On Mon, Oct 08, 2007 at 01:08:33AM -0500, Steve Siegfried wrote: > > More than a year ago I purchased a used HP Laserjet 5MP with a low > > page count (15k). I connected it to my Debian server, configured it > > in Cups and all was well. It wasn't a speed daemon, but it printed > > a page every other minute if it wasn't too loaded. I have upgraded > > the memory to the max (24MB) and that speed it up a bit. > > > > Lately, the printer slowed down drastically, the new rhythm is one > > page every 15-20 minutes! These are PDFs, with some small graphics, > > nothing out of the ordinary. > > > > I moved the printer from my Debian server to my Ubuntu workstation. I > > then moved it to a Windows laptop. It is all the same. > > > > When I spool something, it starts blinking the data port and it just > > sits there. Maybe when the moons align just so, it spits out a page. > > > > Has anybody seen this problem? Does anybody know how to fix it? > > Should I just take it to the curb and let the trash truck run it over? > > I bought my 5MP new about 12 years ago and it's been rock solid. > However I did later upgrade the memory to 22MB and added a duplexer. I installed the memory a week after purchasing the printer, and it worked at decent speed since, until about a month ago. > I've never noticed any change in output rate when I changed from the > old LPR to the newer CUPS. It must have been either a kernel upgrade or a cups "upgrade". There is a lot of churn in the Debian testing cups packages. > Given how old some of these printers are getting, I'd suggest re-seating > the printer's network card and all of the memory sims. I'd also > suggest plugging it back into your network using a new network cable > and a different slot on your router/hub. If you're using the printer > directly connected instead of on a network, try a different printer cable > (or better yet, if it has a network card, use that instead). No network card. The same cable works fine from Windows. > If that doesn't fix the problem, then using the buttons on the top, > get into the "TEST MENU" (via the "Menu" button) and from there (via the > "Item" button) into: > "PRINT SELF TEST" > "PRINT LJ5 DEMO" > "PRINT PS CONFIG" > "PRINT LJ5M DEMO" > "CONT SELF TEST" My printer does not have a screen. The self-testpages (overview + postscript) do print quickly. > Once you get the output from these self tests, pay special attention to > the "Self Test / Configuration" and "Menu Map" output. If you've added > memory (and you have), you'll might need to adjust how it's used in the > MEM CONFIG MENU (but read the manual carefully before moving away from > "AUTO" settings here). > > In the "Menu Map" output (from the SELF TEST) you probably want: > Menu Map -> MEM CONFIG MENU: > I/O BUFFER = AUTO > RESRCSAVE = AUTO > -> PARALLEL MENU: > HIGH SPEED = YES > ADV FNCTNS = ON > -> SERIAL MENU: > PACING = DTR/DSR > BAUD RATE = 9600 (yeah... 9600, sheesh!) > DTR POLARITY = HI > -> POSTSCRIPT MENU: > PTR PS ERRS = OFF > JAM RECOVER = OFF > > I can scan and email the "Self Test / Configuration" and "Menu Map" > output I get if you're still having problems (or can't find/don't have > the manual). I do have the service manual. > 56160 pages and counting'idly, 16014 here. It's brand new ;) Thanks, florin -- Bruce Schneier expects the Spanish Inquisition. http://geekz.co.uk/schneierfacts/fact/163 -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: not available Type: application/pgp-signature Size: 189 bytes Desc: Digital signature Url : http://mailman.mn-linux.org/pipermail/tclug-list/attachments/20071008/b930789c/attachment.pgp