What causes the laser printer to print all pages with a washed out background

laser-printertoner

My HP LaserJet 1200 series laser printer is now printing all pages with a grey background from the toner covering the whole print area. I can still see the printed letters as much darker, but this gray wash across the whole background looks bad.

I can think of two possible causes.

First, my replacement toner cartridge for the c7115a Toner Cartridge was a compatible one sold by Imagestore US Inc. Perhaps the cartridge is defective or after-market ones are not worth using? I took the cartridge out and rotated around the long axis several times back and forth, but the printing was no different.

Second, I recently moved, could some damaged have occurred during moving (I replaced the cartridge right before moving and do not recall if this issue existed before moving.)

If it is the first, I just buy an official HP cartridge, if not, I get a new printer.

Best Answer

This answer is almost 7 years too late, but I believe it may be the definitive answer to the washed-out prints on the LaserJet 1200/1300 printers.

I recently spent several months trying to find the cause of this problem on my LaserJet 1300 (nearly identical to your LaserJet 1200). I too, had been using an off-brand toner cartridge (Cartridge World), and at some point it stopped being recognized by the printer. After replacing the cartridge, I had prints, but they were faded so much that the pages could almost be mistaken for blank.

I tried everything mentioned in the other comments and answers, and spent hours combing the internet for information on this problem. I cleaned every accessible part, including the corona wires, and replaced the toner cartridge with a brand new HP cartridge. I even took the laser off and cleaned the mirror (unnecessary). Some references online mention that the photo-sensitive roller in the cartridge can go bad on the shelf (it didn't, I tried a second brand new HP toner cartridge with the same result).

Finally, I disassembled the entire printer piece by piece because I was determined to save it (after 16 years without a single problem, I had some loyalty to this thing).

In my case, the problem was a faulty zEngine Controller Board - it destroyed a toner cartridge in the process (or perhaps the cartridge itself developed a fault that shorted out the board). I replaced the controller board with a used one from eBay for about $19. As soon I removed the original board, I could see a row of resistors with burn marks (R540-R544 next to the large capacitor).

The zEngine Controller Board is accessible from the back of the printer:

LaserJet 1300 zEngine Controller Board

The area of the fault on the board:

faulty LaserJet 1300 zEngine Controller Board

A closer look at the blown resistors:

blown resistors on LaserJet 1300 zEngine Controller Board

And here are the test pages after replacing the board:

test pages after replacing zEngine Controller Board

Replacing the board was pretty easy, but I wouldn't call it trivial. It took about three hours even with YouTube videos showing the entire process (this video about removing the fuser will get you most of the way there). The good news is that it only took patience and a couple of decent Phillips screwdrivers (two sizes).

In retrospect, the source of the fault may well have been the toner cartridge, because both that and the board needed to be replaced in order get a functioning printer again. Additionally, the off-brand toner replacement leaked toner into some hard-to-clean areas in the printer. From now on, I'm spending the extra money on the HP cartridges.

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