Printers

SEARCH

Store Information & Hours

CW San Diego
3952-H Clairemont Mesa Blvd.
San Diego, CA 92117 USA
Email: cwsandiego@cwsandiego.com
Blog: CWSDblog

Phone: +1-858-581-9191
Fax: +1-858-581-9128

Store Hours
Monday - Friday 9am-6pm
Sat & Sun 10am-5pm
Holiday Hours
We are closed for the following holidays:
  • New Year's Day
  • Easter
  • July 4th
  • Thanksgiving Day
  • (Christmas Eve 9am-2pm)
  • Christmas Day

  • Watch our blog for any changes to our hours
    We specialize in refilling and remanufacturing ink and laser printer cartridges, saving our customers money and helping to save our local environment. We also carry an assortment of fax film rolls and micr toner cartridges for printing checks.

    Office Supply partners

    To visit our office supply partner page, click on the paperclips.
    Office Supplies

    Archives

    Subscribe to our blog feed

    Powered by FeedBurner

    Post a testimonial on Yelp!

    Yelp

    Feedback

    Share your comments, questions and suggestions with us on our Facebook Discussion Board.

    Join us on Twitter

    CWSD is a proud member of:

    CARTRIDGE WORLD

    D&B PowerProfiles online business directory San Diego Regional Chamber of Commerce
    San Diego Referrals, Inc.
    CWSD supports: Kids Need to Read
    Would you be interested in affiliating with us, cross-linking or advertising to the community together? Send us an email or call the store. We are always looking for opportunities to reach out to new customers. Let's help each other.
    How Laser Printers Work

    Posted in: Printers, blog, laser by CW on 21 January 2009

    laser-printer-diagram

    The Basics: Static Electricity

    The primary principle at work in a laser printer is static electricity, the same energy that makes clothes in the dryer stick together or a lightning bolt travel from a thundercloud to the ground. Static electricity is simply an electrical charge built up on an insulated object, such as a balloon or your body. Since oppositely charged atoms are attracted to each other, objects with opposite static electricity fields cling together.

    A laser printer uses this phenomenon as a sort of “temporary glue.” The core component of this system is the photoreceptor, typically a revolving drum or cylinder. This drum assembly is made out of highly photoconductive material that is discharged by light photons.

    The Basics: Drum

    Initially, the drum is given a total positive charge by the charge corona wire, a wire with an electrical current running through it. (Some printers use a charged roller instead of a corona wire, but the principle is the same.) As the drum revolves, the printer shines a tiny laser beam across the surface to discharge certain points. In this way, the laser “draws” the letters and images to be printed as a pattern of electrical charges — an electrostatic image. The system can also work with the charges reversed — that is, a positive electrostatic image on a negative background.

    After the pattern is set, the printer coats the drum with positively charged toner — a fine, black powder. Since it has a positive charge, the toner clings to the negative discharged areas of the drum, but not to the positively charged “background.” This is something like writing on a soda can with glue and then rolling it over some flour: The flour only sticks to the glue-coated part of the can, so you end up with a message written in powder. laser-printer-path

    With the powder pattern affixed, the drum rolls over a sheet of paper, which is moving along a belt below. Before the paper rolls under the drum, it is given a negative charge by the transfer corona wire (charged roller). This charge is stronger than the negative charge of the electrostatic image, so the paper can pull the toner powder away. Since it is moving at the same speed as the drum, the paper picks up the image pattern exactly. To keep the paper from clinging to the drum, it is discharged by the detac corona wire immediately after picking up the toner.

    The Basics: Fuser

    Finally, the printer passes the paper through the fuser, a pair of heated rollers. As the paper passes through these rollers, the loose toner powder melts, fusing with the fibers in the paper. The fuser rolls the paper to the output tray, and you have your finished page. The fuser also heats up the paper itself, of course, which is why pages are always hot when they come out of a laser printer or photocopier.

    So what keeps the paper from burning up? Mainly, speed — the paper passes through the rollers so quickly that it doesn’t get very hot.

    After depositing toner on the paper, the drum surface passes the discharge lamp. This bright light exposes the entire photoreceptor surface, erasing the electrical image. The drum surface then passes the charge corona wire, which reapplies the positive charge.

    (images and content courtesy of HowStuffWorks)

    You must be logged in to post a comment.