LazyTony
New Member
- Joined
- 2012
- Posts
- 4
- Geo
- Florida
Hello all. New to the forum here. Been lurking for a while and taking advantage of your fault code wiki. So thanks a bundle for that. I have an issue we have been dealing with here for a few months and thought it was enough for me to register and present the issue to the collective mind.
For the past few months, maybe even six months we have been having issues with out machine banding during runs. Sometimes it takes longer than other times but it happens all of the time. It shows in any color we do. Almost like thing white lines throughout the whole sheet, long edge. Stock type doesn't matter either, if we are running a saddle stitch book with 60# offset text and an 80# gloss cover it shows on both in the same place on both consistently once it has started.
When it occurs, we typically do a restart, a cleaning, a cmt, and sometimes a 951 and it will resolve the issue for a while but it will come back. The techs haven't been able to figure it out, and from what I understand they aren't taking the issue very seriously anyway. I am not here when they are normally, I am the weekend operator.
I saw somebody post something similar with color not staying and they had the middle etac sensor. Maybe this is the same issue and a possible solution. I will try to get more info from my week guy and my manager, seeing what has been tried already, etc.
I had one more thought. The only thing that has really changed since this started happening on both of our machines is the paper we use to run our CMT. We got a new manager around January and shortly after he requested we start using Mowhawk 80# gloss text. It is a good bright sheet, but we switched to it and then the problem started consistently. On both machines, and that is the only common denominator I can think of. New cmt stock on both machines and both machines get the issue. My manager dismissed this thought after I suggested we switch stocks for about a month and see if it improves. But maybe if I get enough feedback on it, possibly people having a similar issue with CMT stock I can present it to him.
Sorry for such a wordy introduction but I am hoping to maybe get a little insight into this situation.
For the past few months, maybe even six months we have been having issues with out machine banding during runs. Sometimes it takes longer than other times but it happens all of the time. It shows in any color we do. Almost like thing white lines throughout the whole sheet, long edge. Stock type doesn't matter either, if we are running a saddle stitch book with 60# offset text and an 80# gloss cover it shows on both in the same place on both consistently once it has started.
When it occurs, we typically do a restart, a cleaning, a cmt, and sometimes a 951 and it will resolve the issue for a while but it will come back. The techs haven't been able to figure it out, and from what I understand they aren't taking the issue very seriously anyway. I am not here when they are normally, I am the weekend operator.
I saw somebody post something similar with color not staying and they had the middle etac sensor. Maybe this is the same issue and a possible solution. I will try to get more info from my week guy and my manager, seeing what has been tried already, etc.
I had one more thought. The only thing that has really changed since this started happening on both of our machines is the paper we use to run our CMT. We got a new manager around January and shortly after he requested we start using Mowhawk 80# gloss text. It is a good bright sheet, but we switched to it and then the problem started consistently. On both machines, and that is the only common denominator I can think of. New cmt stock on both machines and both machines get the issue. My manager dismissed this thought after I suggested we switch stocks for about a month and see if it improves. But maybe if I get enough feedback on it, possibly people having a similar issue with CMT stock I can present it to him.
Sorry for such a wordy introduction but I am hoping to maybe get a little insight into this situation.