Seven common causes of streaks on copies and how to fix each one

Streaks on copies and scans are the single most reported print quality issue across office MFPs. The pattern looks similar in most cases, a thin vertical line running down the page, but the underlying cause varies between something a user can resolve in one minute and something that requires a service call. Working through the seven common causes in order of likelihood resolves the majority of cases without scheduling service. Each cause below pairs a specific visible pattern with the corresponding fix.

Quick reference: match the streak to the cause

  1. Same vertical line on every ADF page only → ADF glass strip smudge
  2. Same spot on every flatbed scan only → Platen glass spot
  3. Faded line on copies only → Drum unit wear or contamination
  4. Dark line that shifts between pages → Toner cartridge fault
  5. Vertical line on prints from one tray → Paper path contamination from that tray
  6. Coloured line on colour pages → One colour developer or imaging unit
  7. Line appearing only after the device warms up → Fuser sleeve damage

The seven causes in order of likelihood

ADF glass strip smudge or particulate

Pattern: identical vertical line on every page scanned through the ADF, never on flatbed scans

The ADF glass strip is the thin sliver of glass beside the main platen that each page passes over when fed through the document feeder. Any particle on this strip produces a continuous vertical line on every scanned page from that point until cleaned. The strip accumulates dust, correction fluid, and the occasional adhesive residue from sticky notes faster than any other surface on the device.

Fix. Lift the ADF lid, locate the narrow glass strip beside the main platen, wipe gently with a lint free microfibre cloth lightly dampened in 70 percent isopropyl alcohol. Test by feeding one fresh sheet through the ADF and inspecting the scan.

Platen glass spot

Pattern: dark spot or short streak in the same position on every flatbed scan, never on ADF scans

The platen glass collects whatever the user places on it: coffee rings, correction fluid, ink smears from documents, and the occasional staple scratch. The position of the spot on the resulting scan corresponds to the position of the contamination on the glass, which makes the diagnosis straightforward.

Fix. Wipe the platen glass with a microfibre cloth lightly dampened in distilled water. For stubborn marks, follow with a clean cloth dampened in 70 percent isopropyl alcohol. Wipe in parallel strokes corner to corner, never in circles.

Drum unit wear or surface contamination

Pattern: faded vertical line down printed pages, repeating at a regular interval matching the drum circumference

The drum unit holds the latent image as toner during each print cycle. Wear, scratches, or contamination on the drum surface produces a vertical line that repeats every time the drum makes a full rotation. The repeating interval distinguishes drum issues from line faults caused by other components.

Fix. Replace the drum unit. Most office MFPs list the drum as a user replaceable component, with a published rated life of 30,000 to 90,000 pages. Reset the drum counter after replacement.

Toner cartridge fault

Pattern: dark line that shifts position between pages, often accompanied by uneven coverage

A toner cartridge with a damaged seal, low fill on one side, or a worn doctor blade can deposit excess toner in a vertical strip. Unlike drum issues, the line tends to wander slightly between pages rather than appearing in the same position each time. Pulling the cartridge often shows visible damage or uneven toner distribution.

Fix. Inspect the cartridge for visible damage. Replace with a fresh OEM cartridge and run five test pages. The issue resolving with a new cartridge confirms the diagnosis.

Paper path contamination from a specific tray

Pattern: vertical line on prints fed from one specific tray, absent on prints from other trays

A foreign object, accumulated dust, or residue from a paper jam in the path between one specific tray and the print engine can transfer to each page that passes through. The diagnosis pattern is clear: the line appears on prints from one tray and disappears on prints from other trays.

Fix. Pull the affected tray completely, inspect the cavity behind it for any debris, dust, or paper fragments. Vacuum with a toner safe vacuum. If the issue persists, the paper path sensor or guide in that tray's route may need service attention.

Colour developer or imaging unit fault

Pattern: coloured vertical line in one specific colour, on colour prints only

A colour MFP runs four developer units, one for each toner colour. A worn developer or contaminated imaging unit in one specific colour produces a coloured line that matches the affected colour. A cyan line, for example, points to the cyan developer or imaging unit specifically.

Fix. Most colour MFPs allow individual replacement of developer units and imaging units. Check the device's service panel for the replacement procedure on the affected colour. Some models bundle the replacement into a single colour image kit per channel.

Fuser sleeve damage

Pattern: vertical line that appears only after the device has been operating for some minutes, often accompanied by faint discolouration

The fuser uses a heated sleeve to bond toner to the page. Damage to the sleeve, often a small crack or a scratch from a previous jam recovery, transfers a mark to each page that passes through after the fuser reaches operating temperature. The line typically does not appear on the first few pages after a cold start, since the damage only becomes visible at full operating temperature.

Fix. Fuser replacement is the only resolution. The fuser is usually part of the maintenance kit and may be due for scheduled replacement anyway. Service intervention is required on devices where the fuser is not user replaceable.

The diagnostic sequence that resolves most cases

How to work through the seven causes in five minutes

Run one ADF scan and one flatbed scan of a clean blank page. The presence and pattern of the line on each scan immediately narrows the cause to one of the first two categories above.

Run one print job from each loaded tray on a clean blank page. The presence of the line on one tray's output and not others isolates a paper path issue. Identical results across all trays points to a component upstream of the trays.

Run a colour test page if the device is colour capable. A line in one colour only confirms a developer or imaging unit issue, while a line across all colours points to drum, fuser, or transfer belt.

When to stop troubleshooting and call service

Three conditions justify ending the owner troubleshooting and logging a service call. The first is any streak that persists after working through all seven causes above with no clear diagnosis. The second is any streak accompanied by an error code on the service panel, which usually narrows the cause to a sensor or component fault that needs engineer attention. The third is any streak that comes with paper jamming in the same area, which often indicates a deeper paper path geometry issue.

The pre service troubleshooting work is rarely wasted even when service is required. Reporting that the issue has been confirmed against the seven common causes without resolution helps the dispatcher route the call correctly and lets the engineer arrive with the most likely parts already in the vehicle. A device with streaks but no error code, no jamming, and clean cleaning history is most often diagnosed as fuser or transfer belt end of life.

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