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HP-97 Printer Head - Printable Version +- HP Forums (https://archived.hpcalc.org/museumforum) +-- Forum: HP Museum Forums (https://archived.hpcalc.org/museumforum/forum-1.html) +--- Forum: Old HP Forum Archives (https://archived.hpcalc.org/museumforum/forum-2.html) +--- Thread: HP-97 Printer Head (/thread-250065.html) |
HP-97 Printer Head - aj04062 - 09-11-2013 I have a HP-97 that had a printer head failure. It has clearly overheated and burnt out. The plastic holder and rest pad are slightly melted, but usable, I think. I have a new head. However, I am concerned about the failure mode of the prior head. Do you know how this would have happened? I don't want to install a new had just to see it burn out as well. Could it have occurred if someone tried to print without paper?
I looked at the service manual on the DVD set, but nothing jumped out at me regarding this kind of failure.
Re: HP-97 Printer Head - Randy - 09-11-2013 Quote:No, but individual element failures are common. FWIW, I've never seen one that melted the surrounding plastic. Quote:I would agree, not a good idea. It would be a very expensive fuse. Quote:I doubt it. Doing it long term might cause a few elements to fail but not melt things. I would first measure the elements and see how many are failed. One or two is normal. More than that and I'd be concerned that the PIK is gone. A shorted driver transistor (Q1-Q7) would certainly cause a head element to fail if it was powered on for a long time and possibly generate enough heat to melt plastic.
You could provide seven dummy load resistors the same value as the head elements (~10-12 ohms) and power it up. See what the voltage drop is across each element - any with high drop are on all the time and should not be. Next step would be to print and verify that each transistor switches...
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