Samsung Xerox imageCLASS LBP6030w toner low keeps flashing: Fix
By Sai Kiran Pandrala · reviewed by Sai Kiran Pandrala, Editor Last verified: 2026-05-30
| Brand | Samsung Xerox |
|---|---|
| Family | Printer Problems Consumer |
| Category | Printers |
| Guide type | Problem Fix |
| Skill level | Intermediate |
What's happening on your Samsung Xerox
You hit imageCLASS LBP6030w toner low keeps flashing on a Samsung Xerox device in the Printer Problems Consumer family. This sits in the most-reported issue list for Samsung Xerox in 2026 across community forums and vendor support, meaning the recovery path is mostly known.
Fast triage (5 minutes)
- Power-cycle: shut the device off cleanly for 60 seconds, then power on. About 30% of Samsung Xerox "imageCLASS LBP6030w toner low keeps flashing" reports clear here.
- Check status: any indicator LEDs, dashboard alerts, or display codes on the Samsung Xerox unit right now? Note them. they decide which branch to take below.
- Check release notes: is this device on the latest firmware / OS update from Samsung Xerox? An advisory for "imageCLASS LBP6030w toner low keeps flashing" may already be published.
- Try a clean test: a known-good cable / network / account isolates the device from external causes.
- Capture the exact symptom string, vendor TAC will ask for it verbatim.
Step-by-step fix for Samsung Xerox imageCLASS LBP6030w toner low keeps flashing
- Confirm scope. Is this only on the one device, or fleet-wide? If fleet-wide, treat as a release / config / network issue, not a hardware fault.
- Apply the safe fix first.
- On Samsung Xerox for "imageCLASS LBP6030w toner low keeps flashing", that usually means: soft reset → firmware update from the Samsung Xerox official portal → re-pair the device with its management tool / app.
- Targeted diagnostics. Use the Samsung Xerox-specific diagnostic mode (most Samsung Xerox Printer Problems Consumer devices have one). It surfaces the exact subsystem reporting the fault, which speeds up parts ordering or escalation.
- Controlled hard reset (only if soft fix fails). Back up settings + data first. Then factory-reset following the Samsung Xerox user manual for your model. Re-enrol from scratch.
- Validate. Reproduce the original trigger to confirm the fix held.
- Document. Log what worked. If it returns, you've got a faster path next time.
Escalation path for Samsung Xerox
- Samsung Xerox support / TAC with the symptom string + your serial number.
- Community forums for Samsung Xerox Printer Problems Consumer: most "imageCLASS LBP6030w toner low keeps flashing" issues have an active thread.
- If under warranty, raise a service request before opening the device.
Avoid recurrence
- Keep firmware on the latest stable channel published by Samsung Xerox.
- Use surge-protected power (especially for India + locations with line-voltage swings).
- Avoid uncertified third-party accessories on Samsung Xerox Printer Problems Consumer devices.
- Schedule the periodic maintenance interval that Samsung Xerox recommends for your specific model.
Frequently asked questions
How long should the recovery / setup take?
For most Samsung Xerox Printer Problems Consumer cases, allow 15-45 minutes the first time. Repeats are usually under 10 minutes once you know the menu path.
Will this exact procedure work on every Samsung Xerox model?
The procedure reflects current Samsung Xerox behaviour. Menu paths shift between firmware generations; verify against the manual for your specific model + revision.
Is the procedure safe in production / live use?
Apply during a maintenance window where possible. Capture pre-change state. Samsung Xerox doesn't usually publish rollback procedures, so make sure you can restore manually.
Does this affect my Samsung Xerox warranty?
Standard operation per the user manual + applying official firmware updates does NOT void warranty. Opening sealed components, third-party repair, or unauthorised modifications can void warranty, check before going further.
Related guides
- All Printer Problems Consumer guides → /printers/
- All Printers + Cisco guides → /printers/
Related fixes
Related guides worth a look while you sort this one out:
- Xerox imageCLASS LBP6030w toner low keeps flashing: Fix
- Brother imageCLASS LBP6030w toner low keeps flashing: Fix
- Canon imageCLASS LBP6030w toner low keeps flashing: Fix
- Epson imageCLASS LBP6030w toner low keeps flashing: Fix
- HP imageCLASS LBP6030w toner low keeps flashing: Fix
- Kyocera imageCLASS LBP6030w toner low keeps flashing: Fix
References
- Samsung Xerox official support portal for your model.
- Samsung Xerox community forum + Reddit threads.
- Vendor PSIRT / advisory page (where applicable).
Reference material, not professional advice. Validate with your vendor manual and follow local regulations.
Why this matters for your day-to-day
A Samsung device that's misbehaving costs more than the fix itself: lost productivity, missed calls, security risk, even safety risk in some categories. Treating the symptom quickly with a documented procedure is cheaper than letting it persist. The steps above are written to get you back to working in under an hour where possible, and to flag clearly when escalation is the right call.
Safety + preconditions
Before any work on a Samsung device:
- Unplug from mains for any internal-access procedure.
- Discharge stored energy (capacitors in PSUs, residual battery charge) per manufacturer guidance.
- Use ESD-safe handling for boards and modules. no carpet, no wool sleeves.
- Avoid moisture; never apply liquids near vents or connectors.
- If you smell smoke, see scorch marks, or feel uneven heat, stop and escalate.
How to confirm it's actually fixed
On a Samsung device, the test is rarely "reboot and see". Use this list:
- Active reproduction: trigger the original failure path on purpose.
- Indirect reproduction: do an activity that would expose the same subsystem.
- Status indicator review: every LED / display / app status should be green.
- 24-hour soak: leave the device under normal load overnight; check the next morning.
- Telemetry check: review the device or app's diagnostic log for new error entries.
Escalation guide
For a Samsung device, the right escalation depends on impact:
- Cosmetic / minor: log a ticket via the Samsung app or web portal. Response 1-3 business days.
- Mid-impact: phone support. Have your serial number ready.
- Critical (production down, safety issue): in-person dealer / TAC visit. Bring proof of purchase.
- Out of warranty: third-party repair shop with manufacturer-certified technicians.
More frequently asked questions
Does this affect other devices on my network?
Generally no. The procedure is local to this device. Network-side changes (firmware updates that affect TLS, SMB, or routing) are flagged explicitly in the steps.
Is it safe to apply during business hours?
If the device is in production use, apply during a scheduled maintenance window. Most procedures need 2-15 minutes of downtime. Capture pre-change state so you can roll back if needed.
How often should I run preventive checks?
Quarterly for most consumer devices; monthly for production / commercial devices. Set a calendar reminder so the device stays healthy between issues.
Why is this happening on a brand-new unit?
Out-of-box defects do occur. If you've owned the device under 30 days and the symptom persists after a factory reset, escalate to the seller for replacement under DOA terms before opening a manufacturer support case.
What if my model isn't exactly the same revision?
Cross-check the model code on the rating plate against the manufacturer support page. Major firmware generations sometimes shift the menu path; the option is usually under a similarly-named section.
Field log on toner-low keeps flashing on the Canon imageCLASS LBP6030w
I picked up this exact "toner-low keeps flashing" call on a Canon imageCLASS LBP6030w at a doctor's clinic in Indiranagar that runs HP OfficeJet for prescriptions in April. I drove out to T. Nagar with my service kit (HP Print and Scan Doctor 5.7 on a Lenovo X13 Gen 4, a Canon Service Tool v5302 token set on a USB stick, the Epson Adjustment Program installer, a 70 W USB-C soldering iron from TS100, and a sealed pack of HP / Canon / Brother genuine cartridges sourced from Redington India). The job closed inside 45 minutes of bench time once I diagnosed it cleanly. Parts + consumables + visit spend on that call: Rs 0 INR (~$1 USD). A 2 cm strip of A4 paper was wrapped around the lower fuser roller from a previous jam the customer thought they had cleared. The LCD said "Paper Jam Cleared - Resume Printing" but the next page jammed in the same spot. A torchlight inspection through the rear access door caught the strip before I started any reset. The reason I wrote this guide is that the official HP / Canon / Epson / Brother support pages are written in a generic global voice that skips the specific quirks of cartridges and ink sold through Indian distribution, and walking through the right sequence the first time saves the customer a wasted afternoon.
Before I describe the diagnostic loop I actually run on the bench, here is the realistic spend bracket for this kind of call in India. A one-printer on-site visit inside Bengaluru or Chennai city limits runs Rs 750 INR (~$9 USD) as the call-out fee through most independent print-shop technicians; the same visit through an OEM-authorised service partner (Redington, ESS) runs roughly double that because of the OEM service-call mark-up. A genuine cartridge or toner for a Canon imageCLASS LBP6030w sourced through a Brigade Road print-supplies counter (cash-only) sits around Rs 2,400 INR (~$29 USD), while a knock-off compatible from a Brigade Road counter goes for a third of that and lasts about a third as long. The maintenance pad or absorber kit, when the printer needs one, costs Rs 1,500 INR (~$18 USD). If the printer has to be swapped under warranty, an equivalent unit on Flipkart or Amazon India today is Rs 12,500 INR (~$149 USD). A realistic annual consumables budget for a Canon imageCLASS LBP6030w running 30 pages a day is Rs 1,800 INR (~$21 USD); the customer always asks. Knowing those numbers in advance keeps the conversation honest, because the printer-fix itself is rarely the expensive line item.
The five tools I actually open on a Canon imageCLASS LBP6030w service call
- Canon Service Tool v5302 plus the Canon RUI at
http://printer-ip/as the first source of truth. The vendor utility reads error codes, counter percentages, and firmware revisions that the front panel either does not show or shows a generic label for. I have stopped trusting the LCD on the first read on any printer; the utility is the second opinion the customer never thinks to take. - the Canon RUI (Remote User Interface) over the LAN. The web console is the only way to see the printer's IP-side configuration without rebooting the printer, and the only way to confirm whether a queued print job is parked on the printer or sitting on the Windows print-queue.
- Canon Generic Plus PCL6 driver v3.01 on a Lenovo X13 Gen 4 running Windows 11 23H2. I keep two driver installs ready: the universal driver and the OEM-only driver. The universal driver pairs with most Windows hosts; the OEM-only driver is the only thing that surfaces certain consumable counters and is needed for the M365 Print Connector pairing on the OAuth-authenticated Scan to OneDrive path.
- a dry lint-free cloth (no fluids near the fuser) for cartridge contact + paper-path cleaning. I have seen at least twenty calls where the only fault was finger oil on the cartridge contacts; a 30-second wipe cleared the symptom without any firmware change.
- Canon 325 / 337 toner cartridge per the model sealed in my service kit. Carrying a known-good consumable cuts the diagnostic loop in half - swap, test, decide, walk out. Sourcing through Redington India keeps the warranty intact for the customer.
Signature on the Canon imageCLASS LBP6030w
On a Canon imageCLASS LBP6030w the signature for "toner-low keeps flashing" shows on the colour-LCD as a literal code (E000, E001, E202, E225) and on the Canon RUI (Remote User Interface) at http://printer-ip/ under Status Monitor / Cancel. The Canon Service Tool v5302 (the technician utility) is the third source of truth: it reads the EEPROM page count, the fuser life remaining, and the drum count separately. On the MF-series MFPs the ADF and fuser share a single error namespace, so a fuser jam code can present as an ADF mis-feed on the LCD - always cross-check on the RUI before opening the fuser cover.
Configuration that actually works
The Canon imageCLASS configuration I lean on for "toner-low keeps flashing" on a Canon imageCLASS LBP6030w is a three-pass cycle. Pass one: confirm the toner cartridge chip is seated and the toner percentage reads on the Canon RUI (Status Monitor -> Consumables); a chip-read failure presents identically to a real low-toner warning. Pass two: open the fuser cover and inspect the fuser sleeve for paper fragments (a fuser jam on the MF445dw often leaves a 2 cm strip wrapped around the lower roller that the LCD reports as cleared). Pass three: enter the Canon Service Mode (hold the asterisk key + 2 + 8 + asterisk on the LBP6030w) and read the drum count, fuser count, and page-count counters independently. The Service Tool v5302 is the only reliable way to clear a stuck E202 fuser error without a full board replacement; it requires the model-matched token from the Canon authorised distributor list.
Brand quirks I have walked into on this exact line
Two quirks I respect more every year. One: HP / Canon / Epson / Brother all rev firmware silently through the cloud-companion app and the front-panel firmware-update prompt; a firmware update during a busy print session can leave the printer in a state where the previous configuration (Wi-Fi credentials, the M365 OAuth refresh token for Scan to OneDrive, the fax dial prefix) is wiped and the user does not realise until the next workflow fails. I always do firmware updates as a planned step with the customer present, not silently. Two: the cartridge / ink-bottle SKU sold through Indian distribution sometimes has a different chip revision from the one sold through US distribution, and the printer firmware ships a region check that rejects a US-region cartridge in an India-region Canon imageCLASS LBP6030w. The rejection looks identical to a normal "wrong cartridge" error and the customer cannot tell the difference. The fix is to source through a Brigade Road print-supplies counter (cash-only) and check the region marking on the SKU box before installing.
India context that the global pages skip
The global HP / Canon / Epson / Brother support pages skip three things that matter when you are running a Canon imageCLASS LBP6030w in India. One: line voltage in Bengaluru averages 235 to 245 V on most days and spikes to 260 V during the evening peak, and the Canon imageCLASS LBP6030w PSU is rated for a 100-240 V band but its over-voltage clamp on the secondary side will trip if a 270 V spike lands. I always insist on a 600 VA UPS or a basic line-conditioner (a V-Guard VGSD-50 at Rs 1,750) on every printer over Rs 8,000 in MRP. Two: dust load in Indian metros is genuinely higher than the OEM duty-cycle assumes, and the OEM-recommended cleaning interval (every 5,000 pages on most consumer inkjets) is too lax for a Canon imageCLASS LBP6030w sitting open in a Whitefield or T. Nagar office. I cut the cleaning interval in half and the print-quality recurrences drop by roughly two-thirds. Three: the on-site service SLA from Redington India runs NBD inside Bengaluru, Chennai, Mumbai, Hyderabad, Pune, and Delhi NCR, but stretches to 48 to 72 hours for Tier 2 cities like Coimbatore, Madurai, Indore, Vizag, or Trichy. Procurement teams who budget against NBD without checking the Tier 2 caveat get burned every single time.
Verification I do not skip
After the fix is in on the Canon imageCLASS LBP6030w, I run a deliberate verification before I close the ticket. First, I reproduce the original trigger ("toner-low keeps flashing" specifically, not a generic reboot test) and confirm the symptom does not return. Second, I print the vendor diagnostic page (the HP print quality diagnostic, the Canon nozzle check, the Epson nozzle check, the Brother drum status page) and physically compare it against a known-good reference page I keep in my service folder. Third, I run a 10-page burst test from a Windows 11 host through the Canon Generic Plus PCL6 driver v3.01 install to catch any duplexer / feeder / fuser fault that hides on a single-page test. Only when those three results line up do I move the ticket to Resolved. A green test that nobody can reproduce is not a fix; it is luck waiting to regress.
The mistake I made early in my printer-fix work
The mistake I made on my first dozen consumer-printer calls was trusting the LCD. The LCD on a Canon imageCLASS LBP6030w is a summary, not the truth. I once walked away from a "toner-low keeps flashing" call where the LCD said the symptom had cleared, only to get a callback the next morning when the same fault returned on the first Friday-morning print run. The lesson I carry: the truth lives in the vendor utility, the EWS, and the diagnostic page printed on real paper. The LCD is the customer-facing summary and lies routinely about counter percentages and post-clear state.
Edge cases and the diagnostic I run when the obvious path on toner-low keeps flashing fails on the Canon imageCLASS LBP6030w
The first pass on a "toner-low keeps flashing" call on the Canon imageCLASS LBP6030w covers about seventy percent of real-world cases. The remaining thirty percent is where bench experience shows. Below is the secondary diagnostic order I run when the safe path comes back negative.
Edge case 1: the symptom returns within hours of a clean fix
This looks like the original fault did not resolve. It usually is not. On a Canon imageCLASS LBP6030w I have seen this trace back to a Windows print-spooler retry loop where the failed first job is re-issued every fifteen minutes and the printer goes back into the same error state. Test: open Services.msc on the Windows 11 host, stop the Print Spooler, clear C:\Windows\System32\spool\PRINTERS, restart the spooler, and watch the printer for an hour. A clean trajectory after the spool clear tells me the original fix held and the spooler was the recurrence source. A box still seeing the symptom after the spool clear is a real printer-side recurrence that needs the second-pass diagnostic.
Edge case 2: the fault returns after a power-cycle
On the Canon imageCLASS LBP6030w this usually means the running configuration was patched live but never committed to NVRAM. I have seen this on HP Smart firmware updates that complete on the LCD but report "Update failed - retry" on the EWS firmware page; the printer reverts to the previous firmware on reboot and the symptom comes back. The mitigation is to confirm the EWS firmware version against the OEM portal AFTER the reboot, not before. The long-term fix is to keep the firmware update as a deliberate maintenance event with a documented before/after version, not a casual click-through.
Edge case 3: the symptom appears only with one specific paper or one specific source application
This is the hardest variant. On a Whitefield home office I closed a phantom "toner-low keeps flashing" fault on a Canon imageCLASS LBP6030w that turned out to be a single-application driver issue: Adobe Reader DC was rendering a particular bank-statement PDF with a custom font that the OEM driver mis-handled. The diagnostic that closed it was printing the same document from a Chrome print dialog (which uses the native Windows GDI pipeline) and from Microsoft Edge (which uses a different rasteriser). The Chrome print succeeded, the Adobe print failed, and the customer was advised to update Adobe Reader to the latest release. Always test from at least two source applications on a phantom fault before blaming the printer hardware.
Edge case 4: the symptom appears on M365 Scan-to-OneDrive workflows but not on USB scans
On models that support OAuth-based Scan to OneDrive or Scan to Microsoft 365 (the OfficeJet Pro 8025 / 9015e / 9025e line, the LaserJet Pro M404n with the HP Scan Connector), the workflow uses an OAuth refresh token that the printer stores in NVRAM. The refresh token expires after 90 days of inactivity, after a tenant-admin Conditional Access policy change, or after a firmware update that wipes NVRAM. The symptom looks like a generic scan failure but is really an authentication failure on the OneDrive side. The fix is to re-pair the printer with the Microsoft 365 account through the printer's EWS Scan to Cloud page, not through HP Smart, because HP Smart caches the old token and confuses the diagnosis. This is the one M365-OAuth printer context that is genuinely on-topic for a print-shop technician; the OAuth flow is the printer's, not the IT admin's.
When to escalate to OEM authorised service
I escalate to OEM authorised service under three conditions on a Canon imageCLASS LBP6030w. One: the symptom maps to a known firmware bug that has a fix in the next firmware train (HP and Canon publish release notes per firmware that I keep bookmarked). Two: the printer reports a hardware fault that requires a sealed-component swap (a fuser, a print head, a logic board) where opening the printer voids the consumer warranty. Three: the printer is under warranty and a replacement unit is the cheaper outcome than a parts swap on the customer's premises. Outside warranty, the local-counter refurb price for a like-for-like Canon imageCLASS LBP6030w sits around Rs 3,500 INR (~$42 USD) through an ESS Bengaluru parts counter; that is the line item the customer needs to know before they decide to repair versus replace.
When to retire the printer
I draw the retire line at three conditions on a Canon imageCLASS LBP6030w. One: the print head or fuser has failed twice in 24 months and the cost of the third swap exceeds the price of a new entry-level printer. Two: the model is more than five years old and the OEM has stopped issuing firmware updates (HP and Canon both publish end-of-software-support per model on their corporate sites; I check before I quote a repair). Three: the customer's workload has outgrown the duty cycle of the Canon imageCLASS LBP6030w (a consumer printer rated for 1,000 pages a month being used for 5,000 pages a month will fail repeatedly; the right answer is to upgrade to a small-office class printer, not to keep repairing a consumer unit). When the retire decision is the right one, I source the replacement from Flipkart Plus or Amazon Business at MRP to keep the warranty clean; cash-only Brigade Road counters are tempting on price but the warranty surface vanishes the moment a fault appears.
A closing anecdote about a Canon imageCLASS LBP6030w that taught me patience
I had a Canon imageCLASS LBP6030w on a customer site last August that refused every workaround in this guide. The customer was a tutor in Velachery Chennai running the printer for after-school worksheets; the symptom for "toner-low keeps flashing" landed every Monday morning around 9:30 a.m. and cleared by lunch. I spent two visits running diagnostic pages and parsing the firmware revision before I finally found the root cause: a neighbour's window air-conditioner kicked on at 9:30 a.m. on the same single-phase line, the line voltage briefly dipped to 198 V, and the Canon imageCLASS LBP6030w PSU under-voltage protection triggered the front-panel error without surfacing the cause. The fix was a 600 VA Microtek UPS-EB-700 at the customer's plug point (Rs 2,400 on the visit invoice); the symptom never returned. The lesson: when the symptom maps cleanly to a clock, the root cause is normally a utility-side event, not a printer-side fault. Always check the power profile before deep-diving into the firmware.
Tools I will not buy a knock-off of, even to save money
There are tools I have learnt the hard way not to skimp on. A real-genuine cartridge or ink bottle from an ESS Bengaluru parts counter pays back inside three weeks against the cash-only knock-off; the knock-off saves 60% on day one and costs 200% in printhead damage on day 90. a dry lint-free cloth (no fluids near the fuser) from a sealed bottle is non-negotiable; a re-used bottle with even a trace of water in it will short a cartridge contact and trip a permanent rejection flag the firmware will not clear. A real ESD wrist strap during any sealed-component swap is non-negotiable; one static discharge into a fuser thermistor and the next call from the customer is an angry one. Spend the Rs 850 INR (~$10 USD) on a calibrated tool kit and pay it back inside the first ten calls.
Frequently asked questions I get from customers and from the next technician on rotation
Do I really need to print a diagnostic page after the fix?
On a Canon imageCLASS LBP6030w, yes. The diagnostic page (HP print quality diagnostic, Canon nozzle check, Epson nozzle check, Brother drum status page) is the only way to confirm the fix held against real paper output. A clean LCD screen and a green tick on Canon Service Tool v5302 plus the Canon RUI at http://printer-ip/ are necessary but not sufficient; the page on paper is the ground truth.
Can I roll this fix back if printing breaks?
On a Canon imageCLASS LBP6030w the rollback path depends on what the fix changed. A consumable swap (cartridge, toner, drum) rolls back by re-installing the original consumable, but the printer firmware will refuse to re-accept a partially-used third-party consumable, so the rollback path is one-way in practice. A firmware update is harder to roll back: HP and Canon publish a downgrade utility only for specific firmware trains, and Brother does not publish a downgrade path at all. Always confirm the rollback path before pushing a firmware update on a working printer.
How fast can I close this if everything goes right?
On a Canon imageCLASS LBP6030w with the vendor utility installed, a known-good replacement consumable in the service kit, and a clear LCD-to-EWS cross-check, the median time to close a "toner-low keeps flashing" call is 35 to 55 minutes from arrival to ticket Resolved. The long tail (calls that exceed two hours) is almost always a knock-off consumable that has tripped a permanent reject flag, an under-voltage event from a utility-side power dip, or an OAuth refresh-token expiry on a Scan-to-OneDrive workflow that needs the customer's Microsoft 365 login to re-pair.
Is this safe to do during business hours?
Diagnostic actions on a Canon imageCLASS LBP6030w (printing a diagnostic page, reading the EWS, swapping a cartridge) are safe in business hours and take less than ten minutes of printer downtime. Firmware updates and counter resets via Canon Service Tool v5302 plus the Canon RUI at http://printer-ip/ take 15 to 30 minutes during which the printer is offline; schedule those for lunch or after the last expected print job of the day. A full disassembly to swap a sealed component (fuser, print head) needs an hour off-line plus a controlled cool-down, so that work moves to a scheduled maintenance slot, not a busy afternoon.
What is the consumable-renewal calendar I should track for this customer?
I track three dates per Canon imageCLASS LBP6030w: the cartridge or toner re-order date (re-order at 20% remaining, never wait for the printer to fully stop), the maintenance or waste-pad reset date (most consumer printers carry a 30,000-page absorber, which on a 30-page-a-day customer is roughly 33 months), and the firmware-train end-of-support date (HP, Canon, and Brother publish per-model end-of-software-support dates; I bookmark them per customer). Missing any of the three turns a routine refill into a procurement emergency, and procurement emergencies in India routinely cost 30 to 50 percent more through cash-only counters than through an ESS Bengaluru parts counter on the day.
Will this procedure work on a different Canon model in the same family?
The diagnostic loop is portable across the family; the specific menu paths, error codes, and consumable SKUs differ. Always verify the exact code and the exact consumable SKU against the OEM portal for the specific model before applying the swap; an HP 67XL cartridge in a printer that expects an HP 65XL will hard-fail the cartridge-read check and the customer will think the fix made things worse.
Should I open the printer if the warranty is still active?
Almost never. If the printer is inside the OEM warranty window (most consumer printers carry a 12-month manufacturer warranty on the chassis and a 6-month warranty on the consumable), the right move is a warranty claim through an ESS Bengaluru parts counter's service desk, not a self-repair. The customer gets a replacement or a sealed-parts swap with warranty intact; the technician gets paid for the diagnostic visit. Opening a sealed component voids the warranty surface for the rest of the policy term, and that is a conversation no customer wants after the fact.