HP PSC 1610 All-In-One InkJet Printer Logo
Gary Campbell Posted on Sep 26, 2006
Answered by a Fixya Expert

Trustworthy Expert Solutions

At Fixya.com, our trusted experts are meticulously vetted and possess extensive experience in their respective fields. Backed by a community of knowledgeable professionals, our platform ensures that the solutions provided are thoroughly researched and validated.

View Our Top Experts

NEED TO REPAIR MY HP 1610- CARRIAGE JAM!!!

Hi my name is Gary and I am having hell with my HP 1610. It is used very often and refilled 2-3 times daily. Was working great until i start getting carriage jam. Now nothing. It sounds horrible and the bay is not moving. Can you assist me please. Gary

  • 7 more comments 
  • Anonymous Apr 09, 2008

    I'm trying, guys. And even after it starts up again, it seems to have to always start printing a few lines and stop, spit out the page and then get serious about it's job, reprinting the same page over in full.
    I'm getting fed up moving these carridge heads back and forth over and over again, with this thing on my lap when I've got a 360 page novel to print out for my impatient publisher.

  • ibosket Apr 17, 2008

    At first I was receiving an "Add Paper" message, but there was already paper in the tray.  This progressed to a persistent "Carriage Jam" error, but there is no obstruction to the carriage.  Upon troubleshooting and resetting the printer, the carriage consistently moves from left to right, loudly "jamming" itself into the left-hand side where there are 3 rubber pads which raise up underneath the carriage.  I'm assuming it is supposed to stop here awaiting the print command, but it doesn't.  I've tried adjusting these rubber pads to no avail.  Any other suggestions?  Thanks.


    Curt

  • bannerdude97 Oct 27, 2008

    Once I got to print a document then my second occured a carriage jam. How can I fix it?

  • IWantabeer Nov 19, 2008

    i have i hp officejet 6210 all-in-one and i confronted the carriage problem while recieving a fax what go i do

  • djme Dec 02, 2008

    Keep getting "Carriage Jam" message but have no clue what to do. Have tried manually moving the carriage and unpluging but no luck.
    Thanks for any help,
    DE

  • ahido Dec 29, 2008

    I had the same problem. The carriage kept jamming. Solution #7 fixed my problem, too. When I pulled the sponges out, there was a stalagmite of black ink about 3/8 inch high. Thanks for this forum.

  • onetouch2004 Mar 03, 2009

    i have the same problem. solution 7 fixed it. just unplug your power and usb lines (do not turn printer off), move the print head (the place where your two print cartriges are) to the middle and then plug the lines back on. that's it. good luck.

  • bubbies123 May 11, 2009

    I have tried everything I can think of to fix my cartridge jam but no luck. My printer was working fine and then all of a sudden this stupid cartridge jam. Please help!!!

  • chiefsub68 May 18, 2009

    PSC 1610 carriage jam. Took it apart as described, using plastic gloves, etc. Good idea to have methylated spirit, cotton wool buds, good strong light and tweezers to hand first. Took out cartridges, shone light into innards and found problem: a 5mm square of inky Blu-Tack under the carriage. Gave whole thing a general clean-up, removing various debris, solidified ink, hairs, eyelashes, you name it. My printer is singing again. Incidentally, this HP is far far better than the two Epsons I had previously and has already lasted three times as long.

×

16 Answers

Anonymous

Level 1:

An expert who has achieved level 1.

Governor:

An expert whose answer got voted for 20 times.

Corporal:

An expert that has over 10 points.

Mayor:

An expert whose answer got voted for 2 times.

  • Contributor 1 Answer
  • Posted on Nov 29, 2008
Anonymous
Contributor
Level 1:

An expert who has achieved level 1.

Governor:

An expert whose answer got voted for 20 times.

Corporal:

An expert that has over 10 points.

Mayor:

An expert whose answer got voted for 2 times.

Joined: Nov 29, 2008
Answers
1
Questions
0
Helped
20395
Points
22

I had the same problem, but the carriage was jamming on the right. When the carriage is in the right, there is a component that moves front and back under the carriages to clean them. The rails that this component moves on were covered with sticky ink and so it wasn't moving freely. I disconnected the power and used q-tips with mild cleanser to remove the ink from the rails. This fixed the problem.

  • pesch Feb 03, 2011

    Took a while to discover the forward-backward sliding component on the right; it was so sticky that it wasn't clear it should move. Lots of ink buildup. A couple of Q-tips soaked in isopropyl alcohol cleaned off the sticky ink, and now the component moves freely again.

×

Anonymous

Level 2:

An expert who has achieved level 2 by getting 100 points

MVP:

An expert that got 5 achievements.

Novelist:

An expert who has written 50 answers of more than 400 characters.

Governor:

An expert whose answer got voted for 20 times.

  • Expert 159 Answers
  • Posted on Dec 05, 2008
Anonymous
Expert
Level 2:

An expert who has achieved level 2 by getting 100 points

MVP:

An expert that got 5 achievements.

Novelist:

An expert who has written 50 answers of more than 400 characters.

Governor:

An expert whose answer got voted for 20 times.

Joined: Dec 05, 2008
Answers
159
Questions
1
Helped
65072
Points
430

I found out the sponges underneath the carriage's resting place were soaked, and actually had a pyramid of black ink that was gumming up the carriage. It's a good thing HP's ink is so cheap! Wait ...

Mine turned out to be a very easy fix -- and may help reduce problems in the future. Total cost of about $4. You need disposable gloves; a $2 pint of rubbing alcohol; a cheap piece of Gladware or similar plastic container cheap enough to throw away without feeling guilty; and a sink that isn't terribly precious.
-- Put on a pair of medical gloves, or kitchen gloves you'll never use again
-- Get a disposable Gladware container -- the 4-ish-cup one, lower profile, is ideal.
-- Pull out each of the sponges. They may stick. Note which way the notch on the color sponge faces.
-- Plop the sponge into the Gladware. If you have a -lot- of ink on top of the surface, you may want to rub 'em on a newspaper or scrap piece of paper first to get the globs.
-- Plop 'em back into the Gladware, upside down (ink-heavy surface to bottom).
-- Put Gladware in the bathroom sink you don't like much.
-- Slowly pour in almost an entire pint of rubbing alcohol (70 percent, for ~$1.99, worked great). Keep a little in reserve.
-- Using your gloved fingers, keep scraping the sponges against the bottom of the Gladware. Occasionally pick the sponges up, squeeze them out, repeat as necessary. Eventually, they will start to look white -- unlike your alcohol, When they're relatively clean looking and can hold some liquid, you're done.
-- Pick up each sponge and squeeze the liquid out. Set aside in the sink and outside the Gladware, being sure it can't wash down your drawn.
-- Strip off a glove. Use your clean hand to turn on the -hot- water in your sink. It will start to overflow the Gladware, sending an ink-water-alcohol mix down your drain.
-- Let it run. Let it run some more. And more. And then flip over the Gladware, dumping out all the inky water. Let the sink run a full minute more -- keep that liquid flowing out.
-- Put the sponges under the running water; let 'em soak, squeeze out, soak, squeeze out.
-- Splash water and use your hands to rinse away any splashed inky spots in the sink.
-- Splash the reserve alcohol into your hands to clean them, and wipe down the sink again.

Ad

Anonymous

Level 1:

An expert who has achieved level 1.

Governor:

An expert whose answer got voted for 20 times.

Corporal:

An expert that has over 10 points.

Mayor:

An expert whose answer got voted for 2 times.

  • Contributor 2 Answers
  • Posted on Nov 06, 2007
Anonymous
Contributor
Level 1:

An expert who has achieved level 1.

Governor:

An expert whose answer got voted for 20 times.

Corporal:

An expert that has over 10 points.

Mayor:

An expert whose answer got voted for 2 times.

Joined: Nov 06, 2007
Answers
2
Questions
0
Helped
35255
Points
30

This is simpler than you'd think - it's due to the rubber "parkers" under the cartrdiges' rest position being mis-aligned. Solution: 1.Whilst Printer is on, remove power cord 2. Remove power cord from AC outlet 3. By hand, move print cartridges to the left 4. Pull rubber "parkers" under where the cartridges were fully towards you. Now move the cartridges by hand left-to-right to ensure no further obstruction. 5. Connect power cord to printer 6. Connect power cord to AC outlet 7. Switch on. You may need to re-align print heads at this point but carriage jam will be solved.

Anonymous

Level 1:

An expert who has achieved level 1.

Mayor:

An expert whose answer got voted for 2 times.

  • Contributor 1 Answer
  • Posted on Nov 02, 2008
Anonymous
Contributor
Level 1:

An expert who has achieved level 1.

Mayor:

An expert whose answer got voted for 2 times.

Joined: Apr 09, 2008
Answers
1
Questions
0
Helped
20395
Points
9

My printer is working okay now, thanks to a thorough clean-out with a toothbrush..there was a lot of gunky ink collected underneath the cartridge on the right hand side. This might have been caused by a leaky cartridge, but it was messy and gummy and therefore the cartridge wasn't moving forward and backwards (as opposed to left and right) smoothly.  See if this works for you, Eilla,

Anonymous

Level 1:

An expert who has achieved level 1.

Corporal:

An expert that has over 10 points.

Mayor:

An expert whose answer got voted for 2 times.

  • Contributor 2 Answers
  • Posted on Dec 23, 2008
Anonymous
Contributor
Level 1:

An expert who has achieved level 1.

Corporal:

An expert that has over 10 points.

Mayor:

An expert whose answer got voted for 2 times.

Joined: Dec 23, 2008
Answers
2
Questions
0
Helped
22535
Points
11

Thanks "jhv550" - solution #7. That was exactly my fix - it seems that ink jet printers need a little "spit cup". I used que tips and rubbing alcohol to clean the area. Note - there is a little "rub" rail at the top - clean that too - the little rubber parkers "rub" on the rail - apparently to clean themselves up.

Anonymous

Level 2:

An expert who has achieved level 2 by getting 100 points

MVP:

An expert that got 5 achievements.

Governor:

An expert whose answer got voted for 20 times.

Hot-Shot:

An expert who has answered 20 questions.

  • Expert 59 Answers
  • Posted on Jun 08, 2007
Anonymous
Expert
Level 2:

An expert who has achieved level 2 by getting 100 points

MVP:

An expert that got 5 achievements.

Governor:

An expert whose answer got voted for 20 times.

Hot-Shot:

An expert who has answered 20 questions.

Joined: Jun 07, 2007
Answers
59
Questions
2
Helped
65713
Points
102

Check to see if there is a thin plastic strip behind the carriage. It will be clear, and will run along the belt that moves the carriage. If not, that\'s most likely it and it will have to be replaced, the printer that is

Anonymous

Level 1:

An expert who has achieved level 1.

New Friend:

An expert that has 1 follower.

Mayor:

An expert whose answer got voted for 2 times.

  • Contributor 1 Answer
  • Posted on Feb 26, 2010
Anonymous
Contributor
Level 1:

An expert who has achieved level 1.

New Friend:

An expert that has 1 follower.

Mayor:

An expert whose answer got voted for 2 times.

Joined: Feb 26, 2010
Answers
1
Questions
0
Helped
20395
Points
3

Of course you can always throw your hp printer out the window and go buy a Kodak printer...less problems, ink is less expensive, I feel better just thinking about it! :)

Anonymous

Level 1:

An expert who has achieved level 1.

New Friend:

An expert that has 1 follower.

Mayor:

An expert whose answer got voted for 2 times.

  • Contributor 1 Answer
  • Posted on Mar 14, 2010
Anonymous
Contributor
Level 1:

An expert who has achieved level 1.

New Friend:

An expert that has 1 follower.

Mayor:

An expert whose answer got voted for 2 times.

Joined: Mar 14, 2010
Answers
1
Questions
0
Helped
20395
Points
3

Unplug your printer, move the bay to the middle, turn it back on and it works :)

A

Anonymous

If none of the above mentioned techniques fix the issue then it is an HP Hardware Malfunction. I went thru this all and ended up doing an online chat with an HP tech and those were his exact words. HP will try to sell you on another HP printer if you go thru them. I suggest just not buying HP stuff anymore. :)

Anonymous

Level 1:

An expert who has achieved level 1.

New Friend:

An expert that has 1 follower.

Mayor:

An expert whose answer got voted for 2 times.

  • Contributor 1 Answer
  • Posted on Feb 24, 2010
Anonymous
Contributor
Level 1:

An expert who has achieved level 1.

New Friend:

An expert that has 1 follower.

Mayor:

An expert whose answer got voted for 2 times.

Joined: Feb 24, 2010
Answers
1
Questions
0
Helped
20395
Points
2

Before you try any of these other solutions, do this: 1 - with the printer ON, unplug the printer's power cord and usb cord, 2 - open the printer, 3 - move the cartridge to the middle, 4 - close the printer, 5 - plug usb and power cords back in, 6 - turn the printer back on 7 - run cartridge alignment (or just print something), should work fine now, more effective than cleaning or calling tech guys, although that may be the ultimate solution if this doesn't work.

Anonymous

Level 1:

An expert who has achieved level 1.

  • Contributor 1 Answer
  • Posted on Mar 11, 2010
Anonymous
Contributor
Level 1:

An expert who has achieved level 1.

Joined: Mar 11, 2010
Answers
1
Questions
0
Helped
20395
Points
1

I think this is HP's built-in obsolescence. My printer is
immaculate~~showroom condition~~conveniently just out of warranty. I engaged in a technical chat for 1 hour and 20 minutes with a HP technician trying to solve my carraige jam problem. His conclusion was that I needed a new printer.

Anonymous

Level 1:

An expert who has achieved level 1.

  • Contributor 1 Answer
  • Posted on Nov 01, 2008
Anonymous
Contributor
Level 1:

An expert who has achieved level 1.

Joined: Nov 01, 2008
Answers
1
Questions
0
Helped
20395
Points
1

I have a HP 1610 and have a carriage jam. Help!!

Anonymous

Level 1:

An expert who has achieved level 1.

New Friend:

An expert that has 1 follower.

  • Contributor 1 Answer
  • Posted on Jan 19, 2010
Anonymous
Contributor
Level 1:

An expert who has achieved level 1.

New Friend:

An expert that has 1 follower.

Joined: Jan 19, 2010
Answers
1
Questions
0
Helped
20395
Points
1

I had the same problem with a consistent "carriage jam" message on my HP 1610. I too discovered a stalagmite building up from the sponge on the bottom. I LOVE the internet... googled, found this site and boogerhead1 Solution #9 fixed the issue!

Anonymous

Level 1:

An expert who has achieved level 1.

New Friend:

An expert that has 1 follower.

  • Contributor 1 Answer
  • Posted on Dec 12, 2009
Anonymous
Contributor
Level 1:

An expert who has achieved level 1.

New Friend:

An expert that has 1 follower.

Joined: Dec 12, 2009
Answers
1
Questions
0
Helped
20395
Points
1

I just want to thank you all. Especially 'inkstain' solution # 3. I have a HP 2610xi and I love it. First time I have had a problem. Aside from the good solutions about the ink goo build up under the ink cartridge, the statement about the cartridge wasn't moving forward and backwards caught my attention. Cartridges move left and right. My cartridges were moving left and right just fine. But I couldn't understand why the gears were grinding and the paper tray would not rise to feed the paper to the rollers. I cleaned out the ink goo and re-started the printer still no luck. Kept poking and then finally say the carriage below the ink cartridge carriage move forward and backward. I knew I had found the problem - and the printer works fine. I will have to do a little better cleaning but at least I am up and running.

A

Anonymous

My HP 1610 was giving the "carriage jam" error message, I checked the HP site and the troubleshooting tips were not helpful. The carriage was attempting to track from right to left and it seemed to me it was being blocked by the a curved plastic"guide" attached to the drive mechanism / gears at the bottom left side of the carriage. After many failed attempts by the pritnter itself to move, with the power on, I physically forced the carriage to the left, over the "guide" and toward the middle of the printer. At that point the printer took over and reset itself, with the gears and "guide" in the proper alignmnment and now it works fine.

Anonymous

Level 1:

An expert who has achieved level 1.

New Friend:

An expert that has 1 follower.

  • Contributor 1 Answer
  • Posted on Dec 03, 2009
Anonymous
Contributor
Level 1:

An expert who has achieved level 1.

New Friend:

An expert that has 1 follower.

Joined: Dec 03, 2009
Answers
1
Questions
1
Helped
20395
Points
1

My problem was the same as jhv550 (solution 2). I followed his/her instructions except that I used Q-tips and rubbing (isopropyl) alcohol and I also cleaned the extrermely overfilled ink overfllow collection sponges as Boogerhead 01 (Solution 9) suggested. The result was fantastic. The printer worked and no more "Carriage Jam" messages. The cleaning did take about 2 hours. Thanks for all the input.

Add Your Answer

×

Uploading: 0%

my-video-file.mp4

Complete. Click "Add" to insert your video. Add

×

Loading...
Loading...

Related Questions:

0helpful
1answer

I just changed the (2) ink cartridges in my HP PCS 1610 All-in-One HP printer and now get an error message "CARRIAGE JAM - OPEN DOOR. CLEAR CARRIAGE JAM, AND THEN PRESS OK." I don't see any jam...

Have you tried moving the carriage to see if it really is jammed? Maybe you haven't put the levers down properly on your new cartridges....remove them, see if the carriage slides, then refit them and check the carriage again. You wont visually 'see' a carriage jam,; you have to try moving it. By the way, if it doesn't move, DONT force it to try and overcome the jam try and reason out why it doesn't move.
Hope this helps!
nicam49
1helpful
2answers

HP PSC 1610 printer gives error message: Carriage Jam, clear carriage. I open the door and there isn't a Jam. I tried the solution (clean cartridge, turn off/on couldn't reset) posted by nanotech 9 Aug...

If you are getting a 'carriage jam' error as soon as you turn on your printer with no tasks in progress, then check for any piece of paper stuck in the carriage. Remove the paper carefully. If the paper tears, part of it might remain inside the paper path and damage the product.

Follow the steps for fix HP Printer Carriage Jam

  • Turn off the printer and open it to see where the paper is stuck.
  • Manually move the carriage toward the opposite side.
  • Check the paper path and remove any piece of paper or any other object that is stuck in the path.
  • Reconnect the power cord and turn on the printer.
0helpful
1answer

Get message clear carriage jam. how do i do this

Hi! I will be glad to assist you in this issue, here is the link that will fix the issue.
http://h10025.www1.hp.com/ewfrf/wc/document?docname=c00249434&tmp_task=solveCategory&lc=en&dlc=en&cc=us&product=390315&lang=en
0helpful
2answers

Installed new ink cartridges now makes loud nose when printing

hi there,

make sure that the carriage and the cartridge are properly fit into into the slot. make sure that there was no paper jam or object stuck on the parts
0helpful
1answer

HP 1610 Carriage Jam

Remove the ink jet, make sure you removed any pckg. material and the contacts cover on it.
3helpful
1answer

Hp psc 1610 printer ... error message alternates between carriage jam and out of paper

i cleaned the clear file strip behind the carriage by rubbing it between my fingers and my printer started working again. before that i had paper jam and carriage jam and it wouldn't do any printing or copying.
0helpful
1answer

HP 1610 - Skipping Lines when printing w/carriage return

You are lucky you can print ANYTHING! My unit has NEVER worked (3 years) due to a hardware defect of HP. I downloaded patches, cleaned/replaced cartridges, etc.
Spoke to HP last nite-Was told printer was junk-they don't carry it or any parts to fix it anymore!! I was told to replace it!
3helpful
3answers

Paper jams

Had this problem, too with HP PSC 1610 AIO, paper would pull in part way and stop, then display would indicate: Paper Jam, Clear Jam and Press OK, but there was no paper in the path at all. Found in HP forums that possibly the problem was a broken off piece that may be called the "x-bias" lever which is on a little spring inside the printer just to the left of the carriage bay on the right side of the device. There are two photos of "broken" and "not broken" at this forum site:
http://forums11.itrc.hp.com/service/forums/bizsupport/questionanswer.do?threadId=1085918
Since HP does not sell the little part to repair it, I phoned HP and got a good "trade-in, trade-up" price for a better device. Hope this helps someone else find the answer to the constant paper jam issue, as I always appreciate the FixYa forum help from everyone else here, too.
0helpful
1answer

Clear carriage jam

Follow the instruction suggested by Hp at the link below. If it makes you feel any better I have done this myself and it works.
http://h10025.www1.hp.com/ewfrf/wc/document?docname=c00300520&cc=us&lc=en&dlc=en&product=390315&dlc=en&lang=en
Not finding what you are looking for?

20,405 views

Ask a Question

Usually answered in minutes!

Top HP Office Equipment & Supplies Experts

Cindy Wells

Level 3 Expert

6688 Answers

k24674

Level 3 Expert

8093 Answers

Grand Canyon Tech
Grand Canyon Tech

Level 3 Expert

3867 Answers

Are you a HP Office Equipment and Supply Expert? Answer questions, earn points and help others

Answer questions

Manuals & User Guides

Loading...