4ECL<
      I0OJJ<GB7CIP
Sent: 240427/0833Z @:GB7CIP.#32.GBR.EURO #:6384 [Caterham Surrey GBR] $:6384_GB
From: G8MNY@GB7CIP.#32.GBR.EURO
To  : TECH@WW

By G8MNY                                        (New Comments Dec 04)
(8 Bit ASCII graphics use code page 437 or 850, Terminal Font)

After working on a few old copiers & laser printers, here is a brief overview
of how they do their magic.

TONER
This is the very fine black (or Cyan, Magenta & Yellow) powder "ink" that forms
the image. Each particle consists of a low melting point glue (polystyrene)
centre with a dye (carbon) outside.

HAZARDS
Toner: This gets everywhere, so when working with it have a vacuum cleaner &
soft brush handy to suck up spills, never blow it clean! Wear a mask if no
vacuum cleaner handy.

Voltages: Very high voltage is used in this process, so never override safety
interlocks etc. they are there for your safety!

Weight: The larger machines can be very heavy, so use help to move, & watch out
for heavy top decks when propped open!

OPTICS
This is cleaver, all done with 6 mirrors. They convey the image from (1) a
moving light (300W) scanning mirror, that moves over the entire image, to a
half moving pair (2 & 3) of mirrors that maintain a constant distance from the
original image to the lens. The lens position & the next pair of mirrors (4&5)
form the Zoom feature of most copiers as well as keeping the final image
focused. The last mirror (6) is fixed & presents the image to top of the drum.
For cleaning note all the mirrors are surface silvered & are easily damaged,
only use the lightest of cleaning pressure!

When double side printing it is worth noting as there is a lens involved & the
scanning is from underneath original & printing is on top of the paper, the
image is always reversed. e.g. top is bottom, but the starting edge is the
start edge. This my not be the same with digital copiers!

The optics are normally maintained clear of misting when the copier is
apparently powered off by a permanent heater (30W).

             O r i g i n a l   I m a g e
       ..............................................Glass Plate
2 /          1 ³
/'    <---- /\@) Scanning             Movable
`\       Mirror & lamp                    /\ Lens   \ 4 Zoom &
 3`\      --------------------->         ³  ³ -----> `\ Focus
  Half                             Fixed  \/           `\Mirrors
Travelling                         Mirror              /'
 Mirrors                  Charge    6/   <--------   /'5
                       Corona Wire /'|             /'
                      Small a_ b[.] \|/c
                     Lights ³@_..---.._ d
                    Scraper ./ DRUM -> \.        New
   Fuser               /  \ ³    With   ³       Toner
    Unit _.._     Waste\_/g³    Light    ³e _ _³Hopper
       ./Hot \.     Toner   ³ Sensitive ³  \__/
       ³ Roll ³     Hopper  `\_Coating_/'
 _ _ _ _\_._./_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _`_-_-_'_ _ _ _ _   /___ Paper path
       ./'  `\.    Flat feed      [.]f             \   (from paper draw)
 Metal ³ Lamp ³   Tractor     Transfuse
 Roller`\_  _/'                (charger)
          `'                   (wires)
THE DRUM
This is an aluminium tube with a fairly long wearing photo sensitive Selenium
coating. It is a very good insulator & can store strong static charges but when
light falls on it, it quickly leaks away the charge. (if drum is removed avoid
scratching & finger prints etc, & don't leave drum exposed to bright light
[sun]).

DRUM PROCESS
a/ The drum is electrostaticly discharged with a row of small lights.
b/ Then it is "charged up" with static from the nearby corona wire (10kV?).
c/ The well focused & in step light image falls on the rotating drum.
d/ The static is discharged were the light falls producing an electrostatic
   drum image.
e/ This passes very close to the toner hopper where the black particles are
   picked up on the charged areas to make a toner image.
f/ When the drum & image reaches the paper another static charge under the
   paper encourages the drum to drop the toner image.
g/ The drum then passes a soft rubber scraper to remove surplus toner.

Depending on its diameter, the drum may rotate several times for a single sheet
of paper. The initial static charge, & image light level both affect the
contrast & are normally varied to get the exposure correct.

Electrostatic fields actually get stronger with finer images, so fine detail
(other than focus, unmatched speeds, toner particle size & paper grain) is not
a problem for the Xerox process, compared to some digital scanners/printer
copier systems.

PAPER HANDLING
Movable rubber pickup rollers in the paper box as well as & paper switch gates
for manual feeds all need sensors to make sure the paper is in the right place
before the copy process can start.
The flat feed tractor sometimes use fan suction to gently handle the paper &
loose toner image into the fuser unit.
As all these are very mechanical & liable to paper dust they do give trouble,
so clean them as needed with damp cloth/alcohol (meths).

FUSER UNIT
This is the last part of the process 8/, it has a heated roller tube normally
with a 1kW lamp inside. It is maintained around 100øC, THAT IS HOT & it is
reaching the running temperature that takes up the initial warm up time. A
seconds rubber pressure roller makes sure the outgoing toner image is fully
fused to the paper.

Often an economy mode is used to reduce the fuser temperature, but then it will
takes a minute or so to be ready to copy. The temperature of the fuser unit &
feed speed, determine what type of clear acetate OHP material that can be used.

LASER PRINTERS
These work much the same as copiers, except a laser & mirror scanning system
erase the charged drum with the image to form the white areas.

------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comments from Harry M1BYT @ GB7CFR...

Over time & usage the pickup rollers can become hardened & glazed by the
passage of the paper. If simple cleaning does not help & they retain the glaze
indicated by paper misfeeds, then they are quite cheap to replace though often
difficult to get at inside the works. One solution which has worked several
times for me, is to clean the rollers with 'sticky stuff remover'.
This solution seems to both dissolve the glaze & soften up the rubber to make
it as good as new, often without a great deal of dismantling.

Horizontal lines across the width of the paper & similar regular defects, can
be diagnosed by measuring how far apart they repeat. The repetion rate will
exactly match the diameter of one of the rollers, the drum, or the heated
roller in the paper path.

There is a school of thought which suggests the fine toner particles will pass
straight through a vacuum cleaner dust bag, so the use of a domestic vacuum
cleaner might not be advisable. Cold water on a cloth is the recommended method
of cleaning up spillages.... Not hot, as this melts the toner fixing it & you
will then never get it off. The same applies to clothes which has had toner
spilled on them, wash them well in cold water first, never hot.

The fuser rollers often prove to contain nothing more than a simple tubular
tungsten halogen lamp as the source of heat in the middle of the roller. Often
these can be bought much more cheaply as sold for there original purpose at an
electrical dealer, a T/H lamp as used for lighting up your drive.

Grades of toner can vary from machine to machine, but it is often possible to
refill a œ60 original toner cartridge combined with drum several times at a
cost of œ15 per fill. The process typically involves hot cutting a hole in main
hopper to refill it & cutting a second hole to drain the waste toner section to
drain that. Drilling can allow small fragments of plastic to abrade the drum,
so the method is to make the hole(s) with something similar to a heated apple
coring implement (ask SWMBO). A metal one rather than the plastic ones which do
tend to melt :-) 

Once the draining (usually every 2nd refill) & the refilling is complete, the
hole is covered with sticky tape or similar.

The more capable printers often contain a fan & filter to prevent toner
escaping into the office atmosphere. This might need to be cleaned or replaced
at regular intervals.

As regards buying & running a laser printer, the best and cheapest to run are
the ex office machines. These can often be had for simply taking them away,
they are built to last and the cartridges are often 3 or 4 times the size of
the home lasers and cost not much more. Larger paper capacity, probably more
capable, reliable & much faster than a home model. Their sheer size need not be
a problem, you can put them out of the way if they have a network card or
install an after market network to parallel printer adaptor, plus run a LAN.

Mine lives in my shack in the loft, always on standby, available to any of my
PC's on the LAN. Just one machine to be fed watered & maintained very
occasionally.     


Why Don't U send an interesting bul?

73 De John, G8MNY @ GB7CIP


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