14 Mar 2008 02:11:36 | Jason Sprague
font size="2" face="verdana">With most printers, over 50% of
all problems are customer fixable. This guide was created to
help bail you out when you get stuck on tough printing problems.
NOTE: If you need specific information or help with a
particular printer, please contact the printer manufacturer.
You troubleshoot printing issues like you would any other
computer/network related problem. You start at a general point
and rule out the possibilities until you have the specific
cause. The first question that you need to answer is: "Is the
problem hardware, software, network or performance related?".
Hardware:
First make sure that the printer is on and that it is in "ready"
position. Make sure that there are no error messages on the LEDs
or LCD if applicable. Now complete the following
steps:Any printer worth owning, can print an internal
test or configuration page. This is absolutely the first thing
that you want to do, even if you think that the hardware is not
the issue. Make sure that the page will print and it looks good.
If it prints go to step 3 - If it won't print, go to
step 2.Test page didn't print? Any error messages?
Try cycling power on the printer and try again. If it still
doesn't print, many printers have a special reset often referred
to as an NVRAM reset. NVRAM stands for Non-volitile RAM and is
where a printer may store a variety of information including
network settings, ripped print jobs and more. Sometimes a piece
of corrupted information from a bad print job can "confuse" a
printer and cause it to hang. Sometimes an NVRAM reset will
flush this bad information and restore the printer. It may also
wipe all of your network/printer settings so you should contact
the printer manufacturer before doing this. If this procedure
doesn't fix the problem, then call for service.Your
test page printed? Good! Take a good look at it and see if there
are any print quality problems(i.e. spots, streaks, etc). If the
test page looks fine, then you are probably dealing with a
network or software problem. If there are visible problems, then
keep reading. Before doing anything else, consult your
manufacturers documentation for a list of recommended cleaning
procedures before moving to the next step. Almost all printers
have "consumable items" or CRCs. These are parts of the printer
that are customer replaceable and have a lifespan, which means
that they aren't intended to last forever. On a laser printer
these may include a fuser, photo-receptor, scorotron charger,
toner cartridges and more. It is a good idea to keep spares of
these parts on hand for troubleshooting reasons. You can save a
lot of time and headache waiting for a technician, by swapping
these parts one at a time and seeing if it cures the problem.
Make sure that you run about 20 test pages after inserting a new
CRC and see if there is improvement. Sometimes hardware failures
can leave messes that have to be "mopped up" with quite a few
test pages. If these steps do not cure the problem, then contact
the manufacturer for further assistance.
Network:
When troubleshooting networking problems with printers, you will
typically follow the same lines of reasoning that you would
troubleshooting a PC networking issue especially with newer
models of printers. The very first thing to do is narrow down
the scope the problem. Is it only an issue for 1 PC, multiple
PCs or all of them. Once you have answered this question, the
following steps should get you on your way.
ISSUE IS AFFECTING 1 OR SOME PCs: If it is just one PC,
make sure that the PC is functioning properly on the network.
Can it see file servers, print to other printers, ping other
devices, etc. If the answer is "no", then it is not a printer
issue. If the answer is "yes", continue reading. Do print jobs
make it to the printer? Most printers have an LED or LCD message
that will signify that the printer is processing a job. Try the
driver test page that can be printed from the properties
dialogue box for the printer. Does this print? If "no" go to
step 2. If "yes" then it is probably a problem. If
you are at this step, it means that nothing will print from 1
PC. This is most likely a configuration problem. Make sure that
you can communicate with the printer at a protocol level. For
example: if the printer has an IP address, can you ping it? If
it is Appletalk, does it show up in the chooser? Many printers
have an internal "configuration page" that can be printed that
will list the network addresses and available protocols. This
can often be found on an LCD when applicable. If the answer is
"no", go to step 3. Find out what is acting as the print
server for the printer. Some printers act as their own print
server and others will print through a Novell queue, Windows LPR
port or jet direct box. Try sending the test page and see if it
makes it to this device. Does the job show up in the Novell
queue? Does it appear in the NT queue? If the job doesn't appear
in the queue, go to step 4. If the job is making it to
the queue but not to the printer, Make sure that this is the
same queue that the other PCs are printing to. If so, then quite
frankly there is something very goofy going on if this is the
only PC having the problem. Get the classifieds and look for
another job. If you are at this step, it is because the PC
cannot communicate with the printer at a protocol level, but can
communicate with all other devices and other devices can
communicate with the printer. Not sure what to tell you here.
May be a routing/addressing issue of some kind. Consult your
local network guru. If you are at this step, it is
because the print jobs are not making it into the queue on the
print server. We will assume that the PC is able to connect to
the print server via an appropriate protocol(if not, then it is
not a printer issue). This is almost always a driver
configuration issue. It usually means that the driver is not
pointing to the correct port, print server or queue. Go to
another PC and check the network settings for the printer in
question. Go back to the ailing PC and delete the printer.
Reinstall the printer and insert the correct network path, port
or queue, depending on how you are connected. Sometimes
permissions problems can cause weird printing behavior. Make
sure that this user has appropriate permissions to use this
resource. ISSUE IS AFFECTING EVERYONE: Make
sure that you can communicate with the printer at a protocol
level. For example: if the printer has an IP address, can you
ping it? If it is Appletalk, does it show up in the chooser?
Many printers have an internal "configuration page" that can be
printed that will list the network addresses and available
protocols. This can often be found on an LCD when applicable.
Make sure that these settings are correct. If you are able to
communicate with the printer, go to step 2. If not, then
make sure that the printer is on the network. Check cabling,
network addressing/configuration, etc. Check the cabling by
connecting a known working device to the network drop that the
printer is on and see if you are able to communicate with it. If
not, then get a new cable. If you can see another device on this
drop, their may be a hardware problem with the printer. Although
it is rare, network cards do fail. Find out what is
acting as the print server for the printer. Some printers act as
their own print server and others will print through a Novell
queue, NT port or jet direct box. Send a test page from the
print server to the printer. Does this print? If "yes", go to
step 3. If "no", continue reading. If the test page doesn't
print from the print server, it means that the print server
probably isn't properly configured for that printer which would
obviously prevent anyone else from being able to print to it.
Check the type of printer port or queue that you have configured
and make sure that it is correctly pointing at the printer.
If you are at this step, it is because nobody can print to
the printer except for the print server. Make sure that the
printer is shared on the server and appropriate permissions have
been set. Try sending the test page and see if it makes it to
the queue on the print server. Does the job show up in the
Novell queue? Does it appear in the NT queue? If the job appears
in the queue, go back to step 2 as something is either
wrong at the print server or all of the PCs are pointing to the
wrong queue on the print server. Software:
This tends to be the most complicated of the 3
types of problems and we would have to write a novel to cover
everything. Unfortunately, we just don't have that kind of time,
so we are going to try to give you some tips to get you headed
in the right direction. When investigating software printing
problems there are many useful techniques and questions that
need to be asked. The first one is to find out which Page
Description Language(PDL) is being used. The 2 most common are
PostScript(by Adobe) and Printer Control Language(PCL by HP).
Below are some of the fundamental questions that should be asked
early in a problem investigation.
POSTSCRIPT TECHNIQUES/QUESTIONS: Is it actually a
PostScript file that you are sending? If the printer prints out
an endless stream of ASCII text, the printer is receiving PCL
data. Get the correct PostSript driver for your printer.
Reprint the job, this time selecting "print to file" in the
print dialogue box. It will create a *.prn file. Open it using
Notepad and make sure that the first line of the file starts
with "%!". This signifies that it is PostScript. What
printer driver was the PostScript file created with? Make sure
you have the latest and greatest one. Consult your printer
manufacturer. What application was used to create this
file? Do all applications do this? Have you tried an
alternative printer driver? And what were the results?
Has this exact same file been printed on a second PostScript
printer? What were the results? Was there a PostScript
Error page? What did the error page say? Look up errors at: http://www.prepressure.com/ps/dbase/overviewerrors.
htm Try to distill the original file using Acrobat
Distiller. If a PDF file is created, you should be able to print
it, other wise, you will probably get a PS error. PS
errors can often be caused by corrupt graphics. When trying to
distill the file, see which page it faults on. Go to that page
in the document and try removing all of the graphics.
Have you tried recreating the PostScript and resubmitting
the file? HP/PCL TECHNIQUES/QUESTIONS: What
printer driver was the pcl file created with? Make sure you have
the latest and greatest one. Consult your printer
manufacturer. What application was used to create this
file? Do all apps. do this? Have you tried an
alternative printer driver? And what were the results?
Has this exact same pcl file been printed on a second PCL
printer? What were the results? What are the specific
image errors viewed by the customer? A PCL file will continue
printing incorrectly and will not leave an error page.
Have you tried recreating the PCL and resubmitting the
file? Performance:
Performance related issues are usually the result of incorrect
customer expectations. There are actually 3 parts to print
performance. The time that it takes the job to get to the
printer, the time that it takes for the printer to process the
job(RIP) and the time that it takes for the printer to actually
print the job once it has received it. Let's look at each of
these separately.
TRANSFER TIME:
This really has nothing to do with the printer at all. If jobs
are taking a long time to get to the printer, check your network
traffic. You may have to get a network sniffer or network
monitoring software to check this. If you are using an external
print server such as a Jet Direct box, consider the fact that
you actually have a parallel connection to the printer which has
a slower transfer rate than a network connection. The parallel
connection from the print server to the printer is a bottleneck.
Some printers are now supporting 100baseT connections which may
help in this area.
PROCESSING TIME:
The processing that occurs on a printer is called Raster Image
Processing(RIP). This is the process of the printer converting
the file sent into image data that the printer uses to "paint a
picture" on the page. If this process appears to be slow, the
first thing to consider is the size of the file being sent. If
you are sending a 5mb file, it is going to take some time to
process. Note: In order to view the true size of the file being
processed by the printer, you must print to file and then find
the size of the file after it has been run through the driver.
PostScript files can be as much as 3x larger than the original
file. Send over a simple notepad file with the word "test" on it
and see if there is a significant difference. Find out if the
printer's memory is upgradable. This can help with processing
times. Most printers have different print quality settings
specified by dots per inch(DPI). File sizes will typically be
larger when higher resolutions are selected.
PRINT TIME:
The print speed that is quoted by the manufacturer does not
include transfer or processing time. It only includes print
engine speed once the job is processed. If the printer handles
multiple paper sizes, the print speed probably is referring to
the speed for the smallest paper size. If you are printing on
pages larger than 8.5x11 inches, the print speed will be slower.
If it is a color printer, find out if there are different speed
capabilities for color and monochrome. Most printers have
different print quality settings specified by dots per
inch(DPI). Printers will typically print slower in higher
resolutions.
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