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With the gearbox cover removed, the TPH gear is exposed—it's the bottom gear in the set—likely it will either be fully broken off the shaft or cracked. This is first true confirmation that the gear is in fact the cause of the <code>T19/P19</code> errors, and needs to be replaced. | With the gearbox cover removed, the TPH gear is exposed—it's the bottom gear in the set—likely it will either be fully broken off the shaft or cracked. This is first true confirmation that the gear is in fact the cause of the <code>T19/P19</code> errors, and needs to be replaced. | ||
<!-- ==== Removing the TPH (thermal print head) ==== | |||
==== Removing the TPH (thermal print head) ==== | |||
==== Removing the TPH support bar ==== | ==== Removing the TPH support bar ==== | ||
| Line 119: | Line 117: | ||
=== Replacing the TPH gear === | === Replacing the TPH gear === | ||
=== Notes on reassembly === | === Notes on reassembly === --> | ||
{{Blueprint|The rest of this process is documented in the old instructions below—it still needs to be cleaned up and rewritten for the new wiki. The images from the archived article will be integrated or re-illustrated.}} | |||
=== Open and disassemble the MMU === | === Open and disassemble the MMU === | ||
==== 9: Remove the TPH ==== | ==== 9: Remove the TPH ==== | ||
| Thermal-pressure motor lock (TPH Gear) | |
|---|---|
| Difficulty | Intermediate |
| Duration | 90 min. |
| For series | |
| Tools | Phillips #2 screwdriver (magnetic) Flathead screwdriver Needlenose pliers |
| Parts | 612-10010 1 × TPH Gear |
| Error codes | T19-XXX Thermal pressure motor lock !!System Error!!</br>Press Reset Key</br>If Recovery has Failed, Call Service |
This is the draft of an article, it is incomplete or in-progress.
You can help by contributing to missing sections, editing existing material, or helping to migrate this page from linked sources.
This tutorial provides step-by-step instructions to replace a broken gear (part no. 612-10010 referred to colloquially as the "TPH gear") in the gear box for the thermal pressure motor—it's used in all Z+ type machines.[1]
The thermal pressure system is used to keep the TPHThermal Print Head pressing the stencil material against the write roller, to ensure a clean image is burned. A great deal of force is put on this gearing, and this gear in particular will snap and shatter as the system wears. When it does, the riso will generate T19 or P19 errors and be unable to make a stencil and the whole machine will be locked in "call service" mode.
There is a known flaw in the manufacture of this gear, and the shaft system it sits on.[2] While adjustments were made to the design of this area on some models, broken gears are still being found across multiple machines.
The part can be replaced, but it takes a little while to get enough access to remove it and swap the new one in—this is process is also slowed by the caution required when working with the TPH.
It's recommended that anyone running an RZ or newer machine have 1–2 replacement gears on hand. They are readily available on eBay and AliExpress by searching by the part number 612-10010.
The process of replacing this part is a little different between one- and two-drum machines (and depending on the make of your machine you may need to remove some additional covers to get access to things). It will take about 90 minutes the first time you do it (but can be done much more quickly once you know your way around).
First, to access the sections we need, we'll need to pull the MMU (master making unit) out of the machine. Follow the steps you'd take to replace the stencil roll on your machine to get the MMU out (pushing the green button either to the right of the drum removal button on one-drum machines, or on the right side of the riso on two-drum machines).
Before you go any further, turn off and unplug the riso. From here on you'll exclusively be working on it unpowered—until the replacement is finished and everything is reassembled.
Replacing the gear requires access to the TPH pressure assembly, the gearing inside the panel with the TPH that is opened up when replacing the stencil roll. The method for getting into this area is different for one and two drum machines.
The gearbox cover is a metal plate that sits just below the thermal printhead when the TPH is in the open position—usually it has an informational sticker on it explaining that the TPH can be hot and diagrams of how to clean it. It is removed with 4 M3×4 flange head phillips screws (with external hex profile).
The gearbox cover is attached in the same way on two-drum machines as on one-drum machines, with 4 screws in the TPH assembly. However on two-drum machines, because the MMU slides out of the side of the riso, instead of the front—the first 2 screws (those that are removed from the left with the TPH assembly closed) are inaccessible.
The official procedure in the service manual is to fully remove the MMU however, this is a complex operation that carries with it some risk. Removing and reinstalling the MMU involves manipulating delicate ribbon cables, checking parallelism on its rails, and handling one of the heaviest components in the risograph. There is another way to access the first 2 screws: sliding the MMU all the way to the left, removing the master disposal unit on the left side (a much simpler operation), and removing the screws through the opening that creates.
The 5 marked screws secure the plastic panel around the disposal unit.
The two cables and small cable guide above them are marked in purple; the 2 screws holding the unit in are marked in green.
The paper feed cover is removed with 2 screws (it has two plastic arms at the top corners which hook over the metal shelf).
When pressed down, this small plastic hook will free the MMU to be pushed further into the riso.
Then press the MMU all the way in until it stops.
The 2 screws are on either end of a metal bracket on the MMU.
After finishing the TPH gear replacement, the master removal unit can be reinstalled by reversing the steps used to remove it.
With the gearbox cover removed, the TPH gear is exposed—it's the bottom gear in the set—likely it will either be fully broken off the shaft or cracked. This is first true confirmation that the gear is in fact the cause of the T19/P19 errors, and needs to be replaced.
The rest of this process is documented in the old instructions below—it still needs to be cleaned up and rewritten for the new wiki. The images from the archived article will be integrated or re-illustrated.

- Unscrew the white plastic piece and any remaining gear fragments. - Remove the tiny e-ring and push the shaft to the left.
- Slide the new gear onto the shaft. - Reassemble the shaft and ensure the white plastic piece faces inward.
- Grease the new gear and reassemble all components in reverse order.