On 4/2/19 4:57 PM, Guy Dunphy via cctalk wrote:
One other tip that might be useful. Very commonly with
old photocopiers
and laser printers the rubber pick-up and paper feed rollers lose their
'tack' and slip on the paper. I found that briefly soaking them in
teatree oil restores the 'tack' quite well. It soaks in and seems to
have the right spread of rubber-soluble oils to keep the surface a
little tacky.
Anyone else found other solvent/oils with similar effect?
I've never considered oil / solvents. I'd worry about transference to
paper.
I have taken the rubber parts off and boiled them. Or at least put them
in water as hot as I could get it. (You can only do so much when you
put water in a blank CD spindle lid in the low wattage microwave at work.)
This helps remove the accumulated acid from the paper. In doing so, the
rubber becomes more tacky again.
I found one boil cycle to yield good results. Two cycles slightly
better. More than that and the RoI drops through the floor.
--
Grant. . . .
unix || die