
- #SAMSUNG ML 2510 PRINTER BLINKING LIGHTS HOW TO#
- #SAMSUNG ML 2510 PRINTER BLINKING LIGHTS MANUAL#
- #SAMSUNG ML 2510 PRINTER BLINKING LIGHTS FULL#
- #SAMSUNG ML 2510 PRINTER BLINKING LIGHTS PC#
- #SAMSUNG ML 2510 PRINTER BLINKING LIGHTS ISO#
#SAMSUNG ML 2510 PRINTER BLINKING LIGHTS PC#
#SAMSUNG ML 2510 PRINTER BLINKING LIGHTS MANUAL#
If you need to change any part, you find this out because the print quality is still poor after cleaning, its best to buy a new cartridge.This manual is provided for information purposes only. An overhaul is mostly a thorough cleaning, see many youtube videos. Note, cartridges can be refilled many times, but they will likely smudge or streak after the first refill usually due to dirt, trapped toner, or finger prints on the printing surfaces. Cross reference this against the page count and you’ll get a measure of grams of toner/page.
#SAMSUNG ML 2510 PRINTER BLINKING LIGHTS FULL#
Weigh the empty then full cartridge, and then when you are curious as to the intermediate state, weigh in between. The most accurate way to know the level of remaining toner is to weight it with a weight scale with 1 gm resolution. The downside of this method is the page count only holds for Samsung controlled factory fills DIY or 3rd party fills may not provide the same volume of toner are the factory cartridges.
#SAMSUNG ML 2510 PRINTER BLINKING LIGHTS ISO#
Use the estimated ISO pages per cartridge to estimate remaining pages. To estimate a cartridges remaining life note the page count when you change cartridges and mark it on the cartridge, each time you are curious reprint the test page with the current page count and subtract.
#SAMSUNG ML 2510 PRINTER BLINKING LIGHTS HOW TO#
Author Roo Posted on NovemCategories DIY, How To Assuming you’ve got a printer like the Samsung ML-2010 which is refill friendly, its very easy. If you’ve been thinking about doing a toner refill and weren’t sure if you could manage it. A quick test print verified things were all good. Give the cartridge a good shake after it is all together to distribute the toner. Reassembly is straight forward, reverse the steps. The instructions warn you to not squeeze the bottle, toner is very fine dust and will get everywhere easily.ĭid I mention to not squeeze the bottle? This is the result of my barely squeezing it after I had removed the spout from the hole. The spout goes in the hole, and I used a gentle tapping on the outside of the toner bottle while holding the bottle inverted. Give the toner bottle a good shake to break up any clumps, then carefully open it and put the pouring spout on. Once the plug is out, it is time to add toner. Take it slow – it is a friction fit and may need patience. This comes out fairly easly with a little prying from a flat head screwdriver.


Once the side is removed, you can access the round plug. You will want to avoid touching the green strip on the cartridge (normal toner cartridge care here folks). Then gently pull/pry the side off using your finger nails or possibly a small flat head screwdriver. The first step is to remove the two screws on the side of the cartridge. Pictured above is my toner cartridge and the 3 items I received from TonerKits. (there are cheaper kits with less toner, 100g will fill to ~75% level twice) The eBay transaction was quick, and smooth.

I paid $11.99 USD (7.99 + 4 shipping), but looking today – the same kit is $9.99 with free shipping. I purchased from TonerKits via eBay simply selected the right kit for my printer. While the thread was started back in 2004, but its still going strong at 47 pages with recent positive reports. I figured I’d be getting one of the toner refill kits from eBay, but which one? I turned to and found this thread that pointed me at TonerKits. The toner had finally gotten low enough that we needed to do something (taking the cartridge out and shaking it wasn’t helping much anymore). A full 3 years later we still use this printer and it has been mostly trouble free. It was known to be easy to refill, and considering that a new toner cartridge was nearly $100 at the time – I knew I’d be going the DIY route when the time came. The printer I bought was the Samsung ML-2010. I never got the mail in rebate due to the standard rebate avoidance techniques (by the time I found out what I needed months later, the box had gone into the trash). At the time, staples.ca had multiple web coupons you could “stack” and cut a $199 printer down to $126, and there was a $30 mail in rebate on top of that.

It was time for a change, and while colour printing is nice – a lot of our printing needs were very basic. In the fall of 2005 laser printers had fallen to the near $100 mark and our ink jet printer seemed to have an endless appetite for (expensive) ink cartridges.
