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The only time I had anything resembling this kind of issue I found the problem with the encoder disc on the drive/x motor (so the motor that turns the grit-rollers). This smaller encoder disc had oil over it so it was messing up the feed readings and prematurely advancing the media. This was on...
Absolutely worth getting one (but make sure it's a quality brand - I like the Dahle for what it's worth). I've had one for about 5 years now, cut about 200+ synthetic paper posters on it every week, SAV, SAV + Lam and I'm still using the original rotary blade. If you're planning on cutting a lot...
Have you had a look at the HP support page for the L28500. It should have the various versions listed. Access to the page is not restricted to HP techs only.
I love it on my mac. Suitcase can stick it with their fees and needing to upgrade every other version just to work wirk with Illustrator. At $3-4 per month you can’t go wrong
If it's reading the OPOS marks then I'd venture a educated guess and say it's not your OPOS reader. Try a factory reset - I've done this before to resolve odd cutting behaviour. What printer are you working on BTW - a latex?
I used these guys:
https://www.electrothread.com/
I have more details at the office, but if I recall correctly I gave them my cable and told them they could use the original plugs, but I think they actually sourced the correct version.
To me this looks like a board or other electrical hardware issue. Encoders, both readers and lines, could do this - but not to this degree. What machine is this?
I found a cable manufacturing specialist is South Africa and simply had mine re-made. Look around in your area, you’re bound to have somebody who build cable for industry use. My aftermarket cable has lasted longer than the original.
My name is Stephen, not Stevie. I joined the group to partake in finding solutions and for asking assistance, not to deal with shitty responses from members. Why not actually offer assistance to jtiii instead of posting useless dribble?
I really, honestly get it. More than willing to help you try and figure out what the underlaying issue is. Dm me if you need more assistance and I'll try my best to help.
I’ve worked on all sorts of printers the last 20 years, and I guarantee you the latest latex and bigger name solvent machines are able to print at exceptionally high quality. But to often sales and technical staff don’t do their jobs by getting the machines dialed in perfectly. Look at running...
I get the solution, and have used this in artistic settings, but this isn’t a sustainable colour management tool at all. It’s teaching more people to ignore the bigger issue that they possibly don’t even know they have.
I get that the OP has this tip that helps him out, but this is a crummy plaster solution to a much bigger problem on so many printers, with operaters not caring to get educated on how to fix the problem. Again, not dissing the OP, but this is not moving a the problem towards a good, sustainable...
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