PC Review


Reply
Thread Tools Rate Thread

Can we put paper through a laser printer twice, safely?

 
 
eb7g
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      24th Nov 2004
Hi there

I'm wondering, if I want to conserve paper and use old paper that is
print on one side, but print on the back, is it safe for the laser printer?

The old paper can already have laser printed text on it. Alternatively
it may have injet ink on it.

I don't see a problem, of how it would wreck the drum, rollers, or other
internal mechanices.

anyone know?

 
Reply With Quote
 
 
 
 
Peter R. Fletcher
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      24th Nov 2004
On the face of it, this is no different than printing documents
double-sided (by turning the even pages over and printing the backs)
in the first place, and should be perfectly safe. You will have
problems with paper jams, though, unless you keep your "waste" paper
very carefully and are fanatical about lining it up when you put it
back in.

On Wed, 24 Nov 2004 07:52:15 GMT, eb7g <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote:

>Hi there
>
>I'm wondering, if I want to conserve paper and use old paper that is
>print on one side, but print on the back, is it safe for the laser printer?
>
>The old paper can already have laser printed text on it. Alternatively
>it may have injet ink on it.
>
>I don't see a problem, of how it would wreck the drum, rollers, or other
>internal mechanices.
>
>anyone know?



Please respond to the Newsgroup, so that others may benefit from the exchange.
Peter R. Fletcher
 
Reply With Quote
 
Bob Eager
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      24th Nov 2004
On Wed, 24 Nov 2004 08:13:49 UTC, Peter R. Fletcher
<pfletch(at)fletchers(hyphen)uk.com> wrote:

> On the face of it, this is no different than printing documents
> double-sided (by turning the even pages over and printing the backs)
> in the first place, and should be perfectly safe.


The one issue is the moisture content of the paper. If it's already gone
through once, the moisture content will be lower and it may behave
differently.

And, as you say, make sure it is perfectly stacked and lined up for the
second run.
--
Bob Eager
begin a new life...dump Windows!
 
Reply With Quote
 
Timothy Lee
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      24th Nov 2004
In message <(E-Mail Removed)>, Peter R.
Fletcher <(E-Mail Removed)> writes
>On the face of it, this is no different than printing documents
>double-sided (by turning the even pages over and printing the backs)
>in the first place, and should be perfectly safe. You will have
>problems with paper jams, though, unless you keep your "waste" paper
>very carefully and are fanatical about lining it up when you put it
>back in.


I do a lot of this and don't have problems with paper jams.

--
Timothy Lee http://www.wightproperty.com
tlatwightpropertydotcom
 
Reply With Quote
 
John Beardmore
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      24th Nov 2004
In message <(E-Mail Removed)>, Peter R.
Fletcher <(E-Mail Removed)> writes
>On the face of it, this is no different than printing documents
>double-sided (by turning the even pages over and printing the backs)
>in the first place, and should be perfectly safe. You will have
>problems with paper jams, though, unless you keep your "waste" paper
>very carefully and are fanatical about lining it up when you put it
>back in.


Even with mangled paper this works fine on the HP Laserjet 4M machines
as long as you set duplex to 'none'.

Obviously beware of inks and paper finishes that melt in the fuser.
Apply common sense.


J/.
--
John Beardmore
 
Reply With Quote
 
Alan
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      24th Nov 2004
eb7g <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message news:<P4Xod.321442$%k.218708@pd7tw2no>...
> Hi there
>
> I'm wondering, if I want to conserve paper and use old paper that is
> print on one side, but print on the back, is it safe for the laser printer?
>
> The old paper can already have laser printed text on it. Alternatively
> it may have injet ink on it.
>
> I don't see a problem, of how it would wreck the drum, rollers, or other
> internal mechanices.
>
> anyone know?


It's safe enough. Consider that duplex printers just feed the same
page back to print on the other side.
However, the paper after printing will have curled a bit, and more
likely to jam, which is why I don't do it routinely. Times when I've
wanted to duplex (by printing even pages, then restacking and printing
odd) I have to watch it carefully in case it misfeeds, or grabs two
pages, putting them out of sequence. But no damage to the printer.
I've done this with with HP LJ II, III, 4, 4L.

Couldn't vouch for inkjet-printed.
 
Reply With Quote
 
Arthur Entlich
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      24th Nov 2004
It depends.

I do it all the time, and have few if any problems. Firstly, do make
sure the paper has no staples, paper clips, glue or other things
connected to it, as they can damage internal parts of the laser printer.

However, the other potential problem has to do with the melting
temperature of the toner on the laser printed or photocopied materials.

If the toner on the older printing is such that it melts at a lower
temperature than the toner used in your printer, there might be some
transfer of the old toner to internal parts during the final fusing
process. This could contaminate the fuser roller. If the laser output
if from the same printer you use now, that is unlikely to make an issue.

I would test the one sided printed paper and make sure the print doesn't
seem to be getting remelted and removed. In most cases, it is fine to
do. If the paper appears to be sticking (you can usually hear it as it
passes through the fuser section, or it will literally get stuck in
there) I wouldn't do it. Otherwise, it's probably fine. The inkjet
output is likely just fine.

Art



eb7g wrote:

> Hi there
>
> I'm wondering, if I want to conserve paper and use old paper that is
> print on one side, but print on the back, is it safe for the laser printer?
>
> The old paper can already have laser printed text on it. Alternatively
> it may have injet ink on it.
>
> I don't see a problem, of how it would wreck the drum, rollers, or other
> internal mechanices.
>
> anyone know?
>


 
Reply With Quote
 
Joe Hayes
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      24th Nov 2004
A ream of copier paper is only a few dollars at most. Stop being so cheap.


"eb7g" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
news:P4Xod.321442$%k.218708@pd7tw2no...
> Hi there
>
> I'm wondering, if I want to conserve paper and use old paper that is print
> on one side, but print on the back, is it safe for the laser printer?
>
> The old paper can already have laser printed text on it. Alternatively it
> may have injet ink on it.
>
> I don't see a problem, of how it would wreck the drum, rollers, or other
> internal mechanices.
>
> anyone know?
>



 
Reply With Quote
 
jbuch
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      24th Nov 2004
eb7g wrote:

> Hi there
>
> I'm wondering, if I want to conserve paper and use old paper that is
> print on one side, but print on the back, is it safe for the laser printer?
>
> The old paper can already have laser printed text on it. Alternatively
> it may have injet ink on it.
>
> I don't see a problem, of how it would wreck the drum, rollers, or other
> internal mechanices.
>
> anyone know?
>



I've seen workplaces where this is common.

If you don't know about it, you can think something was botched about
your print job, especially if you are used to seeing just the black page
backs come out of the printer into the tray.

I don't like to do it because it makes it easier to mess up reading a
bunch of documents..... when you turn one over after reading, there is
still more to read.....but it has nothing to do with your task..... and
you can't rely on seeing the printed side to tell you that the stack of
paper is "face up".

Jim




 
Reply With Quote
 
Joel Kolstad
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      24th Nov 2004
"Joe Hayes" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
news:ir4pd.3360$Nw.1936@lakeread08...
>A ream of copier paper is only a few dollars at most. Stop being so cheap.


Yeah, cut down twice as many trees! Support the timber industry! Yah!



 
Reply With Quote
 
 
 
Reply

Thread Tools
Rate This Thread
Rate This Thread:

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are Off


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
OK to use inkjet paper in a laser printer? John D Printers 49 20th Apr 2008 09:48 PM
OK to use inkjet paper in a laser printer? John D Computer Hardware 39 20th Apr 2008 09:48 PM
Photo paper through a laser printer? Andrew Hamilton Printers 3 24th Feb 2008 05:50 PM
Paper jam in an HP 4si laser printer Jacques E. Bouchard Printers 0 27th Feb 2004 05:48 AM
Photo Paper Through Laser Printer?? Bob Kos Printers 8 20th Dec 2003 04:47 PM


Features
 

Advertising
 

Newsgroups
 


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 11:38 PM.