Gary, thanks for the reply which I just read this afternoon.
Two days ago, I went to a PC sales outlet and looked at Canon's new
low-priced printers equivalent to my BJC-3000. Each one had its USB
receptacle surrounded with a square plastic "collar", or as you wrote,
"shroud". The collar/shroud is an integral part of each new printer's
case.
I had a narrow piece of card stock along with me, marked with the depth
of insertion possible with my printer, and it was identical to that of
the new printers, so the USB female connector hasn't changed.
I also had my USB A to B cable along, and I tried plugging the B-plug
into the store's Canon printers receptacles, and the collar/shroud
fitted snugly around the plastic handle of the plug and prevented any
side-to-side or up-down movement of the plug, and so I'd say Canon
redesigned the USB connection to prevent cracking of the stopper inside
the receptacle.
It seems odd to me that I can't find any examples posted on the
Internet by others of this problem with the earlier Canon printers.
(I'm not too surprised that Canon doesn't mention any problem in any of
their literature!)
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