Códigos de error · Kyocera

The ten most common Kyocera error codes including C6000 C3100 and C7990

Kyocera publishes a service code list that runs to several hundred entries, yet ten codes account for roughly 80 percent of the support tickets Spanish dealers see across the TASKalfa and ECOSYS catalogue. The codes split into five categories: fuser, scanner, drum, paper feed, and toner. This guide walks through each of the ten with the symptom, the underlying fault, the user-side check, and the service-side fix. A triage flow at the end maps a panel code into the right next action inside two minutes.

Why these ten matter

Across a typical 24-month service window, these ten codes account for more than 4 out of every 5 dealer tickets. Knowing how to read them before the technician arrives shortens the visit by an average of 14 minutes and improves first-call resolution rates by 9 percentage points in the Spanish fleet sample.

80%
Of service tickets
14m
Time saved per visit
5
Fault categories
9%
First-call uplift

Reading a Kyocera error code

Every Kyocera service code prints as one letter (C, F, J, or E) followed by four digits. The letter is the category, the first two digits are the subsystem, and the last two digits identify the exact fault. C codes are service-attention faults that stop the machine; F codes are firmware-level faults on the engine board; J codes are jams; E codes are end-user errors that the operator can clear. This article covers the C codes, since those drive almost every billable dealer ticket.

The ten codes ranked by frequency

C6000
High · service required

Fuser warm-up timeout

The fuser belt did not reach standby temperature within the allowed window. Most common after a cold weekend in an unheated room or after a heater lamp degraded with age. The machine raises C6000 instead of attempting a retry that could damage the heater.

User checkPower cycle from the rear switch, wait two minutes, restart.
Service actionMeasure heater lamp resistance; replace fuser if open circuit.
C6020
High · safety lockout

Fuser temperature above safe threshold

The thermistors reported a reading above 220 °C, the controller cut heater power, and the safety thermostat is at risk of tripping. The fuser is in lockout until a technician inspects.

User checkPower off and let the unit cool 30 minutes minimum.
Service actionInspect thermistor harness, replace fuser if thermostat tripped.
C6400
High · power circuit

Fuser zero cross signal not detected

The controller cannot read the zero-cross signal that synchronises the heater triac with the AC supply. Usually a power supply board fault, occasionally a wiring harness disconnection in the fuser bay.

User checkNone. Note the code and call the dealer.
Service actionReplace LVU (low voltage unit) on the engine PWB chassis.
C3100
Medium · scanner

Scanner LED illumination fault

The LED array under the scanner glass failed to reach the brightness target during the home-position check. Symptoms include the unit operating normally on print and copy from PC, but raising C3100 on any copy or scan job.

User checkClean the scanner glass and the white reference strip behind the DADF.
Service actionReplace the ISU (image sensor unit) LED assembly.
C3200
Medium · scanner

Scanner shading correction fault

The shading calibration sweep against the white reference strip produced readings outside the calibration window. Usually toner dust or paper fibres on the strip; less often a worn ISU.

User checkClean the white reference strip with a lint-free cloth. Re-run the scanner from the panel diagnostics.
Service actionIf cleaning does not clear, replace the ISU unit.
C4000
High · laser scanner

Polygon motor lock fault

The polygon mirror motor inside the laser scanner unit did not reach lock speed within the firmware window. The machine raises C4000 and refuses to print. Usually a motor bearing failure or a controller driver fault.

User checkPower cycle once. If code returns, escalate.
Service actionReplace laser scanner unit (LSU) for the affected colour.
C2500
Medium · paper feed

Paper feed motor fault

The motor driving the paper pickup roller from the cassette is reporting a stall or an encoder reading outside the firmware tolerance. Often paired with repeated jams in cassette 1.

User checkOpen the cassette, check for foreign objects or torn paper at the back wall.
Service actionReplace pickup roller assembly first; replace motor if encoder still fails.
C2101
High · drum drive

Drum motor encoder fault

The motor driving the drum is reporting a lock signal but the encoder is reading zero rotation. Usually a gear-train obstruction or a motor failure. Print jobs are paused until the fault clears.

User checkRemove and reseat the drum unit if accessible. Otherwise escalate.
Service actionBench-test motor with 24 V supply; replace if winding open.
C7990
Medium · waste toner

Waste toner bottle full

The waste toner sensor is reading full or the toner conveyor motor is stalled. Symptoms include the unit printing a banner message for several days, then raising C7990 to stop further print jobs.

User checkReplace waste toner bottle following panel instructions. Reset sensor through service menu if unit does not auto-clear.
Service actionInspect conveyor motor if replacement bottle does not clear the code.
C0180
Low · configuration

Machine number mismatch in NVRAM

The serial number stored on the engine PWB does not match the serial number on the controller PWB. Common after a board replacement during service. The unit functions, but raises this code on boot until corrected.

User checkNone.
Service actionUse the service mode reset routine to write the correct serial to NVRAM.

The two-minute triage flow

From panel code to next action

— Step 01 —

Note the exact code shown on the panel

Write down the C-prefix and the four digits exactly. Do not power cycle yet. The panel will hold the code until the controller is reset; capturing it is the first contract of any service call.

— Step 02 —

Cross-reference against the ten-card list above

Most service tickets correspond to one of the ten codes above. If the code matches, the user-side check beside the card is the right next move; it resolves around 30 percent of the cases before the dealer is even called.

— Step 03 —

Apply the user check exactly as written

Each user check is one specific action: power cycle, reseat a consumable, clean a strip, or open and close a door. The check should be performed once. Repeated power cycles on a hardware fault can compound the damage.

— Step 04 —

If the code returns, raise a service ticket with the code captured

The dealer arrives with the correct part on the van when the code is captured up front. A ticket reading "machine not working" produces a longer visit and often a second trip with the right part.

— Step 05 —

Document the resolution for the next time

A short note on the device sticker (date, code, action) reduces repeat incidents by half on devices that throw the same code intermittently.

How to reset codes after the fix

Most codes clear automatically after a power cycle once the underlying fault has been resolved. A handful require a service mode reset. The table below lists the reset routine per code. The reset routine is documented in the Kyocera service manual; the dealer will run it during the visit. For codes marked operator, the reset can be triggered from the standard panel without service mode.

CodeReset methodTrigger
C6000Power cycle after fuser replacementService
C6020Service mode U168 fuser reset after thermostat swapService
C6400Power cycle after LVU replacementService
C3100Power cycle after ISU LED swapService
C3200Auto-clear after cleaning, no manual reset requiredOperator
C4000Power cycle after LSU replacementService
C2500Power cycle after roller swapService
C2101Power cycle after motor replacementService
C7990Auto-clear after waste toner bottle replacedOperator
C0180Service mode U004 serial number writeService
Safety reminder. The fuser sits at 170 to 200 °C during operation. C6000, C6020, and C6400 codes share the fuser bay; opening the fuser cover before the unit has cooled for at least 20 minutes is a burn risk. The Kyocera service manual flags the wait time on every fuser procedure. Office users should keep the side door closed and call a technician when any of the three fuser codes appear.

Patterns Spanish dealers see across the year

Three patterns repeat across the Spanish service base. The first is a seasonal cluster of C6000 codes after long weekends and holiday closures, driven by cold offices coming back online on Monday morning. Pre-warming the room before powering the unit cuts the cluster by around 60 percent. The second pattern is a slow rise in C3100 and C3200 codes across the second and third year of a lease, driven by accumulated dust on the scanner reference strip. A quarterly clean routine prevents most of these. The third is a near-perfect correlation between C7990 codes and the toner SKU running low, since the waste toner sensor and the toner cartridge sensor are checked together at every boot.

For Spanish offices running multiple Kyocera units, logging the codes against the device serial and the page count produces the predictive maintenance baseline the dealer needs to plan the next service window. The long-life drum cost study covers the underlying economics that make these codes rare in the first place, and the ECOSYS vs TASKalfa comparison covers the engine choices that determine which codes a given fleet sees most often.

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