Yes it is take it from the pro, i lit my cat on fire when i tried
The vague pronoun reference: does the pronoun 'it' refer to the photocopier or the toner.Examples of rewording the sentence:From the photocopier, John took the toner and threw it away.John took the photocopier toner and threw it away.
No. Toner consists of plastic, coloring agents, and charge control agents. No photocopier toner ever contained asbestos.
A photocopier uses static electricity to attract toner particles onto the paper. The drum in the photocopier is charged with static electricity, which attracts the toner particles. When the toner particles are transferred onto the paper, the static charge helps to keep them in place until they are heat-fused onto the paper.
yes
The process of making black toner for a Xerox photocopier is very exacting, even for the older machines. If you could get all the ingredients, some of which are not easy to find, and you tried to make it at home what you made would probably not work in the machine because of the need to precisely control the size of the toner particles.
A photocopier uses static electricity to transfer toner particles onto paper. The toner particles are given an electrical charge that is opposite to the charge on the photoreceptor drum. This causes the toner particles to be attracted to the charged areas of the drum and subsequently transferred onto the paper.
A photocopier typically requires paper, toner or ink cartridges, and electricity to operate. Additional resources may include maintenance supplies like cleaning materials and replacement parts.
Some common parts of a photocopier include the document feeder, platen glass, toner cartridge, drum unit, fuser unit, and control panel. These parts work together to scan, process, and reproduce documents.
Static electricity is used in a photocopier to attract toner particles onto the paper that has been charged with the opposite charge. This creates an image on the paper which can then be fused permanently using heat. Static electricity helps in transferring the toner effectively onto the paper during the copying process.
xerography uses electrostatic charges to form image and transfer it to paper. there is a mechanism in the photocopier that is supposed to remove the charge after the toner is fused to the paper and the charge is no longer needed. sometimes this wears out and no longer works well.
A photocopier machine uses static electricity to form images. The process involves positively charging a drum, which then attracts toner (negatively charged) to form the image before transferring it onto paper and fusing it with heat.
If a photocopier is not making copies there is something missing. No paper, no toner, no electricity, paper jam within the machine to name a few.