View allAll Photos Tagged laserprinter
Did you know you can use essential oils to transfer prints from a laser printer or copier onto fabric, wood, or other materials? Orange oil seems to work best for this process. Pine and other evergreen oils have also been recommended, but I personally found better success with orange. Look at all of the pictures to see how it all works. The things you can do with this method are virtually endless! Use this method to create personalized aprons, totes, gift tags, gift bags, t-shirts, ribbons, and whatever else you can think of!
You can see my other trying to use orange oil to transfer picture onto wood here:
www.flickr.com/photos/lakbearrr/sets/72157647916402753
Please, don't hesitate to contact me here for more info: szentantal@gmail.com
If you like this project, please join to my Facebook group: www.facebook.com/Lakbear2014
Did you know you can use essential oils to transfer prints from a laser printer or copier onto fabric, wood, or other materials? Orange oil seems to work best for this process. Pine and other evergreen oils have also been recommended, but I personally found better success with orange. Look at all of the pictures to see how it all works. The things you can do with this method are virtually endless! Use this method to create personalized aprons, totes, gift tags, gift bags, t-shirts, ribbons, and whatever else you can think of!
You can see my other trying to use orange oil to transfer picture onto wood here:
www.flickr.com/photos/lakbearrr/sets/72157647916402753
Please, don't hesitate to contact me here for more info: szentantal@gmail.com
If you like this project, please join to my Facebook group: www.facebook.com/Lakbear2014
Mr. Lee Chin Guan, Marketing Senior Manager of Fuji Xerox Asia Pacific, showcase colour management printer
Did you know you can use essential oils to transfer prints from a laser printer or copier onto fabric, wood, or other materials? Orange oil seems to work best for this process. Pine and other evergreen oils have also been recommended, but I personally found better success with orange. Look at all of the pictures to see how it all works. The things you can do with this method are virtually endless! Use this method to create personalized aprons, totes, gift tags, gift bags, t-shirts, ribbons, and whatever else you can think of!
You can see my other trying to use orange oil to transfer picture onto wood here:
www.flickr.com/photos/lakbearrr/sets/72157647916402753
Please, don't hesitate to contact me here for more info: szentantal@gmail.com
If you like this project, please join to my Facebook group: www.facebook.com/Lakbear2014
Did you know you can use essential oils to transfer prints from a laser printer or copier onto fabric, wood, or other materials? Orange oil seems to work best for this process. Pine and other evergreen oils have also been recommended, but I personally found better success with orange. Look at all of the pictures to see how it all works. The things you can do with this method are virtually endless! Use this method to create personalized aprons, totes, gift tags, gift bags, t-shirts, ribbons, and whatever else you can think of!
You can see my other trying to use orange oil to transfer picture onto wood here:
www.flickr.com/photos/lakbearrr/sets/72157647916402753
Please, don't hesitate to contact me here for more info: szentantal@gmail.com
If you like this project, please join to my Facebook group: www.facebook.com/Lakbear2014
All those dots in the copper areas are guide spots for drilling 1mm holes for the component leads. Some parts will fit in 0.8mm holes, but when drilling by hand, a little bit of extra clearance is useful. I'm using a tungsten-carbide drill bit which was designed for PCB use. If this was a fibreglass PCB, an ordinary drill would soon be blunted.
Three lenses. The two on the right have what appears to be a grating added as well.
Part of a detailed photo essay about taking apart a modern color laser printer.
Read more here.
At this stage in the process, the laser printer toner is stuck to the copper side of the board, by heat and pressure from a domestic iron. The paper has been soaked in hot water and washed off, leaving just the toner behind. The edges of the board didn't transfer very well, so they've been patched up with a Sharpie permanent marker.
Mr. Lee Chin Guan, Marketing Senior Manager of Fuji Xerox Asia Pacific, showcase drawing different detection technology
A stepper motor with gears.
Part of a detailed photo essay about taking apart a modern color laser printer.
Read more here.
A stepper motor with gears.
Part of a detailed photo essay about taking apart a modern color laser printer.
Read more here.
So after Xmas , I had to go and get a new printer/copier/scanner and I bought a cheap HP laserprinter . So today being a holiday I started playing with the scanner , this photo was taken in 1999 with a Olympic 35mm point and shot the light distortion is from a crack in the body from being dropped ! The print was a 4x6 , have a big box of 40 or more years of negatives somewhere in the basement to go through someday ! Oh yeah this was done in general mode at 300 DPI ,kind of makes everything flat and plastic like nice effect if that's what you want so from there I moved into the advance setting to see , in other words there will be more to come !
One of the interesting points about how this machine is made is that many of the individual springs that you used to find in things like this have been replaced by larger networks of springs-- a move away from off-the-shelf parts to fully custom parts. I guess in this kind of volume, it's actually cheaper.
Part of a detailed photo essay about taking apart a modern color laser printer.
Read more here.
On this monstrous machine, tons of paper output were produced each day. After processing the data on the mainfame, most data was printed for the users. This, because terminals were very scarce, and PC's were things "we'd only heard of"....
ME-Super + Agfa CT100 scanned on Plustek 7400
Paper pick-up roller, viewed from bottom of printer.
Part of a detailed photo essay about taking apart a modern color laser printer.
Read more here.
There are a couple of experimental areas on the board. This is one of them, where I've laid down some fine traces to connect pads to ground. The idea is to cut the one(s) that aren't needed, with a craft knife. On the other end of the board, I tried the opposite method: closely spaced pads that can be "blobbed" with the soldering iron to make a connection.