h a l f b a k e r yNeural Knotwork
add, search, annotate, link, view, overview, recent, by name, random
news, help, about, links, report a problem
browse anonymously,
or get an account
and write.
register,
|
|
|
|
Handy tip: Box the copier (they make less noise then too) and carefully vacuum-clean each sheet before putting it in. |
|
|
Also, try to store the photocopier/printer paper that you're about to use as close to the machine as possible. |
|
|
I've just discovered my printer has a self-cleaning button. no idea how it works though. |
|
|
I'd love to meet the cackling genius who devises the mechanics of these things and ensures that that weeny bit of torn paper is just out of reach of any little door you are allowed to pull open. its a bit like a mad mechanics advent calendar. |
|
|
[po] I think they work by 'blowing' more ink through the jets... as a pleasant side effect for the printer manufacturers, it also wastes as much ink as possible. |
|
|
Don't such "cleaning pages" already exist? (See link for an example of one.) |
|
|
where does that ink go then? no paper was going through the printer when that cleaning operation took place. |
|
|
Some have a sponge in them to soak it up. Some of it evaporates. |
|
|
(I was just trying to find a cartoon which had what happens to a printer when you run out of paper) |
|
|
[noOneYouKnow], erm, maybe? |
|
|
I've never seen them before, but I should think they would work in photocopiers, too. Especially the newer types which use laser printers/scanners. |
|
|
// Thanks for the link. // Ditto |
|
| |