WowKeith — these are the steps I’d follow. I had a very similar error years ago, and this is how I troubleshot it:
Procedure (high level):
- Ignore the ribbon cable. In my experience, the odds of that being the root cause are close to zero.
- Pause on the potential printhead issue for now. A replacement head is ~$1,500, so I wouldn’t start there.
- Check the motherboard fuses (most likely). This is the most common fix I’ve seen, and you can do it yourself.
- Power the printer off, unplug it, then press/hold the power button to discharge.
- Remove the plastic panels per the service manual to access the main board.
- Use a multimeter in continuity mode and test each fuse. A good fuse will beep / show continuity; no continuity = blown fuse.
- If you’re unsure which components are fuses: either use the service manual, or take clear photos of the board and have ChatGPT/Gemini point them out.
If you find a blown fuse:
These are tiny micro-fuses and exact matches can be hard to source. The most practical route is to buy a cheap used/for-parts motherboard on eBay (same model or closely related SureColor models with the same board layout), verify its fuses test good, then have a local electronics repair shop swap the fuse. That typically costs far less than a printhead and doesn’t require an “authorized” technician.
Finally: I can hear the frustration—unfortunately you may not find someone who will truly diagnose at component level. The fastest path here is taking control of the basics (fuse testing), and escalating only if the board checks out.
I am attaching an image of my motherboard for the S40600 with the blown fuse. I am also attaching an older model motherboard that I used as a donor board. This one came with two fuses.
i think this get some sort of AWARD for the most wrong headed advice i have ever seen on this site
BUY A FOR PARTS BOARD to obtain a fuse????