Border Press
New Member
I have an Arizona 318 GL Flatbed with RMO. The ink heater will not turn on and marks N/A on the temperature. On the maintenance screen the temperature reads 9990000000000000000. Can anyone help me figure out what's going on?
	
		
			
		
		
	
			
			Thank you I'll check that out.Probably one of the thermistors inside the printhead is broken. Problem is, that it's inside the head and it's very difficult to replace/bypass it. You need an SDS key to check, which head has the wrong temperature reading.
If I find which one it is would it mean that I would have to replace that printhead?Probably one of the thermistors inside the printhead is broken. Problem is, that it's inside the head and it's very difficult to replace/bypass it. You need an SDS key to check, which head has the wrong temperature reading.
No neither heating element seem to turn on. I hear a noise by the ink pumps on the right side of the gantry. I'm guessing that must be the coolant pump. But nothing heats up.AlsEU is right, one (or more) of the printheads providing wrong temperature values. But the temperature value shown in the GUI is just an visualization of the average of all temperature sensors together. This value is not used to activate or deactivate the heater system. The heating system is self-controlled with temperature sensors on ink reservoir in carriage and coolant reservoir in right side gantry. The only sensor that deactivate the heating is „coolant low“-sensor.
Print starts if temperature measured in one slot (default 5, first cyan) reached the threshold. The default can be changed in registry.
Does the coolant pump and degassing pump start to work on heating? Does the heater elements on ink an coolant reservoir start to heat?
Coolant level is goodYou need to check:
- the coolant level
- possible leaks from the coolant pump
- heater on the coolant tank
- thermistors inside the heads (SDS required)
- heater behind the ink manifold
- when did you flush the coolant system and replace the coolant for the last time? It should be done once per year...
- how old are coolant tubes? Were they replaced?
In time coolant thickens (the water from it evaporates and therefore the liquid is thicker) - that's the reason to replace it once per year. Also, residues precipitate on the tubing walls and inside the pump, which reduces the flow and makes the pump work harder - as a result the pump may become broken due to the too high loading or it will stop pushing the coolant through the tubing. After 6 years I would recommend a coolant system flushing (using demineralized water) and replacing the coolant liquid and the coolant tubing regardless of the temperature error (otherwise the coolant tubing may crack inside the IGUS chain, which may be dangerous for the electric cables located nearly). These service procedures require an SDS key (service key). SDS is not required for thermistors, it is required to enter the service menu and perform many service procedures and diagnostics. You should try to locate a service engineer or someone which has the SDS key and knows the service procedures for these printers to find out, where is the problem.Coolant level is good
No leaks
Neither heater turns on
Don't have SDS for thermistors
We haven't been instructed on how to flush coolant system. Machine is 6 yrs old. Coolant tubes have not been replaced.
