If your prints are scuffed or smeared, try these solutions:
Make sure
your paper meets the specifications for your product.
Do not use
paper with folds or creases and always use new media.
If you are using cut sheet paper, check that changes in
humidity and temperature have not made the paper wavy or curled up
on the edges. Load the paper just before printing and do not use
wavy or curled paper. For roll paper, cut off any wavy or curled
parts and then load the roll again. For cut sheets, use new
paper.
If the surface of the paper is scuffed, select a wider
Platen Gap setting. If results do
not improve, set Paper Setting or
Custom Paper Setting >
Paper Eject Roller to Use (Heavy Load) or Use
(Light Load).
Caution:
The Paper Eject
Roller setting may damage glossy paper.
If your prints are still scuffed, try selecting a
wider Platen Gap Offset setting.
Note: The
Platen Gap Offset setting cannot be
set wider or narrower than the value set for Platen Gap.
If ink is smeared on your prints, clean the rollers and the
paper cassette printing path. For roll paper, load blank A2 or
17-inch wide paper and select > Forward to feed it through the printer. Paper is
fed as long as the icon is pressed. Once the paper comes out clean,
cleaning is complete. Then select to cut the paper. For the
paper cassette printing path, load several sheets of A2
(16.5 × 23.4 inches [420 × 594 mm])
or 17-inch wide paper in the paper cassette. On the Home screen,
select the maintenance icon >
Paper Guide Cleaning and then select
Start. Select Run Again, as needed, until the sheets come out
clean, and then select Done.
If you are using non-Epson media, make sure you create a custom
paper configuration for the media.
Lower the Color Density setting
in the Paper Configuration dialog in the printer driver.
Make sure the Paper Size Check
setting is set to On, or the printer
may print outside the edges of the loaded paper and smear ink on
the back of the print.
Depending on the print density and type of paper you are using,
the ink may take a while to dry. Do not stack the prints until the
ink is completely dry.
Make sure that the printer driver's Media Type settings match the paper that you are
using.
If the bottom edge is scuffed, try widening the bottom
margin.
If the trailing edge is scuffed while printing, create your
data with a wider margin.
If the printhead is scuffing the edge of the paper, set a
larger Top Margin in the paper
settings.
If the left or right edges of the paper are scuffed while
printing, create your data with a wider left or right margin. If
the situation does not improve, rotate the data 90 degrees in the
printer driver or your software before you print.
If you are printing multiple pages and Auto Cut is set to Never
Cut, the area between pages may be scuffed. Widen the margin
between pages.
Try cleaning inside of the printer and the roll paper
feeder.