klmiller611
New Member
Updated 11 am
Hi All:
I'm hoping some of the helpful folks here have a few suggestions of what to look for here.
We've had our Anapurna Mv since December 2008, and generally speaking has been a good machine. In the last few months, on occasion, I can be printing, stop to change the head height or clean heads and when I go to do a prime test, one head or the other will totally not fire on the test, repeat, same thing, clean, do a complete flush, nothing. What was then the procedure was a complete shut down, let it sit with no power on for 10-15 minutes, and that usually cleared the problem.
There is no consistency of how or when it occurs, but it usually clears up and I can proceed. Yesterday afternoon, naturally with something that needed to go out, both the black and yellow heads would not fire.
I can pump the ink through them as in cleaning, no problem. I spent an hour going back and forth with this, occasionally, one would fire, then the other would not, then it would switch positions. In other words, one might fire for one prime sample, then the other might a few cycles later, but the first one would stop. I tried the shut down and unplug two different times, to no avail. When I raise the head and did the jet test, where you can visually watch it fire the jets into the air, nothing was showing on either.
Thus far, I've not fired the printer up this morning, but getting ready to go out and do so now.
The lamps are brand new only two weeks old. I'm suspecting there is an electrical contact issue somewhere. The printer is on a dedicated circuit, unplugged when not in use, and always shut down on advent of an electrical storm. It has about 2100 hours of service over time, which I know for five years is not a lot.
As a follow up this morning, I just did a test prime, and most everything was firing perfectly with light cleaning. Of course, that got me to thinking about what could be the issue and it lead me to static, as I had printed some coro and attempted to print some styrene just before this. During the winter, static has been an issue in the past, but it was primarily with static pulling the cyan (mostly) ink vapor out of the air and onto the surface of the coro. Could there have been enough static charge to have entirely stopped the heads from firing?
When I went back to print, it was on a posterboard material, so static is not going to be an issue with that. But the sitting overnight would seem likely to have allowed a static charge to dissipate. Thoughts?
I welcome any suggestions
Best
Ken
Hi All:
I'm hoping some of the helpful folks here have a few suggestions of what to look for here.
We've had our Anapurna Mv since December 2008, and generally speaking has been a good machine. In the last few months, on occasion, I can be printing, stop to change the head height or clean heads and when I go to do a prime test, one head or the other will totally not fire on the test, repeat, same thing, clean, do a complete flush, nothing. What was then the procedure was a complete shut down, let it sit with no power on for 10-15 minutes, and that usually cleared the problem.
There is no consistency of how or when it occurs, but it usually clears up and I can proceed. Yesterday afternoon, naturally with something that needed to go out, both the black and yellow heads would not fire.
I can pump the ink through them as in cleaning, no problem. I spent an hour going back and forth with this, occasionally, one would fire, then the other would not, then it would switch positions. In other words, one might fire for one prime sample, then the other might a few cycles later, but the first one would stop. I tried the shut down and unplug two different times, to no avail. When I raise the head and did the jet test, where you can visually watch it fire the jets into the air, nothing was showing on either.
Thus far, I've not fired the printer up this morning, but getting ready to go out and do so now.
The lamps are brand new only two weeks old. I'm suspecting there is an electrical contact issue somewhere. The printer is on a dedicated circuit, unplugged when not in use, and always shut down on advent of an electrical storm. It has about 2100 hours of service over time, which I know for five years is not a lot.
As a follow up this morning, I just did a test prime, and most everything was firing perfectly with light cleaning. Of course, that got me to thinking about what could be the issue and it lead me to static, as I had printed some coro and attempted to print some styrene just before this. During the winter, static has been an issue in the past, but it was primarily with static pulling the cyan (mostly) ink vapor out of the air and onto the surface of the coro. Could there have been enough static charge to have entirely stopped the heads from firing?
When I went back to print, it was on a posterboard material, so static is not going to be an issue with that. But the sitting overnight would seem likely to have allowed a static charge to dissipate. Thoughts?
I welcome any suggestions
Best
Ken
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