Banding shows up as horizontal stripes across a printed page, alternating darker and lighter regions in a regular pattern. The pattern looks similar across causes, but the spacing between bands carries the diagnostic information. Each rotating component in the print engine has a specific circumference, and a band repeating at that interval points directly to that component. Measuring the band spacing with a ruler resolves the diagnosis to one of three sources in under five minutes, with no service tools required.
The drum has a circumference of roughly 75 to 95 mm depending on the model. Bands at this interval repeat once per drum rotation.
The developer roller is smaller than the drum, producing tighter bands. The transfer roller falls in the same range on most models.
The fuser components are larger than the drum on most office MFPs. Wider band spacing points to the fuser as the likely source.
| Component | Typical circumference | Diagnostic notes |
|---|---|---|
| OPC drum, A4 mono | 75 to 85 mm | Most common cause of mid spaced bands |
| OPC drum, A3 colour | 85 to 95 mm | Larger drums on higher volume devices |
| Developer roller | 45 to 55 mm | Smaller than drum, tighter banding |
| Transfer roller | 40 to 55 mm | Similar to developer, requires test isolation |
| Charge roller | 20 to 30 mm | Tight bands, often confused with halftone artefacts |
| Fuser sleeve | 100 to 130 mm | Wide bands, often with subtle gloss difference |
| Pressure roller | 110 to 140 mm | Slightly wider than fuser sleeve on most models |
Developer roller and transfer roller produce bands in a similar 40 to 55 mm range, which makes spacing alone insufficient to distinguish them. Two additional tests separate the two. The first is colour specificity. On a colour MFP, a developer roller fault appears in one specific colour, while a transfer roller fault appears across all colours. Running a colour test page with separate cyan, magenta, yellow, and black ramps isolates the affected colour and points to that colour's developer.
The second is band uniformity across the page width. Developer roller faults often produce bands that vary in intensity across the page width, with one side darker than the other. Transfer roller faults produce uniform bands edge to edge. Running a full width test pattern and inspecting the band intensity across the page resolves the diagnosis in most cases.
Laser scanner unit faults produce a different banding signature from the rotating component faults above. The laser scanner draws each scan line across the drum at high speed, and faults in the polygon mirror or in the laser timing produce bands that follow the scan line direction rather than the drum rotation direction. Visually, laser banding looks more like horizontal hashing or a moiré pattern than the regular dark and light stripes of rotating component faults.
The laser scanner is sealed inside the print engine and not user accessible. Diagnosing laser banding accurately requires either the service panel's laser diagnostic cycle or an engineer visit. A device showing irregular horizontal hashing rather than regular bands, especially if it appears suddenly rather than gradually, benefits from a service call rather than further owner diagnosis.
Drums are owner replaceable on most office MFPs. Order an OEM drum unit for the affected colour, install following the front panel procedure, and reset the drum counter. Drum life ranges from 30,000 to 90,000 pages depending on model and coverage.
Developer units are owner replaceable on most colour MFPs and on many mono devices. The developer unit usually includes the developer roller, the doctor blade, and the toner agitator. Reset the developer counter after replacement.
Transfer rollers are usually part of the maintenance kit and may be due for scheduled replacement. On devices where the transfer roller is individually serviceable, replacement is straightforward. On others, service intervention is required to fit the new roller.
The fuser is the largest component in the maintenance kit. On most office MFPs the fuser is part of the kit and replacement coincides with the scheduled maintenance event. On devices where the fuser is owner replaceable, the procedure takes 15 to 20 minutes. On others, service intervention is required.
Three conditions justify logging a service call rather than continuing the owner diagnosis. The first is band spacing that does not match any of the entries in the table above, which usually points to a fault inside the laser scanner or the high voltage power supply. The second is banding that appears in combination with an error code on the service panel, which narrows the cause to a sensor or component the engineer needs to inspect. The third is banding that persists after replacement of the suspected component, which signals that the diagnosis was incomplete and a second issue is at play.
Even when service is required, the owner diagnostic work usually shortens the visit. Reporting the band spacing measurement and the colour specificity tests gives the dispatcher enough information to assign the correct skill level and to ensure the engineer arrives with the most likely parts. A clear diagnostic baseline turns what could be a multi visit investigation into a single visit fix.
This piece covers the diagnostic flow for banding. The opening pieces in the cluster cover other quality issues: seven common causes of streaks on copies and how to diagnose faded copies as a toner drum or transfer issue. The next pieces handle related quality patterns: how to fix ghosting on photocopies in three steps, how to fix the dreaded black line down every copy, and a practical fix guide for colour misregistration on MFPs.