|  |     
    Hi Chris,
    
    > One of the pins isnt printing (most of the time). 
    
    I take this to mean that occasionally all 9 pins fire. If this is the
    case, the fault MAY not be at the pin mechanism but further back.
    
    One of the favorite places for interrmittency?? is a crack in the
    flexable cable or printed loom that bends to and fro as the head moves
    back and forth across the platen. Also poor connections at either end
    of this cable. Some printers incorporate this cable in a new head
    assbly, some treat it as a separate spare. Its not too hard a job to
    check the cable with a continuity tester, if it is cracked you can
    replace it, or the o/c track, temporarily with a thin flexable wire.
    
    If there is nothing wrong with the cable, then you could either have a
    defective pin solenoid, or a sticky pin, most unusual these days,
    unless you have been cutting wax stencils?, or a dry joint in the head
    driver chip connections. 
    
    I dont know the cost of Star heads, but I do know that some people have
    had very nasty shocks at the price quoted for a replacement head,
    especially when compared to the dicounted price of a new printer, (like
    two thirds!!!!!), so it may be worth having a visual inspection before
    you take it in!
    
    Best of luck
    
    Pat K.
    
    
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|  | 
	Well, I looked into this a little more.  There's definately
	an open circuit somewhere, unfortunately it's not in the cable
	as it test open going right into the head.  The head looks
	scary to take apart - well, actually to put back together -
	I may never get the print wires in the right place . . .
	. . . so I called Star's part number.  $72.32 for a new print
	head!  I guess I'll take the old one apart and see if there's
	any hope.  Then after I destroy it, I'll call up and order a
	new one.
	chris
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|  | 
	Well, I fixed it!   I had to completely disassemble the print
	head, including pulling out all the print wires and the springs,
	to get to a bad solder joint connecting one of the solenoids to
	the circuit board.  I never thought I'd get it back together
	but for 72 bucks it was worth a try.  Took about 2 hours, but
	it works!  I'd hate to try it with a 24-pin head.
	chris
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|  |     
    
    Hi Chris,
    
    Congratulations,  you are now the resident printer head fixing guru!!!!
    
    I am absolutely amazed that you could get the thing apart let alone put
    it together again!
    
    But as you say, if you were sure that the head was o/c then you dont
    lose anything, (except your eyesight and your sanity in trying).
    
    $72 is stiff, but I have heard of other people being quoted a third of
    printer cost for a head, ( I suppose 3 X 72 = $216 is not what a Star 
    retails for?). 
    
    Cheers
    
    PAt K.
    
 | 
|  | >    
>    I am absolutely amazed that you could get the thing apart let alone put
>    it together again!
>
	Taking it apart was easy!!
>
>    $72 is stiff, but I have heard of other people being quoted a third of
>    printer cost for a head, ( I suppose 3 X 72 = $216 is not what a Star 
>    retails for?). 
>    
 	That's just about what I paid for it, through some roundabout
	connection via a computer club, 4 or 5 years ago.
	chris
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