Intermec Technologies 06CN3 CN3 User Manual part 3
Intermec Technologies Corporation CN3 part 3
Contents
- 1. User Manual Compliance Insert
- 2. User Manual 1 of 6
- 3. User Manual 2 of 6
- 4. User Manual 3 of 6
- 5. User Manual 4 of 6
- 6. User Manual 5 of 6
- 7. User Manual 6 of 6
- 8. Compliance Insert
- 9. User Manual
- 10. Manual
- 11. Radio Info
- 12. User Manual part 1
- 13. User Manual part 2
- 14. User Manual part 3
- 15. User Manual part 4
User Manual part 3
6822 Series 80-Column Printer Photo of printer not available at this time User’s Manual 6822 User’s Manual Series 80-Column Printer 6 Troubleshooting This chapter helps you correct printing problems that may occur. If you experience a printing problem, you can perform several tests to find and possibly correct the problem. In this chapter you will find these sections: • Checking the power source • Aligning the printer mechanism • Troubleshooting system components • Communications pin-out configurations 6822 Series 80-Column Printer User’s Manual 97 Chapter 6 — Troubleshooting Checking the Power Source Press any button on the printer control panel. If there is power, the power indicator (green LED) turns on and the printhead moves to its starting position. If the printer emits beeps and any of the other indicators light up or flash, observe the number of beeps and indicator flashes and see “Printer Failure Indicators” on page 102 If there is no reaction from the printer after you press a key on the control panel, or only the green power light blinks, verify that the power cables are properly connected between the printer mechanism and its power source (internal battery, vehicle cable, or ac). If none of these steps “wake” up the printer with the problem, then you need to return the printer for service. • Internal battery Check the battery and its cable by installing into another knowngood printer. • Vehicle cable Attach the printer in question to another vehicle power cable. • AC power Plug the printer into another outlet. Aligning the Printer Mechanism If head jams occur, you may need to align the printer mechanism. To align the printer mechanism 1 Open the printer top cover, then install a ribbon cartridge (see page 15) and position the printhead to the far left toward the green thumb wheel. 98 6822 Series 80-Column Printer User’s Manual Chapter 6 — Troubleshooting 2 Check the area between the printhead and the printer cavity. If the ribbon cartridge touches the pivot frame, the printer mechanism needs realignment. Pivot frame Printhead at far left in the printer 3 Loosen the four screws that hold the mechanism in place using a Phillips screwdriver (see the following illustration). 4 Push the printer mechanism to the right away from the green thumb wheel. 5 Press on the right side of the printer mechanism to the back as far as it will go. Note: In this position, the right back edge of the printer mechanism may touch the pivot frame. The left side must not touch the pivot frame. 6822 Series 80-Column Printer User’s Manual 99 Chapter 6 — Troubleshooting 6 Hold the printer mechanism in place and tighten the screws in the sequence shown below. 1 Top right 3 Top left 2 Bottom left 4 Bottom right Four screws hold down the printer mechanism Troubleshooting System Components The printing system is composed of four basic components: printer, computer, power source, and communications. Any one of these components can prevent the printer from functioning properly. Verifying the Printer Components Power Source Verification Start by verifying that power is available at the printer. Visually inspect the control panel to verify that the power indicator (green LED) is lit. If it is not, press the Set Page button and note if the power indicator lights up. If it does, the power system is all right. If it does not, press the printer reset button. If the power indicator still does not light, check the power cable, by connecting it to a different printer. If the power indicator works on the new printer, then the cable is all right, and the printer that was originally connected is suspect. If it does not light, then the problem is most likely the cable or the power source. Depending on the results, either replace the cable or return the printer for service. 100 6822 Series 80-Column Printer User’s Manual Chapter 6 — Troubleshooting Printer Verification If the power indicator works properly and the printer still does not print, then printer errors are noted. If any indicators light when you press the Set Page button, or the printer beeps, refer to the Printer Failure Indicators table on page 102 to determine the problem. If none of the listed conditions are indicated by the beep codes and LEDs, yet the printer does not perform properly, then perform a printer self-test. Press and hold (for several seconds) both Form Feed and the Set Page buttons at the same time, until the printer beeps and all indicator lights come on. The lights change throughout the test, as it progresses. At the end of the self-test, the printer generates a report. This report verifies the following: errors detected during self-test, the error history, and the communication configuration. If the printer self-test report does not print, then reset the printer. If the report does print after resetting, then the printer is all right and the reason the printer does not respond to PC print requests is probably communications or PC related. If the report is partially completed, and a printer error occurs during the printing of self-test, refer to the Printer Failure Indicators table on page 102 for the cause of the printer failure. Perform a power-on-self-test (POST) to test for errors either by resetting the printer or powering it up. If errors occur, audible error codes, along with indicator light status, are produced during POST (see the POST Error Codes table on page 104). If the POST completes without error, try the printer self-test again. If the self-test prints correctly, but the printer does not respond to the PC, then the problem may be related to communications or PC problems. Communications / PC Verification Use the self-test report to verify that the communications protocol options, selected at the printer, match those expected by the host. If they do not match the expected results, reconfigure the printer using the control panel configuration modes described below in the Configuration part of this chapter. 6822 Series 80-Column Printer User’s Manual 101 Chapter 6 — Troubleshooting If the protocol options match, then the communications cable may be defective. To determine if the cable is working, substitute a new cable. If the PC is suspect, substitute a different PC. A defective computer dock might be another possibility. Understanding Printer Errors Printer Errors are divided into classes: • Runtime errors • POST errors, • Fatal errors (consisting of flash write errors and EEPROM block errors). Runtime Errors Runtime errors can occur during the course of printing. These errors are displayed on the LEDs, along with beep sequences. This causes the printer to stop printing and enter an error state. Then beep sequences are emitted, LED codes are displayed, the error status may be sent to the host (depending on the protocol), and the printer goes into suspend mode. The printer exits from the suspend mode when the user presses one of the keyboard keys or communications is resumed from the host. The printer also places the printhead in its home position and attempts to recover from the error condition. Until the error condition is corrected, the error procedure does not end, and the error state is not removed. For paper out errors, load paper and press the Set Page button before printing begins. Press the Form Feed button to load the paper to the top of form. The following table provides a listing of printer failure indicators and describes what they mean. Printer Failure Indicators Sets of Beeps Paper Out Head Jam Low Batt Meaning 1 beep 1 set of 2 beeps Off Off Off Off On 2 blinks 1 set of 3 beeps Off Off 3 blinks 12 V under voltage fault (Low Battery) 12 V over voltage fault (Input Voltage too high) 24 V under voltage fault (internal power supply failure) 102 6822 Series 80-Column Printer User’s Manual Chapter 6 — Troubleshooting Printer Failure Indicators (continued) Sets of Beeps Paper Out Head Jam Low Batt Meaning 1 set of 4 beeps Off Off 4 blinks 1 set of 13 beeps 2 sets of 2 beeps 2 sets of 3 beeps 2 sets of 4 beeps 5 sets of 2 beeps Off Off On Off 5 blinks Off 2 blinks Off On 5 blinks Off 2 blinks Off Off 5 blinks 3 sets of 2 beeps 3 blinks Off 3 blinks 3 sets of 4 beeps 4 sets of 2 beeps 12 sets of 12 beeps Off 4 blinks Off 3 blinks 4 blinks Off Off Off Off 24 V over voltage fault (internal power supply failure) Configuration error printhead over temperature Paper Out Head Jam Paper feed current fault (Possible paper jam or feed motor failure) printhead over current (printhead failure) Home switch failure printhead short (printhead failure) Operating System software failure Note: The most common errors are Paper Out, Low Battery, and Head Jam. Status indicators on the front panel alert you to these errors. For a description see “Understanding the Status Indicators” on page 3 Power-On-Self-Test (POST) Errors When you reset the printer, a POST runs to determine why the printer might be failing. Audible error codes, along with indicator light status, are produced during POST if an error occurs. See on POST Error Codes on page 104. To perform a POST 1 Open the printer case. 2 Insert the printer diagnostic cable into the phone jack on the printer and then connect the 9-pin D-Sub plug to your PC. The cable is used during POST to configure the printer, access printer diagnostics, update software, and install new fonts. 6822 Series 80-Column Printer User’s Manual 103 Chapter 6 — Troubleshooting 3 Press the Reset button to start the POST. When the POST starts, green Power LED will come on followed by a single beep indicating that the printer is active. Note: After the test is completed, all LEDs turn off and the printhead moves to the home position. Only runtime errors or fatal errors are reported until the next time the printer is reset and POST is performed. The printer emits beeps and flashes the LEDs to indicate the cause of any POST errors. POST error codes are described in the following table. POST Error Codes Long Beep Short Paper Head Beep Out Jam Low Batt Power Meaning Off Off Off Off Off Off Off Off Off On Off On Off Off On On Off On On On Off Off On On Off Off Off Off Off On Off On On On On On On On On On Off On On On Operational No Power Control program Initial Program Load (IPL) successful Invalid CRC on boot block Invalid CRC on control program or program not found Upper 192K RAM failure Upper 64K RAM failure Diagnostic mode command check Diagnostic flash memory check failed or is not initialized Diagnostic memory write failure Control program IPL Fatal Errors There are two types of fatal errors, flash write errors and EEPROM configuration block errors. These errors are extremely rare, but measures are built into the printer diagnostics to track possible occurrences. Flash Write Errors Errors related to writing or erasing flash are critical errors. These errors cause the printer to stop all processing and produce an LED code and a sequence of beeps. The LED code indicates the address of the segment where the error occurred in octal notation. 104 6822 Series 80-Column Printer User’s Manual Chapter 6 — Troubleshooting The octal digit changes every four beeps until four octal digits are output. Only four octal digits are output since blocks are 256 bytes in size and flash can be addressed with a total of 0x7ff blocks. The segment address output is the runtime address of the flash block and not the offset of the block within flash. To obtain the block offset within the flash • Subtract 0x800 from the address output to determine the block offset. The printer suspends after the processing the error code. When the printer resumes, an error again and the printer suspends again. Reset the printer to correct the error. If a reset does not correct the error, have the printer checked by a qualified service technician. Note: Flash write errors may be unrecoverable. EEPROM Configuration Block Errors Errors related to an invalid configuration block (diagnostic block) produce 13 beeps, and then the printer suspends. It continues to produce this symptom until the configuration block error is corrected. Configuration block errors may be caused by a flash write error or an incorrect printer configuration. Reset the printer to correct the error. If a reset does not correct the error, have the printer checked by a qualified service technician. Self-Test Function Descriptions The self-test performs the following functions. Boot Block Program Verification A CRC (Cyclic Redundancy Check) is performed on the boot block program. The calculated CRC is compared to the CRC embedded in the program module. Control Program Verification A CRC is performed on the control program, which is loaded into writable flash program memory. The calculated CRC is compared to the CRC embedded in the program module. The results of this test are printed on the self-test report. 6822 Series 80-Column Printer User’s Manual 105 Chapter 6 — Troubleshooting Font Module Verification A CRC is performed on the font modules, which are loaded into writable flash font memory. The calculated CRC is compared to the CRC embedded in the program module. Results are printed on the self-test report. A2D Check Current reading of the A2D sources are performed, and the results are printed on the self-test report. Nonvolatile Diagnostic Memory Verification A CRC is performed on the area of the nonvolatile diagnostic memory that has a CRC over it. Results are printed on the self-test report. Nonvolatile Diagnostic Memory Update The nonvolatile diagnostic memory is updated from the nonvolatile diagnostic memory data shadowed in memory. Detailed Printer Self-Test Perform a self-test to verify printer functions, and provide reporting of printer diagnostics. The self-test performs a series of internal diagnostics and prints the results. When the self-test begins, the beeper sounds for half a second and all LEDs turn on for half a second. Initiating Self-Test • While the printer is idle or in Suspend mode, press the Line Feed and Set Page buttons simultaneously to initiate a self-test. Terminating Self-Test • Press the Line Feed and Set Page buttons simultaneously to manually terminate a self-test. Self-Test Report Note: This method is recommended to determine printer functionality. 106 6822 Series 80-Column Printer User’s Manual Chapter 6 — Troubleshooting A self-test is equivalent to a warm start. Both are performed when you simultaneously press Form Feed and Set Page buttons on the control panel for a few seconds. Release the buttons when the printer beeps and all indicators are lit. If you press the buttons for too long, the self-test will not happen and the printer will form-feed one page. As the self-test progresses, the indicator lights change. Internal tests are performed and the two page report is printed. This report provides helpful information in diagnosing and troubleshooting printer problems. When you perform a self-test, the following actions occur: • All LEDs are turned on to verify the lights work • A 600 ms beep is emitted to verify the beeper works • LEDs flash individually to show progress during internal tests • Current voltage and ambient temperature are obtained • Validity of diagnostic block program is checked • Validity of boot block program is checked • Validity of control program is checked • Validity of loaded fonts is checked • LEDs turn off • Self-test report is printed Printer capability is diagnosed by printing the report. Device errors are displayed on the LEDs and emitted by the beeper. The printer then does a warm reset (soft reboot) when an error is encountered or when the selftest report prints. Understanding the Self-Test Report The self-test report is divided into sections. Refer to page 110 and page 111 for a sample printout. All other values are informational only. Remember that these values are cleared after the self-test. • The printer model number is given on line 1 (first line). This identifies the printer type used, in this case the 6822. • The 8-digit serial number of the printer is listed on line 4 under the “Serial#” heading on line 3. The serial number is also on the inside of the printer. In portable printers, raise the printer mechanism to look for the number on the inside back wall. 6822 Series 80-Column Printer User’s Manual 107 Chapter 6 — Troubleshooting • Battery Voltage, (line 13) Indicates the input voltage sampled at the beginning of the self-test. The input range must be between 7.5 and 15 V. The input voltage must be greater than 10.5 V to charge the internal battery. At 7.5 V or less, the Low Batt LED comes on and the printer enters Sleep mode. At 10.5 V or less, the Low Batt comes on but the printer still prints. • Auto Feed (line 16) Auto feed is a configurable item. Carriage Return (CR) means no auto linefeed. This is the most common setting for applications using NPCP CR+LF means a line feed will be added to each CR. This setting can produce double-spacing of reports. See “Setting the Autofeed” on page 29 • Interface Mode (line 17) Interface mode lists the interface protocol for the printer. The typical setting is NPCP. Others include DTR with no, odd, or even parity, and IrDA. See “Protocol Selection Mode” on page 29 • Bit Rate (line 18) Bit rate is commonly set to 19200 (19.2K) or 9600 bps. See “Selecting the Bit Rate” on page 29 • A2D History (lines 21 through 25) Shows the recorded history for voltage measurements and temperature measurements. • Head Jam History (lines 26 through 29) Provides information on head jams. If the printer is having frequent head jams, these lines can assist in determining the problem. Head Jam History Information Heading Description Home Command Err indicates the home position LED sensor has failed. Indicates which printer command was executed when the head jammed. Indicates which way the head was moving, left is toward the home position and right is away from the home position. Home position is at the extreme left, toward the green thumb wheel. Indicates the acceleration speed of the printhead when the jam occurred. Direction Speed 108 6822 Series 80-Column Printer User’s Manual Chapter 6 — Troubleshooting Head Jam History Information (continued) Heading Description Step The acceleration step at the jam. 0 means no steps were taken, 15 means all steps were taken. 1-14 indicates the printer jammed during acceleration or deceleration. The ambient temperature at the last head jam. The temperature is listed in Celsius. Position of carriage at the time of the jam in 1/720 in = 12 * step position. Divide the number by 12 to get the step position. There are 512 steps across the page. If it is jammed at position 0, check the printer mechanism alignment. If it is jamming in the middle, it is more likely a dirty ribbon or obstruction in the printhead’s path. Temp Position • Head Dot Pattern (line 37) Is used to verify the individual dot wires. There should be nine dots. If some dots are missing, it could be a printhead failure or a circuit board failure. • Error Log information appears on lines 38-43. This information is cleared after every self-test. Error Log Information Heading Description PE HJ 12Vu 12Vo 24Vu 24Vo Home Number of paper jams while feeding paper Number of head jams while printhead is moving Number of 12 V under-voltage Number of 12 V over-voltage Number of 24 V under-voltage (head/motor voltage) Number of 24 V over-voltage Number of home detect errors (typically caused by paper scraps or circuit failures) Unused Number of head over-current errors (typically caused by a bad printhead) Number of head driver short errors (typically caused by circuit failures) Number of paper feed motor over current errors (excess current in paper feed motor could indicate circuit failure) Temp OverC HeadS Fault 6822 Series 80-Column Printer User’s Manual 109 Chapter 6 — Troubleshooting Error Log Information (continued) Heading Description ADErr EEErr Dlink Number of A2D conversion failures Number of EEPROM write failures to diagnostic block Number of software memory errors (corruption in internal memory) Number of software memory errors Llink Sample First Page of the Self-Test Note: Lines 15-18 are factory default printer settings. Take note of these lines when reading the self-test report. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1NP6822 2 Copyright 1997, 1998, Intermec Technologies Corporation. All Rights Reserved. 3Serial# MFG Date Hardware Check Repairs Svc Date 412345678 yy/mm/dd ddd-ddd-ddd/dddd (TOP) GO/NG 00 yy/mm/dd ddd-ddd-ddd/dddd (MLB) ddd-ddd-ddd/dddd (PS) ddd-ddd-ddd/dddd (IOB) 8Revisions:..........0000000000303100 9Bootblock: NPBB6822.MOD - Version XX.XX XXXX XXXX GO/NG 10Control Program: npfl6822.mod - Version XX.XX XXXX XXXX GO/NG 11Font Module: nftxxxxx.mod - Version XX.XX XXXX XXXX GO/NG 12Font Module: nftxxxxx.mod - Version XX.XX XXXX XXXX GO/NG 13Battery Voltage: 012.34 Low...../....High 14Total Pages: 123456 15Zero Font Style: 16Auto Feed: CR 17Interface mode: NPCP 18Bit Rate: 19200 19Cold Starts: 00024 20Warm Starts: 00050 21A2D History 22 Curr Low High Min Max Error Page Count 2324v: 024.00 023.21 023.91 023.21 024.51 027.21 00401 00021 2412v: 012.55 010.91 013.51 010.90 014.50 8.71 00401 00021 25Temp: 023 -020 055 -021 060 000 00401 00021 26Head Jam History 27Total Head Jams: 00186 28Home Command Direction Speed Step Temp Position Page 29 Print Left Const 010 -010 01440 12345 30NPCP History 31Disc Addr Parity IFTS Seq CRC Frame Bind IPLDU 3212345 12345 12345 12345 12345 12345 12345 12345 12345 33IRDA History 34 FramesOk BroadCasts CRC/TMO DISCARD 35rx 1234567890 1234567890 0123456789 0000000000 36tx 1234567890 1234567890 0123456789 0000000000 37HEAD DOT PATTERN 38 Error Log 39PE HJ 12Vu 40Dlink Llink 4112345 12345 12345 4212345 12345 12345 4312345 12345 12345 110 12Vo 24Vu 24Vo Home Temp OverC HeadS Fault ADErr EEErr 12345 12345 12345 12345 12345 12345 12345 12345 12345 12345 12345 12345 12345 12345 12345 12345 12345 12345 12345 12345 12345 12345 12345 12345 12345 12345 12345 6822 Series 80-Column Printer User’s Manual Chapter 6 — Troubleshooting Sample Second Page of the Self-Test Page 2 of the self-test contains the print pattern used to diagnose printer mechanical behavior. The pattern continuously prints the ASCII characters between 33 and 126 decimal inclusive for the entire page, or until you cancel the print by pressing a button on the printer. An example of that rotating pattern is shown below. !”#$%’()*+,–./ 0123456789:;<=>?@ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ[\]^_’abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz{|}~!”#$%’ ()*+,–./ 0123456789:;<=>?@ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ[\]^_’abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz{|}~!”#$%’ ()*+,–./ 0123456789:;<=>?@ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ[\]^_’abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz{|}~!”#$%’ ()*+,–./ 0123456789:;<=>?@ABCDEFGHIJKL Self-Test Failure • For help, see “Miscellaneous Troubleshooting Tips” on page 111. • Check the power source (internal battery, charge cable, or ac adaptor) for a possible power failure. Miscellaneous Troubleshooting Tips The following table lists actual printing problems, possible causes, and actions you should take to correct a problem. Possible Printer Problems Symptom Test or Cause Solution Printer does not communicate Incorrect protocol selection. with the mobile computer. Bluetooth unable to connect. Check lines 17 and 18 on the self-test report for correct bit rate and protocol selection. Change protocol settings through configuration process. Make sure you are in range Make sure your device is Make sure the Bluetooth shutdown (10 cm to 10 m) configured to be discoverable timer has not expired and/or connectable. For help, see “Bluetooth Configuration Commands and Specifications” on page 133. Check line 16 on the self-test For help, see “Cleaning the Mask Double-spacing on application reports but single- report. CR+LF indicates an Spring” on page 22. incorrect configuration for spacing on NPCP. self-test. Zero prints incorrectly (with Check line 15 on the self–test If incorrect, adjust the zero print or without slash). report for the Zero Font Style option, see “Cleaning the Mask setting. Spring” on page 22 6822 Series 80-Column Printer User’s Manual 111 Chapter 6 — Troubleshooting Possible Printer Problems (continued) Symptom Test or Cause Solution Does not print extended Check line 11 or 12 on the character set — missing font. self–test report to see if the NFT0000.MOD file is listed after Font Module. Printer emits 1 or 2 beeps or Printer mechanism does not blinking green light is the have adequate power for only indicator. printing. The 12 V may be under or over voltage fault. (Note: Error lights do not flash if voltage is too high) If battery, recharge or replace If power supply, adjust supply (see “Installing the Internal voltage to 7.5 to 15 V. Battery” on page 10 Use the 6820 Printer Tool Kit to reload the font file or send the printer in for hardware repair. Check battery or power supply. Check the printer’s internal battery, if installed. Check the vehicle charge cable (see 6822 Printer Installation Instructions P/N 931-052-001). Printer emits 2 sets of 3 beeps Printer out of paper Reload paper into printer mechanism. For help, see “Loading the Paper Tray” on page 13. Printer works but some or all Gray ribbon cable connecting Call Customer Support LEDs do not work. control panel board to pivot (800-755-5505) or send printer for frame assembly is loose. hardware repair. Printer does not print No voltage Voltage too high or low. Check line 13 on the self–test report, under the Battery Voltage heading No paper feed (paper jam or head jam) No data input Adjust supply voltage to 7.5-15 V Tighten computer connections. Test: Pull paper toward roller. Paper tray too full Cause: If paper is resistant: Paper wrinkled, creased, White ribbon cables moist, or perforations missing obstructing paper Torn paper perforation Ensure fewer than 200 3-ply sheets in the deep paper tray and fewer than 50 3-ply sheets in the shallow paper tray. 112 Head Jams due to carriage alignment. Check line 29 on self-test report, under Position heading, for value. Remove torn paper, load and center new paper, readjust pinfeed holders. 6822 Series 80-Column Printer User’s Manual Chapter 6 — Troubleshooting Possible Printer Problems (continued) Symptom Test or Cause Replace the paper. Straighten the white ribbon cables. Solution If “0,” realign mechanism in pivot tray. See “Aligning the Printer Mechanism” on page 98 No paper feed (paper jam or Move the printhead manually Remove ribbon cartridge, move head jam) from side to side. printhead. If smooth, ribbon is jammed. Remove ribbon cartridge, move printhead. If still resistant, mask spring is bent or damaged. Remove ribbon cartridge and Cause: printhead gap turn knob. If ribbon resists, adjuster too tight. replace ribbon cartridge (see Cause: Paper scraps found in “Installing the Ribbon printer mechanism or around Cartridge” on page 11 Replace the mask spring see platen. “Cleaning the Mask Printer mechanism unlatched Spring” on page 22 (unlocked). (portable, fixed Set the head gap adjuster to mount printers) the fifth notch away from the paper see “Adjusting the Printhead Gap” on page 12 If ribbon cartridge bumps against inside of printer, check white ribbon cable, home position sensor, and four screws. Remove any paper scraps, do a cleaning. Latch (lock) the printer mechanism into place. Perform a self-test. Note: In paper jams or head jams, press the Set Page button to clear the printer before printing can resume. 6822 Series 80-Column Printer User’s Manual 113 Chapter 6 — Troubleshooting Compatibility Issues Use the following information to determine some compatibility issues that come up relative to the 6822:I Compatibility Issues and Conclusions Issue Conclusion Does a 6820 ribbon work on the 6822? Do 6820 applications work on the 6822? Yes. Yes. Applications that work on the 6820 also work on the 6822. Does the 6822 work with an application Yes. The downloadable character set feature is the same that downloads some custom characters to for both the 6820 and 6822. the printer? Can 6820 printers be replaced with 6822s? Yes. 6822s can be installed on existing 6820 mounting brackets. Understanding Diagnostic Information Diagnostic information is stored in flash to support the hardware configuration, both at time of manufacture and in the field. This includes recording the initial configuration changes to hardware and software, and various environmental statistics helpful in determining why failures are occurring in the field. The flash is provided for storage of critical data that must remain in the unit after power to the unit is lost. The data in the flash is used for diagnostic information for a catastrophic failure, or over the phone with a customer. Diagnostic information is updated and maintained by the printer. All diagnostic information is shadowed in RAM. At the end of every 50 forms, the flash information is updated from the RAM. The printer also updates the diagnostic information for nonrecoverable error, printer resets, printer self-test, and remote polling of diagnostic information. Fields are stored with ID first, then length, then data. The details of the data and the length of the entire field, including ID and Length bytes, are shown in the “Diagnostic Information” table on page 115. The amount of flash memory reserved for nonvolatile diagnostic memory is 16 K bytes. Printer self-test prints most of the information contained in the diagnostic memory for remote and end-user diagnostic access. 114 6822 Series 80-Column Printer User’s Manual Chapter 6 — Troubleshooting Diagnostic Information Field Id 01 08 Stored as 7 digit BCD set at MFG 39 bytes 6 digit BCD set at MFG 52 digit BCD set at MFG 09 10 20 30 Total Length Length Description Serial Number Date of Manufacture, yy/mm/dd Hardware Configuration ddd-ddd-ddd/ddd (top level P/N) ddd-ddd-ddd/ddd (control board) ddd-ddd-ddd/ddd (power supply) ddd-ddd-ddd/ddd (I/O board) CRC of preceding fields Hardware Revisions: ECNs. applied. 64 ECNs can record separately by number 1-64. Service Repairs: a two-digit field indicating number of times serviced Date of last repair, yy/mm/dd Cold starts since MFG or last repair Warm starts since last cold start Pages printed over life Last high and low voltage extremes on 24 V input over last 50 reports. Extremes stored as 8-bit A2D conversions Voltage extreme history stores min/max 24 V A2D conversions over printer life 24 V voltage error. Voltages greater than 10% considered errors. A2D error count Form number at last voltage error 24 V error count Last high and low voltage extremes on 12 V input over last 50 reports. Extremes stored as 8-bit A2D conversions Voltage extreme stores min/max 12 V A2D conversions over printer life 12 V error. Voltages less than 10.5 V and greater than 14.5 V are considered errors. A2D value is recorded Page number at last 12 V error 12 V error count Temperature, maximum and minimum over last 50 reports. Set A2D value 6822 Series 80-Column Printer User’s Manual 2 byte binary set at MFG 8 byte bit field 11 bytes 2 BCD digits 6 BCD digits binary digits binary digits binary digits 2 bytes 8 bytes 11 bytes 2 bytes 1 byte 2 bytes 2 bytes 2 bytes 11 bytes 2 bytes 1 byte 2 bytes 2 bytes 2 bytes 11 bytes 115 Chapter 6 — Troubleshooting Diagnostic Information (continued) Field Id Length Description Stored as Temperature, min/max over printer life. Set A2D value Temperature error. Last A2D conversion below -10 or above 60°C recorded Page number at last temperature error Total number of temperature errors Total number of head jams Command 0 = Stop 2 = Print 4 = Print/LF 6 = Seek 8 = Slow Seek 10 = Change Speed 12 = Feed 14 = Wait 2 bytes Speed 00 = Init 01 = Low 10 = High bits 4-5 Direction 1 = Left 0 = Right bit 6 Home Switch 0 = No Error 1 = High Error Acceleration or deceleration stop motor value when jam occurred Ambient temperature when had jam occurred. Set A2D value Form number where head jam occurred Carriage position where head jam occurred bit 7 40 60 116 IrDA rxFramesOK – total frames received OK Total Length 1 byte 2 bytes 2 bytes 2 bytes binary bits 0-3 11 bytes 1 byte binary 1 byte 2 bytes binary 2 bytes binary in 1/720 in 4 bytes 46 bytes 6822 Series 80-Column Printer User’s Manual Chapter 6 — Troubleshooting Diagnostic Information (continued) Field Id Length Description Stored as 4 bytes 70 IrDA rxFrameCrcErr – total frames received with CRC error IrDA rxTotalBytes – total bytes received OK IrDA rxFramesDiscardBuf – total frames discarded due to no buffer space IrDA rxBroadcastFrames – total broadcast frames received OK IrDA rxFramesDiscardHwErr – total received frames discarded due to hardware error IrDA txFramesOK – total frames transmitted OK IrDA txTotalBytes – total bytes transmitted OK IrDA txBroadcastFrames – total broadcast frames transmitted OK IrDA txFramesNotTxTimeout – total frames not transmitted due to time out IrDA txFramesNotTxHwErr – total frames not transmitted due to a hardware error Paper out count Head jam count 12 V low count 12 V high count 24 V low count 24 V high count Home switch error count Unused Over current error count Head short error count Paper fault error count A2D conv. error count EEPROM write error count Double link error count Lost link error count 6822 Series 80-Column Printer User’s Manual Total Length 4 bytes 4 bytes 4 bytes 4 bytes 4 bytes 4 bytes 4 bytes 4 bytes 4 bytes 2 bytes 2 bytes 2 bytes 2 bytes 2 bytes 2 bytes 2 bytes 2 bytes 2 bytes 2 bytes 2 bytes 2 bytes 2 bytes 2 bytes 2 bytes 74 bytes 117 Chapter 6 — Troubleshooting Diagnostic Information (continued) Field Id 118 Length Description Stored as 2 bytes 20 * 2 bytes Out of buffers error count Unused Total Length 6822 Series 80-Column Printer User’s Manual Chapter 6 — Troubleshooting Communications Pin-Out Configurations This section shows common cable configurations between a mobile computer or a dock and the printer. Wall Mount Printer or Remote Mount Terminal Holder Mobile Computer Signal Name Pin # Chassis Ground Charge Input SG (Signal Ground) DSR (Data Set Ready) DTR (Data Terminal Ready) CTS (Clear To Send) RTS (Ready To Send) RXD (Receive Data) TXD (Transmit Data) Dock_A/B_SW shell NC Pin # Signal Name 20 12 NC (No Connection) HHC_CHARGE GND DTR NC RTS CTS TXD RXD Term A/B shield 13 25 15 14 15-Pin DSUB Male 15-Pin to 25-Pin Cable (P/N 216-605-1XX) 25-Pin DSUB Male 15-Pin to 25-Pin Cable (P/N 216-605-1XX) 6822 Series 80-Column Printer User’s Manual 119 Chapter 6 — Troubleshooting Wall Mount Printer PC Signal Name Pin # Pin # Signal Name DTR (Data Terminal Ready)* RC (Receive Carrier) TC (Transmit Carrier) DCD (Data Carrier Detect) SG (Signal Ground) DSR (Data Set Ready)* CTS (Clear to Send) RTS (Ready to Send) RXD (Receive Data) TXD (Transmit Data) 20 17 15 20 17 15 NC (No Connection) NC NC NC GND DTR RTS CTS TXD RXD * Signals are not available on the 6100 Dock 14 13 25 13 25 14 25-Pin DSUB Male 25-Pin DSUB Female 25-Pin to 25-Pin Cable (P/N 216-771-XXX) 25-Pin to 25-Pin Cable (P/N 216-771-XXX) 120 6822 Series 80-Column Printer User’s Manual Chapter 6 — Troubleshooting Printer PC Signal Name Pin # Pin # Signal Name TXD (Transmit Data) RXD (Receive Data) RTS (Ready to Send) CTS (Clear to Send) DSR (Data Set Ready) SG (Signal Ground) RCT TXD CTS RTS DTR (Data Terminal Ready) GND Chassis Ground shell shell Chassis Ground Terminal Charge out to computer shield 15 9-Pin DSUB Female 9-Pin to 15-Pin Cable (P/N 226-016-XXX) 15-Pin DSUB Female 9-Pin to 15-Pin Cable (P/N 226-016-XXX) 6822 Series 80-Column Printer User’s Manual 121 Chapter 6 — Troubleshooting Printer w/6210 Terminal Holder Dock Signal Name Pin # Pin # Signal Name TXD (Transmit Data) DTR (Data Terminal Ready) RTS (Ready to Send) RXD (Receive Data) CTS (Clear to Send) DSR (Data Set Ready)* SG (Signal Ground) 20 RXD NC (No Connection) CTS TXD RTS DTR GND open shield shell * Signal is not available on the 6100 Dock 13 25 14 15 15-Pin DSUB Female 25-Pin DSUB Male 25-Pin to 15-Pin Cable (P/N 226-162-XXX) 25-Pin to 15-Pin Cable (P/N 226-162-XXX) 122 6822 Series 80-Column Printer User’s Manual Chapter 6 — Troubleshooting Printer PC Pin # Pin # RJ-11 Jack 9-Pin DSUB Male Data Communications Cable (P/N 226-270-XXX) Data Communications Cable (P/N 226-270-XXX) The printer has a 25-pin connector with the following pinout designations and signal mnemonics: Printer Communications Connector 15-Pin 25–Pin D–Sub D–Sub Signal Name Type I/O Description ––– RS-232 RS-232 RS-232 RS-232 RS-232 ––– IN IN IN OUT OUT NC (No Connection) Printer’s DSR Wake up Printer’s RxD Printer’s TxD Printer’s RTS NC 20 NC DSR (Data Set Ready) CTS (Clear To Send) RXD (Receive Data) TXD (Transmit Data) RTS (Ready To Send) 6822 Series 80-Column Printer User’s Manual 123 Chapter 6 — Troubleshooting Printer Communications Connector (continued) 15-Pin 25–Pin D–Sub D–Sub Signal Name Type I/O Description RS-232 OUT Printer’s DTR POWER POWER OUT 11-13 V, 2 A maximum SG (Signal Ground) 124 DTR (Data Terminal Ready) HHC_CHARGE GND 6822 Series 80-Column Printer User’s Manual A Specifications This appendix provides physical specifications for the 6822 printer models as well as specifications for the media used with the printers. 6822 Series 80-Column Printer User’s Manual 125 Appendix A — Specifications Specifications Print Speed 230 cps Note: Various print fonts do affect the print speed. Weight Fixed Mount Printers6.55 kg (14.41 lbs) Portable Printers w/ 4000 or 61XX terminal holder5.80 kg (12.75 lbs) w/ 62XX, 600 series, 700 series, or CK60 holder5.67 kg (12.25 lbs) Mounting plate1.93 kg (4.25 lbs) Flat paper tray2.45 kg (5.40 lbs) Compact paper tray2.05 kg (4.50 lbs) Temperature DC Operating -20°C to 60°C (-4°F to 140°F) AC Operating -20°C to 45°C (-4°F to 113°F) Storage -30°C to 70°C (-22°F to 158°F) Humidity Operating10 to 85% noncondensing Storage5 to 95% noncondensing Altitude Operating–100 to 5000 m Storage15,000 m Electrical Voltage13.8 VDC (nominal) Current10 mA (idle, sleep mode not charging batteries); 3.5 A (average while printing); 450 mA (charging internal battery); Up to 1.5 A (charging computer battery) Vibration 12 g RMS for 4 hours 126 6822 Series 80-Column Printer User’s Manual Appendix A — Specifications ESD 15 kV noncontact and 8 kV contact Battery Shelf Life 1 year at 25°C (77° F) 2.3 Ah 12 V sealed lead-acid) Note: The battery goes dead within two weeks when connected to the printer and with no external charge source. Note: A printer and a computer, using the supplied serial cable, can operate up to 9 m (30 ft) apart. Printer Dimensions Listed below are the dimensions of the fixed mount and portable printers. Fixed Mount Printer The base of the fixed mount printer is 32.5 cm (12.75 in) wide by 35.5 cm (14.0 in) front to back. The upper portion varies according to the configurations shown in the following table. Fixed Mount Printer Dimensions Configuration (with deep paper tray) with 61XX Holder Side Mount with 4000 Series, 62XX, 600 Series, 700 Series, or CK60 Holder Side Mount with 61XX Holder Top Mount with 4000 Series, 62XX, 600 Series, 700 Series, or CK60 Holder Top Mount 6822 Series 80-Column Printer User’s Manual Width Length Depth 51.4 cm (20.25 in) 47.0 cm (18.5 in) 42.5 cm (16.75 in) 38.1 cm (15.0 in) 36.8 cm (14.5 in) 36.8 cm (14.5 in) 42.6 cm (16.75 in) 42.6 cm (16.75 in) 19.1 cm (7.5 in) 20.3 cm (8.0 in) 19.1 cm (7.5 in) 20.3 cm (8.0 in) 127 Appendix A — Specifications Portable Printer The portable printer may come with a handle, an AC foot, or with a terminal holder top mount. Portable Printer Dimensions Configuration Width with handle, 61XX Holder Top Mount, and Deep Paper 41.9 cm Tray (16.5 in) with handle, 61XX Holder Top Mount, Shallow Paper Tray 42.5 cm (16.8 in) with handle, 4000 Series, 62XX, 600 Series, 700 Series, or 38.1 cm CK60 Holder Top Mount, and Deep Paper Tray (15.0 in) with handle, 4000 Series, 62XX, 600 Series, or 700 Series, 41.9 cm or CK60 Holder Top Mount or Fill Plate, and Shallow Paper (16.5 in) Tray Length Depth 42.6 cm (16.8 in) 42.6 cm (16.8 in) 42.6 cm (16.8 in) 38.1 cm (15.0 in) 20.3 cm (8.0 in) 19.1 cm (7.5 in) 20.3 cm (8.0 in) 13.0 cm (5.1 in) Note: The AC foot adds 6.35 cm (2.5 in) to the length of the printer. Media Specifications Using paper that matches the following specifications ensures optimum 6822 performance. Variation from these specifications, use of aged paper, or use of paper exposed to elements such as dirt or humidity may cause printing problems. The printer works with 1-3 ply carbonless paper that is single-edge glued and designed for sprocket feed. Standard paper size is 8.5 x 11 in or 241 x 305 mm international (8.5 x 12 in). Use 3-ply forms up to a maximum of 0.23 mm (0.009 in) thick. A soft, flexible, rubber type cement applied to one perforation strip only is preferred. The paper should wrap around a 1 1/4 in diameter roll without curl or wrinkle. 128 6822 Series 80-Column Printer User’s Manual Appendix A — Specifications Material Breakdown The following tables show the material broken down per ply: 14# CBF (Carbonless Back and Front) Target Under Over Basis Weight 14 lb 13.3 lb 14.7 lb Caliper 2.9 2.6 3.2 Moisture 5.0 4.0 6.0 Smoothness (RS) 165 110 230 Smoothness (CB) 270 220 320 Brightness (Wht) 88 86 90 Colors available: White, Canary, Pink, Goldenrod, Blue, Green 15# CF (Carbonless Front) Target Under Over Basis Weight 15 lb 14.43 lb 15.8 lb Caliper 3.0 2.5 3.2 Moisture 5.0 4.0 6.0 Smoothness (RS) 140 100 180 Smoothness (CB) 140 100 180 Brightness (Wht) 85 84 86 Colors available: White, Canary, Pink, Goldenrod, Blue, Green 16# CB (Carbonless Back) Target Under Over Basis Weight 16 lb 15.2 lb 16.8 lb Caliper 3.3 2.8 3.8 Moisture 5.7 4.2 6.7 Smoothness (RS) 180 120 270 Smoothness (CB) 270 220 320 Brightness (Wht) 86 84 88 Opacity (Wht) 81 78.5 82 Colors available: White, Canary, Pink, Goldenrod, Blue, Green 6822 Series 80-Column Printer User’s Manual 129 Appendix A — Specifications 20# OCR Laser Bond Basis Weight Caliper Moisture Smoothness Brightness (Wht) Opacity (Wht) Target Under Over 20 lb 4.0 3.8 140 94 85 15.2 lb 3.8 4.7 100 82 84 16.8 lb 4.2 5.0 170 N/A N/A Caliper Breakdown The following table shows the caliper of forms broken down by ply: Caliper Breakdown 1-Ply (20 lb) 2-Ply (15 lb and 16 lb) 3-Ply (14 lb, 15 lb, and 16 lb) 130 Target Maximum 4.0 6.3 9.2 4.2 7.0 10.2 6822 Series 80-Column Printer User’s Manual Appendix A — Specifications Understanding the Fanfold Paper Page Layout The following illustration shows the printable area of the lower section of a page of fanfold paper and the upper section of the next page. The Assured Print Area is the best area to use for printing. Page width Assured Print Area 8 inches Max. (area 2) 0.75 inch (or more) Assured Print Area 55 lines max (at 1/16” line spacing) (area 2) 0.75 inch (or more) Paper End Detection Position Abcdef... 1 inch ...Xyz (area 3) 1.833 inches (11 lines) (area 1) Perforation 1 inch (area 1) Abcdef... ...Xyz Printable Area of Fanfold Page You should leave a 1 in margin at both the top and the bottom of the page. This provides for a margin of six lines at 1/6 in line spacing. Even though printing in Area 1 (before or after the perforation) may be possible, you should keep in mind that paper feed precision is reliable only within the Assured Print Area. 6822 Series 80-Column Printer User’s Manual 131 Appendix A — Specifications • The top and bottom margins are represented by Area 1, as shown in the previous illustration. The top margin is defined as the distance between the top edge of the paper and the first row of printed characters. The bottom margin is defined as the distance between the last row of printed characters and the bottom edge of the paper. • There is a possibility that printing can start within one line below the perforation and printing could continue beyond the Assured Print Area, however paper feed precision is only reliable with top and bottom margins of approximately one inch. Basically, you should consider there are only 55 lines available for reliable printing. • The left and right margins are represented by Area 2. For reliable printing, use a margin of at least 0.75 in for the left and right margins. The Paper End Detection line indicates the point where the Paper Out sensor detects the bottom edge of the paper. Area 3 represents the distance between the Paper End Detection position and the bottom edge of the page. Once the last page of the fanfold paper stack is in the printer, and the printhead has advanced past this Paper End Detection line, printing is no longer reliable. When the bottom end of the last page has advanced through the printer, past the spring plate along the front of the platen, the paper should not reverse back through the printer, because the printer could jam and cause paper feed problems. 132 6822 Series 80-Column Printer User’s Manual
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