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Those photoconductors have a limited life and have to be replaced. The message is warning that it is near the end of its life and wants you to have one ready when it goes out. Most printers will prevent you from printing when it reaches the end of the service life, some will let you continue to print but you will get reduced image quality. Either way, you'll need a new one soon.
Check the cassette, on certain printers if the cassette is set for the wrong size paper it will cause the printer to run slow, this happens on HP so it might be worth a try.
Here is a procedure I would like you to do to reset the light:
1-Power the printer on and get it to the Ready state (i.e. the light on the operator panel is on) 2-With the printer on and in the Ready state, open the front cover 3-Press and hold the Cancel button until all of the lights begin flashing up and down. 4-Release the Cancel button and close the door. The photoconductor count should now be reset
To confirm that the photoconductor page count has been reset, it is recommended that you print a menu settings page and check the photoconductor level. Do the following:
1.With the printer at the Ready status, press the Continue button once. The Ready light will begin flashing and one or two pages will print out. 2. Look for a section labeled Cartridge Information and locate the word Photoconductor under this heading. 3. Confirm that the photoconductor level reading is either OK or close to 100%. 4. If the reading is low, try printing 10 - 20 pages. 5. Print the menu settings page(s) again. 6. Confirm that the photoconductor level reading is OK or close to 100%. 7. If the photoconductor reading is still low, there is a second, more detailed, procedure you can perform to reset the count. 8. If the reading is still low after both procedures have been attempted, the printer may require service
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