![]() We specialize in everything business technology from copier, fax, printer and scanner technology to document management, onsite paper shredding services, VoIP phone systems and managed IT support to video surveillance solutions. is an Oklahoma City-based, family-owned leading provider of office technology solutions to small and medium-sized businesses in Oklahoma and Kansas. You can also just click the button below, fill out the form, submit and expect to hear from us right away. If you have any questions about copiers or business technology, give us a call at 40. If you take the above measures and are still not able to make those lines on your copies disappear, contact us so we can do our magic or contact your servicing dealer. Also, directly applying liquid to the glass risks damaging the copier should any liquid slip down into the machine via seams and cracks. NOTE: Do not try to clean the glass with any abrasive or with acetone, benzene, ammonia, ethyl alcohol or carbon tetrachloride as these will ruin the glass. If the line is gone, problem solved! Congratulations! Where you see the line is where you will find the dirt. Take the new copy with the line and line it up with the ADF glass. With either copier manufacturer, if the cleaning cloth or tool seems to have grown legs and walked off, any lens cleaning cloth - such as you would use for cleaning glasses - will do the job just as well.Īfter you have finished cleaning, run a blank sheet through the copier to see if you have any lines. Pull it out and pass the brush over the ADF until the dirt is free. Sharp: Lift the copier lid and fastened to the bottom-side to the right you should find a small, typically green-colored brush-type tool. ![]() If the residue is particularly stubborn, carefully scrape at it with your fingernail until it busts free and then wipe it again with the cloth. Ricoh: Look for a small cleaning cloth typically in a small cubby positioned on the left side toward the top of the copier, and wipe that up and down the ADF. With use, as paper moves past the ADF, any scum on the paper, whether that is paper dust, sticky-note glue, grease from your French fries, or (if your copier is in an auto shop motor) motor oil, all of that can get transferred to the ADF, blocking the light from reaching your document and thence making lines. When it comes to Ricoh and Sharp copiers, the culprit producing those lines is most likely dirt on your ADF - that’s the long, narrow glass strip to the left of the main glass - also called a scan slot. ![]() Those lines can be quickly and easily removed with just a little bit of knowledge, time and some tools. If you find yourself “reading between the lines” on your copies, don’t worry. When people say to “read between the lines,” they’re not talking about the lines on copies from a copier. ![]()
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