Toshiba 3520C Manuale Utente

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Toshiba e-STUDIO3520c 
 
 
 
Copyright © 2008 BERTL Inc.  
All Rights Reserved. The license under which this document is made available and applicable law prohibit any reproduction or further transmission of any portion of this document. This 
document may only be viewed electronically through the www.BERTL.com Web site and may not be stored in electronic or hard copy format. Any reproduction of trademarks is strictly 
prohibited. BERTL accepts no responsibility for any inaccuracies or omissions contained in this document. 
Page 27
August 2008 
Toshiba e-STUDIO3520c 
www.BERTL.com 
ROUTINE MAINTENANCE 
Workgroup devices sold through retail and traditional IT 
distribution outlets usually are maintained by office workers 
who change the all-in-one cartridge units that encase the 
entire imaging system, including the toner cartridge (or the 
ink cartridges employed by ink-jet imaging systems).  Units 
sold through resellers and dealers are usually maintained 
by office workers and/or trained service engineers.  While 
separate long-life parts are more complex to install (i.e., 
separate toner cartridges, imaging drums, transfer belts), 
they tend to cost less than low- yield, all-in-one 
alternatives. 
 
Toner or Ink Replacement 
Changing the toner, imaging cartridge or ink cartridge is a 
necessary task that is traditionally is avoided by some for 
fear of toner dust or ink leaking on clothing or hands, or the 
fear that it might be too complicated.  However, most units 
today offer clean replacement of toner or ink supplies, and 
there is very little risk of toner or ink leakage.  Usually the 
replacement process is typically easy. 
 
Clearing Media Misfeeds 
The main issue that office users attempt to avoid is the 
removal of an occasional media misfeed.  As a general 
rule, the faster a device engine, and the more media 
handling and finishing options it has, the more complex is 
the process of removing media misfeeds.   
 
Common media-misfeed sources involve the duplex unit 
and poor loading of media supplies.  The position of the 
duplex unit may be a major factor in the removal of many 
media misfeeds.  How easy or difficult it is to load media 
supplies can also be a factor in the overall number of 
misfeeds that may occur. 
 
Loading Media 
It goes without saying that loading media should be as 
easy as possible, but sometimes that is not the case.  
Among the factors that affect ease-of-use are: 
 
•  The user should be able to load an entire ream (500 
sheets) in a single step. 
•  Mechanisms such as corner separators and ramps in 
the media drawer can impede loading media.   
The most critical factor involved in ease-of-loading media is 
automatic media-size detection.  Ultimately, the device 
should be able to recognize the new media size and reflect 
it on its control panel/touch screen and across the network 
in print drivers and printer-management software.  Without 
automatic media-size detection, users must remember to 
program-in the new media size—something they often 
neglect to do, or do incorrectly.  This can result in jobs 
printed on the wrong media size, backed-up job logs, etc. 
LOADING MEDIA 
 
Paper Loading Checklist 
Maximum media weight from all media sources? 
No 
Drop-in loading of a full ream of paper? 
Yes 
Corner separators in paper trays? 
No 
Spring-loaded ramps in paper trays? 
No 
Geared media size side guides? 
No 
Captured rear media guide? 
Yes 
Automatic paper size detection? 
No 
 
 
Both tray 1 and tray 2 can each hold 550 sheets of 20 lb. Bond 
/80 gsm or 500 sheets (105 gsm or 28 lbs bond media (in from 
5.5"x8.5"/A5-R up to 11"X17"/A3). 
 
 
In order to adjust the paper drawers, the user must unlock the 
drawer by squeezing the lock on the top left. Once unlocked, the 
user squeezes the green lever on the bottom right and then slides 
the guide into place.