Robin-Whittle
Newbie to Printing
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Summary: I was able to extend the life of the original toner cartridges in a Brother HL-4040CN without adding any toner - just by resetting the flag gear in the carts. The description below is what I did for the three colour carts. Presumably the same procedure would work for the black cart. It may well apply to some other Brother colour laser printers.
These carts also have a little window on each side. I haven't tried taping over these with black gaffa tape, because the carts are not yet close to empty - but this is a way of getting more use out of limited toner in the HL-5250DN.
I bought a Brother HL-4040CN in mid-2009 ago on special. It was a good deal. They can still be bought for AUD$400 or less inc. GST. I found that the print quality was not quite perfect - some minor mis-registration between the colours and black - but I am fussy. If there was a block of half-tone colour, there might be horizontal bands of more intense colour. However, testing it now, I find no bands at all. The quality is fine for my needs. For really high quality, a good inkjet and special paper is required.
The printer runs off the LAN and it turns its fans off when not in operation. It is quite bulky, but I like this, since it probably means larger toner carts and larger components in general for a longer life.
I was printing mainly text documents such as academic articles with a few colour illustrations. Only rarely did I print large photos.
One day, it refused to print (at least for a colour file) displaying: "Toner Life End - Replace Cyan(C) & Magenta(M) & Yellow(Y) Toner Cartridge." Via the front panel I found it had printed 2980 colour pages and 687 mono = 3667 total.
The specifications:
http://www.ht.com.au/part/U8244-Brother-HL-4040CN-printer-colour-laser/detail.hts
are that its initial cartridges will do up to 1500 pages at 20% coverage (M, C and Y) and likewise up to 2500 pages for BK.
The initial carts are TN-150 "standard-yield". TN-155 carts are "high yield" and are rated for 4000 pages for colour and 5000 for black. The TN-155 prices are pretty frightening - at ht.com.au AUD$251 each for the colour carts and AUD$168 for the black. I am sure plenty of people go out and spend AUD$921 once their printer tells them to replace the carts. There are also non-genuine carts for AUD$100 or so each.
I considered getting non-genuine carts, and then looked at toner refill kits. I bought a set of toner refills from The Printer Ink Warehouse http://www.ink-refills-ink.com/printer/HL+4040+CN+Color/16857/ in Michigan USA, because I have had such good experiences with their refills for the HL-5250DN (see other posts in this forum).
I was able to land the full set of refills - 3 x 150 grams C, M, Y and 1 x 160 grams BK - in Australia for close to AUD$100. I think this is a very good deal.
The instructions concern two things. Firstly, removing the old toner with vacuum and/or compressed air - and then half-filling the cart with new toner. Secondly, resetting the flag gear. With the HL-5250DN, I found it was indeed necessary to remove the old toner to avoid "shading".
I emptied the toner from the black cart - there was 46 grams remaining. So I put the toner back. I did not touch the flag gear for the black cart.
Then I considered the colour carts. I had weighed two of them when the printer was new, and by reweighing them, I determined they had only lost 15 or 16 grams of toner. Not bad for all those pages!
I reset the flag gear on the colour carts, put them all back in the machine, and after a few minutes it was happy to print again.
When the printer complains about the black cart, I will reset its flag gear. I plan to keep doing so for all carts until either the cart itself becomes worn out, or the cart is actually empty. If it is empty, I will vacuum it out to remove the old toner. I may remove the roller to do this more effectively. Then I will add the Printer Ink Warehouse toner and reset the flag gear again.
To reset the flag gear, I removed the cover of the left of the cart - by removing two screws and undoing a little clip on the front end of the cover (to the right when looking at the left of the cart). The spring can be pulled back, the gear pulled off and then put back in the proper position. With the cart sitting on a table, the correct position is where the symmetrical pointy bit of the flag gear is at about 10:30 o'clock, with its right side resting on the spring.
The instructions from Printer Ink Warehouse were for TN110 and TN115, but seemed to match my TN-150 carts. The instructions showed two flag gears - one for the TN-110 (AKA TN-150, I guess) one for the TN-115 (AKA TN-155, I guess). The gears go in the same position, but their flags - the bit which sticks out - are in different places on the gear.
It seems that on the very first turn of the toner cart, the flag gear sticks out its flag, to be sensed by a switch. After this, the flag gear runs out of teeth and sits parked in a position where the flag does not stick out. The low-yield carts have the flag initially at 1 o'clock and the high-yield carts have it at 5 o'clock. So the printer firstly determines that a new cart has been added by the flag sticking out on the first few revolutions. It figures out the low or high yield status of the cart by an early switch closing being "low yield" and a later one being "high yield".
Perhaps there's not a lot of difference between these carts - though I guess they put less toner in the low-yield ones.
At my current rate of toner usage, it looks like I will be right for quite a while.
Robin Whittle http://www.firstpr.com.au
These carts also have a little window on each side. I haven't tried taping over these with black gaffa tape, because the carts are not yet close to empty - but this is a way of getting more use out of limited toner in the HL-5250DN.
I bought a Brother HL-4040CN in mid-2009 ago on special. It was a good deal. They can still be bought for AUD$400 or less inc. GST. I found that the print quality was not quite perfect - some minor mis-registration between the colours and black - but I am fussy. If there was a block of half-tone colour, there might be horizontal bands of more intense colour. However, testing it now, I find no bands at all. The quality is fine for my needs. For really high quality, a good inkjet and special paper is required.
The printer runs off the LAN and it turns its fans off when not in operation. It is quite bulky, but I like this, since it probably means larger toner carts and larger components in general for a longer life.
I was printing mainly text documents such as academic articles with a few colour illustrations. Only rarely did I print large photos.
One day, it refused to print (at least for a colour file) displaying: "Toner Life End - Replace Cyan(C) & Magenta(M) & Yellow(Y) Toner Cartridge." Via the front panel I found it had printed 2980 colour pages and 687 mono = 3667 total.
The specifications:
http://www.ht.com.au/part/U8244-Brother-HL-4040CN-printer-colour-laser/detail.hts
are that its initial cartridges will do up to 1500 pages at 20% coverage (M, C and Y) and likewise up to 2500 pages for BK.
The initial carts are TN-150 "standard-yield". TN-155 carts are "high yield" and are rated for 4000 pages for colour and 5000 for black. The TN-155 prices are pretty frightening - at ht.com.au AUD$251 each for the colour carts and AUD$168 for the black. I am sure plenty of people go out and spend AUD$921 once their printer tells them to replace the carts. There are also non-genuine carts for AUD$100 or so each.
I considered getting non-genuine carts, and then looked at toner refill kits. I bought a set of toner refills from The Printer Ink Warehouse http://www.ink-refills-ink.com/printer/HL+4040+CN+Color/16857/ in Michigan USA, because I have had such good experiences with their refills for the HL-5250DN (see other posts in this forum).
I was able to land the full set of refills - 3 x 150 grams C, M, Y and 1 x 160 grams BK - in Australia for close to AUD$100. I think this is a very good deal.
The instructions concern two things. Firstly, removing the old toner with vacuum and/or compressed air - and then half-filling the cart with new toner. Secondly, resetting the flag gear. With the HL-5250DN, I found it was indeed necessary to remove the old toner to avoid "shading".
I emptied the toner from the black cart - there was 46 grams remaining. So I put the toner back. I did not touch the flag gear for the black cart.
Then I considered the colour carts. I had weighed two of them when the printer was new, and by reweighing them, I determined they had only lost 15 or 16 grams of toner. Not bad for all those pages!
I reset the flag gear on the colour carts, put them all back in the machine, and after a few minutes it was happy to print again.
When the printer complains about the black cart, I will reset its flag gear. I plan to keep doing so for all carts until either the cart itself becomes worn out, or the cart is actually empty. If it is empty, I will vacuum it out to remove the old toner. I may remove the roller to do this more effectively. Then I will add the Printer Ink Warehouse toner and reset the flag gear again.
To reset the flag gear, I removed the cover of the left of the cart - by removing two screws and undoing a little clip on the front end of the cover (to the right when looking at the left of the cart). The spring can be pulled back, the gear pulled off and then put back in the proper position. With the cart sitting on a table, the correct position is where the symmetrical pointy bit of the flag gear is at about 10:30 o'clock, with its right side resting on the spring.
The instructions from Printer Ink Warehouse were for TN110 and TN115, but seemed to match my TN-150 carts. The instructions showed two flag gears - one for the TN-110 (AKA TN-150, I guess) one for the TN-115 (AKA TN-155, I guess). The gears go in the same position, but their flags - the bit which sticks out - are in different places on the gear.
It seems that on the very first turn of the toner cart, the flag gear sticks out its flag, to be sensed by a switch. After this, the flag gear runs out of teeth and sits parked in a position where the flag does not stick out. The low-yield carts have the flag initially at 1 o'clock and the high-yield carts have it at 5 o'clock. So the printer firstly determines that a new cart has been added by the flag sticking out on the first few revolutions. It figures out the low or high yield status of the cart by an early switch closing being "low yield" and a later one being "high yield".
Perhaps there's not a lot of difference between these carts - though I guess they put less toner in the low-yield ones.
At my current rate of toner usage, it looks like I will be right for quite a while.
Robin Whittle http://www.firstpr.com.au