There are new (-ish) ones like the LSU adjustments. Think they came out 2006.ĥ0-22 (Registration)/ 44-2 (Sensor adjustment)/ 44-6 (High Density PC)/ 44-27 (Clear Halftone Density values)/ 44-26 (New Halftone density value)/ 61-13 (Clean LSU values) / 61-11 > Light/ Medium/ Dark (New LSU Values)/ 64-24 (Copy Color Adj)/ 46-74 (OR 24) Copy/Print Calibration/ 50-28 > Original/ ADF/ Engine (Off Center/ Lead and Trail edge adj)Īll this would take. standard sims for routine maintenance that have not changed much since. I used to work for Ricoh and across the entire fleet from small desktop colour to high volume colour, all you needed to do was tell the device what unit(s) you were replacing, change the value in service mode (simulation) and on boot up the device would automatically initialise the unit you replaced and off you went.There are. If this is true I didn't realise Sharp was so far behind in the game. OK, so going off the comments above, there is no generic simulations you would recommend across the entire Sharp fleet whether the device was colour or black and white? I understand the MXC357's and 507's are Lexmark which are different but say from the BP20C20 to MX2651 to MX6071 to MX7081 you need to use different simulations for each of these models when initialising developer, resetting counters, preforming skew adjustments or colour registration.
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