Home Forums Chat Forum Why is it printing like this?

Viewing 30 posts - 1 through 30 (of 30 total)
  • Why is it printing like this?
  • zippykona
    Full Member

    Printer heads aligned ,heads cleaned and lots of ink.
    Is it time for a new one?

    1
    midlifecrashes
    Full Member

    Looks like it might be wedding stationery, you have to pay more for that.

    1
    kelvin
    Full Member

    Is it the In-laws’ printer?

    scruff9252
    Full Member

    Looks like Gods’ knackered it

    maccruiskeen
    Full Member

    Disappearing ink?

    richmars
    Full Member

    What make and type of printer is it?

    the-muffin-man
    Full Member

    Try changing the text colour to a dark blue – that way Cyan, Magenta and Yellow will be used too.

    Could just be the black print head that’s buggered. The shape of those lines doesn’t look consistent with head problems though. They are usually linear and uniform in pattern.

    2
    jonwe
    Free Member

    I’ve owned a lot of inkjets from all the big manufacturers and they have all ended up doing that especially if they are not used regularly (daily or weekly). They clean themselves each time you turn them on/off by wasting vast quantities of your very expensive ink, so if you don’t cycle them they dry out and block the printheads which are built into the printer or print head (depending on manufacturer. Sometimes you can clear it with several cleaning cycles or flushing through the head (if it’s built into the printer) with cleaner, other times the head is caput and you need a new head/printer/cartridge.

    I eventually gave up and bought a home laserjet which is utterly reliable but only black and white. IF anyone wants colour they can look at it on the internet IMHO.

    zippykona
    Full Member

    It’s an HP officejet 6230

    nickc
    Full Member

    Have you used non-HP ink cartridges?

    1
    Drac
    Full Member

    Let’s address the elephant in the room.

    You know some of god’s relations?

    richmars
    Full Member

    So an HP will replace the print head when you get new ink, so should fix the problem, unless the interconnect between the head and rest of the printer is damaged, which I’ve never seen.

    But given the cost of a new cartridge Vs a new printer it may be cheaper just to buy a new one, and sign up to the ink subscription plan.

    fossy
    Full Member

    The 6230 just takes ink, it has a built in print head by the looks of the cartridges. Try IPA or brake cleaner on the print head (remove cartridges first). That looks partially blocked.

    spooky_b329
    Full Member

    As the others said, normally the print head is disposable i.e built into the cartridge, so a new cartridge will be a new print head.

    1
    maccruiskeen
    Full Member

    You know some of god’s relations?

    maybe it’s a hit list 

    1
    fossy
    Full Member

    HP used to do print heads in the cartridge, but more recently they haven’t. Our current ‘HP Ink’ subscription printer has cartridges with no head.

    richmars
    Full Member

    I’d use water on a cotton bud if you’re going to try cleaning the heads. The ink is water based which is why it sticks to your hands.

    hot_fiat
    Full Member

    We used to use paper to clean print heads as it’s the material it’s designed to touch. Newsprint is good as it has loads of detergent left in it (also great for glass as a result). Just wrap it around some folded up kitchen roll, make it damp with a spray of water then carefully rub the print head over it. Then we’d make up a test sheet like a de stijl artwork with heavily contrasting colours and get it to spew that out a few times along with a few pages of quick brown fox.

    zippykona
    Full Member

    Which bit do I clean?

    The printing is for signs for Christmas card stock. Mystery over.

    richmars
    Full Member

    The nozzles are made in a very thin sheet of kapton which will be a transparent brown colour. They are very delicate and there will also be (probably) a non wetting coating applied to the kapton, which can be rubbed off. I would use a cotton wool bud and very gently wipe the surface of the kapton.

    You will need to take the cartridge out of the printer to clean it 

    ossify
    Full Member

    I never knew until now that there was such a thing as a godbrother or godsister.

    You learn something new every day.

    theGrinder
    Full Member

    there is a way of getting the printer to perform some self cleaning and then some deep cleaning – it’s happened to me twice when the printer has not been used in a while.

    took longer to find the access into the process on the printer

    Settings   Printer  Printer Properties  Maintenance Tab  Clean or Deep Clean – print test page – does it all itself and my printer is donkeys old

    hot_fiat
    Full Member

    Urgh, looks like its not intended as a user serviceable part. That said printheads are only about £20. 

    (881) How to change printhead on HP Officejet 6810 6820 6830 Printer CQ163-80060 – YouTube

    molgrips
    Free Member

    I’ve owned a lot of inkjets from all the big manufacturers and they have all ended up doing that especially if they are not used regularly (daily or weekly).

    My HP does not do this, although previous Epson ones did. We’ve had it years, used very irregularly, seems to be unstoppable.

    I’m not sure that’s blocked print head though as each line has at least some full print parts in it. Looks like it might be just buggered.

    1
    wordnumb
    Free Member

    It aspires to be a graphic designer for early 2000s hipster magazines.

    1
    kayak23
    Full Member

    Never understood why cards need to be relation-specific.
    🤔

    Do you do a second-cousin-twice-removed, good luck in your new home one?

    2
    zippykona
    Full Member

    Kayak, Christmas is a nightmare.
    Mum and partner.Dad and partner. Daughter and partner and every combination of people under the sun.
    Mother’s day is going **** stupid as well…you’re like a mum to me …blah blah blah.

    richmars
    Full Member

    Could be some dust in the print head that’s moving around. Or an air bubble. Or damaged non wetting coating causing the face of the nozzle to flood. 

    1
    tjagain
    Full Member

    zippy – I have godless children and godless grandchildren – got any cards for me?

    (I take on some of the godparent role but cannot be an official godparent as I am not baptised hence godless parent  Their mother was religious)

    timmys
    Full Member

    Long term solution; buy a cheap laser printer and never worry about this sort of crap every again.

Viewing 30 posts - 1 through 30 (of 30 total)

You must be logged in to reply to this topic.