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| If this is a ''coarse'' adjustment (the holes on the paper feed pulley were not closely aligned, and no test print was made), the drum pulley must first be locked into place: | | width="50%" | If this is a ''coarse'' adjustment (the holes on the paper feed pulley were not closely aligned, and no test print was made), the drum pulley must first be locked into place: | ||
# Using the 2 mm hex wrench, loosen the set screw in the pressure disc, on the end of the drum pulley shaft. | # Using the 2 mm hex wrench, loosen the set screw in the pressure disc, on the end of the drum pulley shaft. | ||
| Line 80: | Line 80: | ||
# Once the alignment hole is free, put a screwdriver or hex wrench through it and the pulley—this will hold the drum pulley more or less in place while adjusting the paper feed pulley. | # Once the alignment hole is free, put a screwdriver or hex wrench through it and the pulley—this will hold the drum pulley more or less in place while adjusting the paper feed pulley. | ||
<span style="color: {{wiki color|Red}};">Before turning the riso back on <u>the screwdriver or hex wrench ''must be removed''</u> or there is a risk the riso may be damaged (and it will certainly lose time again).</span | <span style="color: {{wiki color|Red}};">Before turning the riso back on <u>the screwdriver or hex wrench ''must be removed''</u> or there is a risk the riso may be damaged (and it will certainly lose time again).</span> | ||
| If this is a ''fine'' adjustment (the alignment holes on the paper feed pulley were close), the current position of the paper feed pulley should be marked relative to the pulley. (It can be difficult to determine if very small changes have been successfully made.) | | If this is a ''fine'' adjustment (the alignment holes on the paper feed pulley were close), the current position of the paper feed pulley should be marked relative to the pulley. (It can be difficult to determine if very small changes have been successfully made.) | ||
# Using a white paint pen or whiteout (or some other implement that can make visible marks on black rubber), mark a point on the pulley and a matching point on the belt (this is easiest right where the belt separates from the pulley beneath it). | # Using a white paint pen or whiteout (or some other implement that can make visible marks on black rubber), mark a point on the pulley and a matching point on the belt (this is easiest right where the belt separates from the pulley beneath it). | ||
|} | |} | ||
| 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 |
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
The belt is tensioned by the clutch assembly—detensioning it involves loosening the assembly and turning it away from the belt.
The timing is adjusted by rotating the paper feed pulley while the drum pulley remains stationary.
If this is a coarse adjustment (the holes on the paper feed pulley were not closely aligned, and no test print was made), the drum pulley must first be locked into place:
Before turning the riso back on the screwdriver or hex wrench must be removed or there is a risk the riso may be damaged (and it will certainly lose time again). |
If this is a fine adjustment (the alignment holes on the paper feed pulley were close), the current position of the paper feed pulley should be marked relative to the pulley. (It can be difficult to determine if very small changes have been successfully made.)
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