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Thread: Roller Marks on new 3880

  1. #1

    Join Date
    Jun 2008
    Location
    Dandenong Ranges, Australia
    Posts
    86

    Roller Marks on new 3880

    Thanks to everyone who has helped me navigate the jungle of colour management.
    I'm now getting some prints that are looking pretty good to my novice eyeballs.
    Originally I was using an 'el cheapo' printing paper just to get up to scratch. I thought the prints were looking pretty decent until I bought my first pack of Epson Premium Gloss. The difference in print quality has been stunning. So no more cheap paper for me.

    Anyway my problem is that the cheap paper was showing broad ugly roller marks in the deep shadow areas. With the Epson paper the marks are much less noticable and much narrower but still there if I hold the print at an angle.

    As most of my work is shot at night this is a real problem.
    The printer is only about a month old and is used irregularly.
    I live in a remote area and want to avoid sending the printer back for service if I can.
    Any ideas?

    cheers
    Steve
    Home is always just beyond the next photograph
    Tumut, NSW, Australia
    A Glass Eye & Three Wooden Legs

  2. #2
    Jim Ewins
    Join Date
    Apr 2004
    Location
    Seattle
    Posts
    388

    Re: Roller Marks on new 3880

    IT'S an Epson!! trademark

  3. #3

    Join Date
    Nov 2000
    Location
    Victoria BC Canada
    Posts
    274

    Re: Roller Marks on new 3880

    I had a similar problem printing digital negatives on Pictorico. Try using the manual front feed slot. It doesn't use the same rollers and it solved the problem for me. Because Pictorico is so thin, I tape it to a thicker pice of paper when feeding it through, as the front feed is intended for thicker media.

    Hope this helps.

    Dave

  4. #4

    Join Date
    Dec 1997
    Location
    Baraboo, Wisconsin
    Posts
    7,697

    Re: Roller Marks on new 3880

    I think the standard advice for eliminating roller marks is to clean the rollers.
    http://www.epson.com/cgi-bin/Store/s...147&foid=31095

    Are you sure these are roller marks and not the infamous "pizza wheels?" I think the solution for pizza wheels is supposed to be to widen the platen gap.

    Fortunately I've never had either problem with any of my four Epson printers so I'm just going by what I remember or think I remember reading, not from experience.
    Brian Ellis
    Before you criticize someone, walk a mile in their shoes. That way when you do criticize them you'll be
    a mile away and you'll have their shoes.

  5. #5

    Join Date
    Jun 2008
    Location
    Dandenong Ranges, Australia
    Posts
    86

    Re: Roller Marks on new 3880

    Quote Originally Posted by Brian Ellis View Post
    I think the standard advice for eliminating roller marks is to clean the rollers.
    http://www.epson.com/cgi-bin/Store/s...147&foid=31095

    Are you sure these are roller marks and not the infamous "pizza wheels?" I think the solution for pizza wheels is supposed to be to widen the platen gap.

    Fortunately I've never had either problem with any of my four Epson printers so I'm just going by what I remember or think I remember reading, not from experience.
    Hi Brian thanks for the link, I didn't find that in the help manual. I will follow it up.
    BTW it's definately roller marks - regular linear banding perpendicular to the feed direrction.
    cheers
    Steve
    Home is always just beyond the next photograph
    Tumut, NSW, Australia
    A Glass Eye & Three Wooden Legs

  6. #6

    Join Date
    Jun 2008
    Location
    Dandenong Ranges, Australia
    Posts
    86

    Re: Roller Marks on new 3880

    Quote Originally Posted by SteveH View Post
    Hi Brian thanks for the link, I didn't find that in the help manual. I will follow it up.
    BTW it's definately roller marks - regular linear banding perpendicular to the feed direrction.
    cheers
    Steve
    Brain
    do you know if this is still relevant to the 3880?
    I believe its a different beast service-wise?
    thanks
    Steve
    Home is always just beyond the next photograph
    Tumut, NSW, Australia
    A Glass Eye & Three Wooden Legs

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