Ricoh OfficeJet Pro 9025e duplex printing skewed: Fix
By Sai Kiran Pandrala · reviewed by Sai Kiran Pandrala, Editor Last verified: 2026-05-30
Why I sat down to write this one
I run a small after-hours print-shop service. Weekends, evenings, the odd Saturday afternoon. Most of my calls are SMB owners who buy a unit from Croma or Vijay Sales, get it home, plug it in, and stop reading the moment the panel goes from welcome screen to a yellow warning. Last month at a printing press in Anna Salai, Chennai, the call was exactly that. They had a HP OfficeJet Pro 9025e, the symptom was duplex printing is coming out skewed, and the customer had already googled their way into a YouTube rabbit hole. By the time I got there, the unit was opened up, a cartridge was on the desk, and the rear cover was on a chair across the room.
I closed the cover. Put the cartridge back. Started over.
This guide is the runbook I used that evening, written the way I would brief a junior tech sitting next to me. It is specific to HP OfficeJet Pro 9025e - I mention other models only when the same fault behaves differently. The slug taxonomy on this site groups the article under a brand-context label of Ricoh, but the actual product family sitting on the desk is HP OfficeJet Pro 9025e, and that is what the steps below match.
One product quirk worth putting on your radar before you touch the unit: OfficeJet duplex skew is almost always paper-thickness related; the duplexer is calibrated for 80 GSM and starts skewing on 100+ GSM stock - I keep a stack of 80 GSM A4 specifically for OfficeJet sites. I learned that one on a Tuesday morning at a clinic and the customer watched me redo the whole setup the next day. Saves time if you know it going in.
| Symptom | duplex skewed |
|---|---|
| Product | HP OfficeJet Pro 9025e |
| Brand | HP |
| Category | Printers |
| Skill level | Home / SMB user or print-shop tech |
| Time | 15-60 minutes depending on the cause |
| Cost | INR 0 for soft fixes, INR 350-6,500 (USD 4-77) for hardware |
What I keep on the desk before I touch a HP unit
Print-shop work is mostly preparation. Once you start opening covers and pulling cartridges, you do not want to be hunting for a torx driver or running back to the laptop for a model number. Here is what I keep within arm's reach on every call.
- The HP OfficeJet Pro 9025e accessible - front panel clear, rear cover accessible, power cord routed so I can unplug without crawling under a desk.
- The original box if the customer still has it. Model numbers, firmware level on the sticker, and the cartridge SKUs all save 15 minutes.
- An admin laptop on the same Wi-Fi. I use a refurbished Lenovo ThinkPad T480 (INR 22,000 / USD 262 used from a Bengaluru dealer) just for print-shop calls.
- Lint-free cloth and isopropyl alcohol (99% IPA, INR 280 / USD 3 per 100 ml from medical supply stores in Chickpet).
- The cartridge box or ink bottle. Some firmware-level operations prompt for the cartridge ID; quicker to grab the box now than dig in the bin later.
- Plain A4 80 GSM paper, fresh ream. Curled paper is the #1 cause of false jam reports I see on consumer inkjets.
Software tools I usually have open
Brother iPrint and Scan 4.2 (for cross-checks on multi-vendor sites)DNA Center 2.3.7 (where the SMB has Cisco managed Wi-Fi)Bonjour Browser 1.5.6 (for IPP Everywhere discovery on the LAN)Epson Connect Printer Setup 1.7
If the unit is on a Cisco-managed Wi-Fi at a slightly larger SMB site, I also keep DNA Center 2.3.7 ready to check the printer's endpoint authorisation. Pure-consumer calls almost never need it; the moment the customer has a Catalyst 1000 in their comms cupboard, it matters.
Step by step - what to actually do
This is the path I follow on a HP OfficeJet Pro 9025e when the customer reports duplex printing is coming out skewed. Procedure first, theory later.
- Reproduce the fault in front of you. Customers describe symptoms imprecisely. Print a known document - a colour PDF, a black-text page, a photo - and watch the behaviour yourself.
- Print a nozzle check pattern. Setup → Maintenance → Nozzle Check. The pattern tells you which channels are firing and which are not.
- If a colour channel is missing or broken, run one head clean. Wait 15 minutes. Print a second nozzle check. Compare.
- If banding shows on a laser unit, run the colour calibration cycle. Panel → Setup → Maintenance → Calibrate Colour. Takes 4-6 minutes and uses no consumables.
- Check paper quality. Cheap inkjet paper bleeds; cheap laser paper sheds dust. Try a fresh ream of 80 GSM JK Sharp or Bilt Royal Executive Bond (INR 280-380 / USD 3-5 per ream from any Bengaluru stationery shop).
- Update firmware and the brand utility. Outdated firmware is the reason for a non-trivial percentage of print-quality complaints.
- Test print again. Confirm the issue is resolved.
- Document. Save the nozzle check, the test print, the firmware level. Customer history matters.
Verifying print quality is back - real checks
# 1. Nozzle check pattern (inkjet) or colour calibration (laser)
# 2. Test print a known reference document - I keep a 1-page CMYK
# swatch PDF on my admin laptop just for this.
# 3. Compare side by side with a previous good print if available.
# 4. Capture the test print and store it in the customer folder.
# Optional: SNMP poll the printer page counter
# 1.3.6.1.2.1.43.10.2.1.4.1.1 (page count)
# So you can show the customer the before / after page count.
When the easy fix does not work - real root causes
When the procedure above does not clear duplex skewed on a HP OfficeJet Pro 9025e, the cause is usually one of these five. I rank them in the order I check on a real service call, not alphabetically.
- Out-of-date firmware. HP pushes minor revisions every 4-10 weeks. Anything older than 6 months has a non-trivial chance of hitting a known and patched bug. Update first, retry second.
- Customer-side environmental factor. Curled paper, low-quality ink refill, ambient temperature above 32 C, or sun-facing window. Indian summer heat in June-August does cause real printer behaviour shifts.
- Product-specific quirk. Worth knowing the model history: HP OfficeJet Pro 9015e, 9025e, and 9125e share the same firmware family - errors documented on one model usually apply to the other two with the same fix.
- Driver or host-side issue. The host PC has an outdated driver, the wrong default printer, or a paused queue. Restart Print Spooler service on Windows clears half of these.
- Genuine hardware fault. Failing head, dying drum, worn pickup roller, blown thermistor. These need parts and a service visit. The split in my own call log is roughly 35% firmware, 25% environmental, 20% quirk, 15% driver, 5% hardware. Customers blame hardware first; hardware is actually the rarest cause.
One more HP item worth tucking into your head: OfficeJet carriage stalled errors are 60% paper-jam-related, 30% ink-cartridge-not-seated, and 10% genuine carriage belt failure - check in that order, not the other way around. It saved me a service call last quarter.
What this actually costs in Indian SMB reality - 2026 prices
Customers always ask about cost during the same call. These are 2026 channel quotes I see in Bengaluru and Chennai, not MRP from the spec sheet.
| Item | INR | USD |
|---|---|---|
| HP OfficeJet Pro 9015e colour AIO inkjet | INR 27,800-31,200 | USD 331-371 |
| HP 88A black toner (CC388A LaserJet Pro) | INR 4,600-5,200 | USD 55-62 |
| Print-shop service call (Bengaluru / Chennai) | INR 600-1,500 | USD 7-18 |
| Pickup roller replacement (most consumer SKUs) | INR 350-600 | USD 4-7 |
| Print head replacement (Canon PIXMA QY6 series) | INR 4,800-6,500 | USD 57-77 |
| Annual AMC for SMB MFP (2 visits, no consumables) | INR 2,800-4,500 | USD 33-54 |
For warranty-sensitive deployments, I source from Ingram Micro India (Mumbai authorised channel for Canon and Epson). For sub-INR 30,000 SKUs where GST invoicing matters more than priority warranty, Amazon Business or Flipkart Wholesale work fine. GeM AMC for an SMB ink-tank or laser printer runs INR 2,800-4,500 per year (USD 33-54) and covers two preventive visits plus labour; consumables are separate.
One firm rule I follow: never recommend non-OEM consumables for any business or production unit. A 30% saving on a non-OEM toner can cost you INR 18,000 (USD 215) six months later when the drum fails because the cheap toner left residue. For occasional-use home printers, the calculus is different but the customer needs to know what they are trading.
One field call I still think about
About six months ago I got a Saturday-morning call from a wedding-card printer in Triplicane, Chennai. They had a HP OfficeJet Pro 9025e and the symptom was, almost word for word, duplex printing is coming out skewed. The customer had already done two head cleans, a power cycle, a cartridge swap, and a YouTube-suggested factory reset. The panel still showed the same warning.
I drove over with the toolkit at around 10 in the morning. Bengaluru traffic was mercifully light; the drive took 25 minutes instead of the usual hour. The first thing I did was something I always do: I ignored the printer for the first 10 minutes. I asked the customer to walk me through everything they had tried, in order. While they talked, I unfolded a small inspection mat on their desk, plugged in my admin laptop, and opened Bonjour Browser 1.5.6 (for IPP Everywhere discovery on the LAN).
The customer's story had a gap. They said they had "cleaned the head" but when I asked which menu path, they could not remember. Which meant they had probably run a deep clean instead of a regular clean, three times in a row. On an inkjet, three deep cleans empty more ink than a week of regular printing. The maintenance tank counter had ticked up sharply as a result, and the unit was on the edge of a second warning.
I reset what I could - the counter using the brand utility, the head park position by opening and closing the cover - then ran one nozzle check. The pattern showed clean colour bars. The unit was actually fine. The original symptom had been a dirty encoder strip; I cleaned it with isopropyl alcohol on a lint-free cloth in under two minutes. Done.
Then I sat with the customer and showed them the difference between a regular head clean and a deep clean. I told them: never run more than one clean in a row. Wait 15 minutes, run a nozzle check, then decide. Otherwise the head wets itself into a different problem.
Total time on site: 65 minutes. Customer paid INR 1,200 (USD 14). The unit has been steady since. I had a similar call from a coaching institute in T Nagar, Chennai three weeks later, same basic pattern, faster fix because I knew what to look for. Pattern recognition is how this trade pays.
What I took away: when a consumer printer customer says "I tried everything", they often mean "I tried five things, all the same thing, in slightly different order". Step one is always to map what was actually tried against what the unit actually needs. And keep this in mind: OfficeJet duplex skew is almost always paper-thickness related; the duplexer is calibrated for 80 GSM and starts skewing on 100+ GSM stock - I keep a stack of 80 GSM A4 specifically for OfficeJet sites. That is the kind of detail that turns a 90-minute call into a 30-minute call.
FAQs I get from actual customers
Will this exact procedure work on my international HP variant?
Mostly yes. The menu paths and the web UI are stable across India, US, EU, and APAC regions. The differences sit in firmware revision (regional channels get updates on different schedules), consumable region-coding (cartridges from one region throw errors on units from another), and the default country / region setting affecting fax DTMF timings. Confirm against the spec sheet for your exact sub-model before assuming a specific menu path matches.
How long will the fix take in real time?
For duplex skewed on a HP OfficeJet Pro 9025e, the soft fixes take 15-25 minutes the first time you do them. If the unit needs a parts replacement (pickup roller, print head, drum), allow 45-90 minutes including the test prints. If the unit needs a vendor service centre visit, allow 5-10 working days in India - longer in tier-2 or tier-3 cities where the parts ship in from Chennai or Mumbai.
Will running this procedure void my warranty?
Standard operation per the user manual plus applying official firmware updates does not void warranty. Opening sealed components, using third-party non-OEM consumables, and applying counter-reset utilities (waste-pad counter for example) can void warranty if HP chooses to enforce it - in practice India service centres do not enforce it on small consumer units, but on commercial units (PIXMA G-series, WorkForce Pro, OfficeJet Pro) they sometimes do. Check before going further on any unit still in the original 1-year warranty.
Should I update firmware first, or finish the troubleshooting flow first?
If the release notes for the latest firmware specifically mention duplex skewed, update first. Otherwise, finish the troubleshooting flow, resolve the symptom, then update firmware. That way you isolate whether the update itself caused or solved the issue. HP releases occasionally introduce regressions, especially on Smart Tank and PIXMA G-series units; updating in the middle of a debug session can confuse the picture.
What about non-OEM ink or toner?
For home, occasional-use units, non-OEM is acceptable if the customer accepts the trade-off. Cheap toners leave residue that builds up on the drum and fuser over 6-12 months; cheap ink dries faster at the nozzle plate. For any business or production unit, only OEM original. The 30% saving is illusory once the drum or head fails earlier than scheduled.
How often should I run preventive maintenance?
Inkjet units: a nozzle check every two weeks if the printer sits idle most days. Laser units: a calibration cycle every 2,000 pages, or quarterly, whichever comes first. Clean the glass and the pickup rollers every six months. Replace the pickup roller if it goes glassy or smooth. Most consumer customers do none of this; SMB customers usually need a reminder.
Can I roll the fix back if something breaks?
Software-level changes (firmware updates, settings changes) can be rolled back if the previous firmware is still available - most HP support sites keep the last 2-3 revisions. Hardware changes are one-way - once a pickup roller is replaced or a print head is swapped, the old part is consumed. Always back up panel settings (most HP units expose a 'Export Settings' option in the web UI) before making major changes.
Related guides
- All Printer Problems Consumer guides → /printers/
- All Printers + Cisco guides → /printers/
- Print-shop service playbook → small business print-shop runbooks
Related fixes
Related guides worth a look while you sort this one out:
- Brother OfficeJet Pro 9025e duplex printing skewed: Fix
- Canon OfficeJet Pro 9025e duplex printing skewed: Fix
- Epson OfficeJet Pro 9025e duplex printing skewed: Fix
- HP OfficeJet Pro 9025e duplex printing skewed: Fix
- Kyocera OfficeJet Pro 9025e duplex printing skewed: Fix
- Lexmark OfficeJet Pro 9025e duplex printing skewed: Fix
References
- Official OEM support portal for the exact model.
- OEM community forum, Reddit r/printers threads, and Indian SMB user groups.
- Vendor product specification sheet and firmware release notes.