Pressing the wrong button inadvertently, or having the riso behave unexpectedly, can send very powerful motors and springs running, and there is a <u>real risk of injury</u>, particularly crushing of hands or fingers.}}
Pressing the wrong button inadvertently, or having the riso behave unexpectedly, can send very powerful motors and springs running, and there is a <u>real risk of injury</u>, particularly crushing of hands or fingers.}}
{{mbox|text=<ol><li>If the drum pulley is not aligned (the riso is not in "home position"), plug the riso back in and turn it on in [[test mode]] (holding down the L/P and M/P buttons while turning it on).</li>
{{mbox|text=<ol type="i"><li>If the drum pulley is not aligned (the riso is not in "home position"), plug the riso back in and turn it on in [[test mode]] (holding down the L/P and M/P buttons while turning it on).</li>
<li>Close the front door.</li>
<li>Close the front door.</li>
<li>On the main circuit board at the back of the machine, find a small push button labeled "SW1" or "DRUM FREE"—this is the free rotate button, when pressed, it will turn the main motor at 15 RPM (half the slowest printing speed), until released.</li>
<li>On the main circuit board at the back of the machine, find a small push button labeled "SW1" or "DRUM FREE"—this is the free rotate button, when pressed, it will turn the main motor at 15 RPM (half the slowest printing speed), until released.</li>
Revision as of 21:52, 11 November 2025
Retiming the main drive (GR/FR)
Difficulty
Intermediate
Duration
15–45 minutes
For series
Tools
JIS phillips #2 screwdriver
Needlenose pliers
White paint pen/whiteout
1.5 mm hex wrench
Flashlight
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One of the most common repairs on is retiming.
Timing, in this case, refers to the relationship between (1) the angle of the drum and (2) the position of a series of cams which operate the first and second paper feed. In the back of the riso are two large pulleys, each with cams and discs attached—during each print, both pulleys rotate exactly once. They are held "in time" (moving the same amount, at the same speed) by a long rubber toothed "timing belt." When a riso is out of time, it means one of the pulleys has rotated independent of the other, so that they no longer have the same angle.
Retiming the riso then, is the act of realigning the pulleys to once again match up.
Symptoms
Because timing controls two of the biggest systems on the riso (paper feed and drum/press/printing), when it is incorrect there are multiple symptoms which may emerge.
A machine losing time is usually due to a drum getting stuck (fixing the drum pulley) while the main motor continues to turn (turning the paper feed pulley regardless). When this happens, the belt will click over the main motor pulley creating a very distinct loud ratchet sound.
Print position slid off the edge of the sheet (usually to the left) on all prints is also a sign the machine is out of time.
Generally a print being off-center by more than 12 mm is a sign that the belt has skipped at least one tooth.
Note that prints being slid off the left edge of the page can also be caused by paper getting stuck for a cycle in the first paper feed, and feeding later than expected. So if it seems like the riso is only feeding sheets at half speed, on every other rotation, it's more likely this is a first paper feed issue. (In this case the sheet is fed early during the riso's attempt to feed another sheet.)
If the machine is very out of time (more than a few teeth on the belt) it is likely that 'no paper will feed at all'—though many other issues with the paper feed system could cause all sheets to jam.
The true way to know if a machine is out of time is to manually check the position of the pulleys by opening the back of the riso. Turn off the riso, unplug it, and remove the plastic cover (5 screws). Then compare the positions of the two pulleys to the following.
There is a small hole in the main drive cover at the 12:00 position above the drum pulley shaft—shining a light from above will show that this hole goes straight through a corresponding hole in pulley.
On the paper feed pulley, there is a small hole in the pulley which should be roughly at 4:00 when looking behind the main drive cover from below.
If the pressure disc is properly positioned on the drum pulley, it will have a small hole centered on the light interrupt sensor at the 9:00 position.
If the p-disc is properly positioned on the paper feed pulley, it will have a small notch which aligns with a light interrupt sensor at the 3:00 position (centered on the sensor for B4/legal positions, or aligned with the bottom corner for A3/ledger machines).
Procedure
To retime the risograph, tension must be released on the main belt, then the paper feed pulley can be turned to the correct position relative to the drum pulley.
Setup and evaluation
Remove the drum from the risograph.
If the drum is stuck, turn the machine off and unplug it first, then manually remove the drum before proceeding.
Turn off and unplug the risograph.
Remove the back plastic cover (5 screws).
Check the position of the drum pulley—it should be in the home position, with the hole at the 12:00 position lined up all the way through the pulley.
Use extreme caution whenever the riso is on and the mechanical components are exposed. Keep hands away from all mechanisms and moving parts.
Pressing the wrong button inadvertently, or having the riso behave unexpectedly, can send very powerful motors and springs running, and there is a real risk of injury, particularly crushing of hands or fingers.
If the drum pulley is not aligned (the riso is not in "home position"), plug the riso back in and turn it on in test mode (holding down the L/P and M/P buttons while turning it on).
Close the front door.
On the main circuit board at the back of the machine, find a small push button labeled "SW1" or "DRUM FREE"—this is the free rotate button, when pressed, it will turn the main motor at 15 RPM (half the slowest printing speed), until released.
Shining a light at or above the 12:00 alignment hole on the drum pulley, cautiously (with hands away from all the mechanisms) press the drum free rotate button to rotate the main drive of the riso, until the hole in the pulley is aligned. (Tapping the button will allow very fine adjustment.)
Once the drum pulley is back in home position, turn the riso off again and unplug it.
Look at the paper feed pulley on the right to evaluate roughly how far the machine is out of time.
Use the small hole(s) on the main drive cover to evaluate if the hole in the pulley is at least near to them, or if it's not in the region.
If the alignment holes are not close, continue to #Releasing belt tension. (After making a coarse adjustment to get things close, creating a test print will allow fine-tuning.).
Releasing belt tension
The belt is tensioned by the clutch assembly—detensioning it involves loosening the assembly and turning it away from the belt.
Attached to the top of the clutch assembly is the horizontal "timing spring"—the right side will be hooked into one of three slots. Note which slot it is in, then unhook that side of the spring.
Let the timing lever fall to the left with the spring.
Loosen the 3 screws in curved slots, at the back of the golden clutch assembly.
Turn the clutch assembly clockwise to release tension on the main belt.