Xerox DeskJet 4100 all-in-one wrong colors print quality: Fix
By Sai Kiran Pandrala · reviewed by Sai Kiran Pandrala, Editor Last verified: 2026-05-30
| Brand | Xerox |
|---|---|
| Family | Printer Problems Consumer |
| Category | Printers |
| Guide type | Problem Fix |
| Skill level | Intermediate |
What's happening on your Xerox
You hit DeskJet 4100 all-in-one wrong colors print quality on a Xerox device in the Printer Problems Consumer family. This sits in the most-reported issue list for 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 Xerox "DeskJet 4100 all-in-one wrong colors print quality" reports clear here.
- Check status: any indicator LEDs, dashboard alerts, or display codes on the 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 Xerox? An advisory for "DeskJet 4100 all-in-one wrong colors print quality" 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 Xerox DeskJet 4100 all-in-one wrong colors print quality
- 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 Xerox for "DeskJet 4100 all-in-one wrong colors print quality", that usually means: soft reset → firmware update from the Xerox official portal → re-pair the device with its management tool / app.
- Targeted diagnostics. Use the Xerox-specific diagnostic mode (most 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 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 Xerox
- Xerox support / TAC with the symptom string + your serial number.
- Community forums for Xerox Printer Problems Consumer: most "DeskJet 4100 all-in-one wrong colors print quality" 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 Xerox.
- Use surge-protected power (especially for India + locations with line-voltage swings).
- Avoid uncertified third-party accessories on Xerox Printer Problems Consumer devices.
- Schedule the periodic maintenance interval that Xerox recommends for your specific model.
Frequently asked questions
How long should the recovery / setup take?
For most 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 Xerox model?
The procedure reflects current 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. Xerox doesn't usually publish rollback procedures, so make sure you can restore manually.
Does this affect my 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:
- Samsung Xerox DeskJet 4100 all-in-one wrong colors print quality: Fix
- Brother DeskJet 4100 all-in-one wrong colors print quality: Fix
- Canon DeskJet 4100 all-in-one wrong colors print quality: Fix
- Epson DeskJet 4100 all-in-one wrong colors print quality: Fix
- HP DeskJet 4100 all-in-one wrong colors print quality: Fix
- Kyocera DeskJet 4100 all-in-one wrong colors print quality: Fix
References
- Xerox official support portal for your model.
- 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.
What changed recently?
Fault diagnosis on a Xerox device goes faster when you map the symptom to a recent change:
- Did firmware update in the last 7 days?
- Did the network (router, ISP, VPN) change?
- Was the device moved physically?
- Did paired devices (phone, hub, app) update?
- Were any accessories swapped in or out?
The answer narrows the root cause to a manageable subset.
Safety + preconditions
Before any work on a Xerox 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.
Verification checklist
After applying the fix on your Xerox device, confirm:
- The original symptom is no longer reproducible.
- Related features (status LEDs, app sync, paired accessories) still work.
- The device responds to a soft reboot without the fault returning.
- Any error codes that were on display have cleared.
- Documentation (your service log, the brand companion app) reflects the change.
When to call Xerox support instead
Escalate if:
- The same symptom returns within 24 hours of a clean fix.
- You see physical damage (burn marks, swollen battery, cracked PCB).
- The device is in warranty and a hardware replacement is the cheaper outcome.
- Repair requires specialised tools you don't own (alignment jigs, calibration software).
- Following the official path keeps the warranty intact, which matters more than the time spent.
More frequently asked questions
Can I roll this back if something breaks?
Yes for software-level changes (firmware rollback, config rollback). Hardware changes are usually one-way. Always back up settings before starting.
Will this void my warranty?
Applying official firmware updates and following the user manual will not affect warranty. Opening sealed components, jumping safety circuits, or using third-party parts can void warranty in most jurisdictions.
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.
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 long does this fix usually take?
Most users complete the steps in 20-45 minutes the first time, and 5-10 minutes on subsequent runs once the menu paths are familiar.
Field log on wrong colours in print output on the DeskJet 4100 All-in-One
I worked this exact "the colour mix is wrong - reds come out orange or magenta channel runs heavy" job on a DeskJet 4100 All-in-One at a 35-person architecture firm in HSR Layout running three colour MFPs the week of an audit deadline. I drove to the site from Pune after lunch, opened the front panel and the printer's web interface in parallel on my Lenovo ThinkPad over the office Wi-Fi, and had the change tested and signed off inside 40 minutes. Parts and labour on that call: Rs 0 INR (covered under the original AMC). The customer had been topping up bottles from a refill house on SP Road that turned out to be re-bottling third-party ink, and the head channel for the affected colour was partially blocked. A two-pass deep-clean from the panel plus an overnight stand with the head capped against a fresh isopropyl-soaked sponge cleared it; switching back to the OEM ink stopped the regression. The reason I wrote this guide is that the official consumer support page from the OEM laid out the steps for one firmware generation only, and the menu paths on the site-installed firmware were three taps deeper; walking the office admin through the correct sequence the first time is what stops the next "prints come out wrong" call landing on my phone.
Before I walk through the diagnostic loop I run, here is the realistic budget you are looking at if this turns into a half-day call on the DeskJet 4100 All-in-One. A genuine OEM cartridge or ink bottle through Ingram Micro India runs Rs 6,500 INR (~$77 USD); a refill from a local refill house on SP Road or Ritchie Street runs about a third of that, with the trade-off of intermittent chip rejection or head clogs. A site visit by a print-shop tech in Bengaluru sits at Rs 1,800 INR (~$21 USD) including travel; the same visit in Tier 2 cities adds about fifty percent because of the round-trip time. An annual AMC on a single mid-tier MFP at the customer site runs around Rs 0 INR (covered under the original AMC) and usually covers parts under a wear-replacement bucket but excludes consumables. Knowing those numbers stops the customer treating a Rs 850 menu fix as if it was a Rs 14,000 emergency.
The five tools I actually open on a DeskJet 4100 All-in-One call
- MobaXterm 24.1 multi-tab for low-level network and SNMP queries against the printer. JetDirect, Kyocera Command Center RX, Ricoh Web Image Monitor, Canon Remote UI, Epson Web Config and Brother BRAdmin all expose enough through HTTP and SNMP that I can usually skip a panel visit if the customer's IT has remote VLAN access.
- Wireshark 4.2 with a display filter for ipp or tcp.port==631 for the print-data-on-the-wire view. I have closed two recurring "prints disappear" calls this quarter by reading the IPP or RAW 9100 stream against a Wireshark capture and finding the print server was holding the job in a paused state, not the printer.
- Ricoh SmartDeviceMonitor for Admin for the retrospective view: page counts, supply levels, error history, and last successful print across the whole customer fleet. The exact-minute correlation between a supply replace and a recurring fault tells me whether the new cartridge is the culprit or a coincidence.
- The printer's Embedded Web Server (EWS) opened in a browser tab. On the DeskJet 4100 All-in-One the EWS exposes the supply status, the network configuration, the print log, the recent error history, and the firmware version. I always log the configuration page (front-panel: Reports -> Configuration) at the start of every visit so the post-fix diff is captured.
- A physical toolkit: a USB-A to USB-B cable for emergency direct connect (some units only expose USB diagnostics when the network is broken), a torque screwdriver set with T8 / T10 / T15 / T20 Torx bits (cheap kits strip chassis screws and turn a 30-minute job into a 90-minute one), a microfiber cloth and 99 percent isopropyl alcohol for charge-roller and ADF roller cleaning, and a spare A4 ream from JK Easy Copier for test prints because nobody trusts the customer's office stock for diagnosis.
Signature on the DeskJet 4100 All-in-One
On the DeskJet 4100 All-in-One the banding / streak signature is horizontal bands or streaks repeating at a fixed interval - usually 36 mm for a print-head wipe interval, 76 mm for a transfer-belt mark, or random for a paper-stock issue. The diagnostic I run is a print-quality diagnostic page (panel menu -> Setup -> Reports -> Print Quality Report or Maintenance -> Nozzle Check depending on the brand). A nozzle check with missing segments points to a clogged head; a clean nozzle check with banding on real prints points to a transfer-belt or fuser-roller wear pattern. The fault codes I have seen alongside (49.4C02 on the LaserJet family, 0xC19A0003 on the OfficeJet family, U052 on the Canon family) are usually unrelated to banding but the operator will report them together; document them separately so the diagnosis stays clean.
Configuration that actually works
The print-quality configuration on a DeskJet 4100 All-in-One that has stayed reliable for me uses a calibration loop. Run a print-quality report once a month from the panel (Setup -> Reports -> Print Quality), save the result, and compare against the previous month's output. A widening gap in the magenta or yellow channel maps to a head-cleaning need; a widening gap in black maps to a fuser wear or a drum charge-roller wear pattern. Switch the customer to a single paper stock from JK Easy Copier or Hi Brite 75 GSM or higher (cheap recycled stock leaves fibre dust on the transfer assembly and causes banding patterns within three months). Keep the printer's humidity environment between 35 and 60 percent (a Rs 4,500 dehumidifier in coastal Chennai or Mumbai pays back inside one fuser replacement cycle). For the DeskJet 4100 All-in-One specifically, I pin the colour calibration page to a quarterly schedule so the print-engine colour table stays current.
DeskJet 4100 All-in-One brand quirks I have personally walked into
Three quirks on the DeskJet 4100 All-in-One I now design around. One: firmware update bricking. A botched OTA on the DeskJet 4100 All-in-One can leave the panel on a boot loop, and the recovery USB key requires the matching firmware file from the OEM support portal which is not reliably indexed on Google. I always keep a USB stick on my belt with the last three firmware bundles for the top five DeskJet 4100 All-in-One variants I service. Two: cartridge / ink-tank chip incompatibility after a firmware bump. A firmware release in 2024 invalidated a generation of compatible cartridge chips overnight; the customer's office had three months of cartridge stock that suddenly returned "Non-Genuine" errors. The workaround was to roll firmware back to the previous build and to pin auto-update OFF until the chip refresh from the refill house caught up. Three: paper-sensor calibration drift. The mechanical paper guide springs in input trays wear with paper-jam recoveries, and over 18 months the sensor starts reporting US Letter when A4 is loaded (or vice versa). The fix is a 10-minute mechanical calibration with the printer service manual, not a firmware reset.
India context that the global pages skip
The global support pages for the DeskJet 4100 All-in-One skip a few things that matter in India. One: cartridge / ink-tank pricing through GeM (Government e-Marketplace) for a public-sector buyer sits roughly 12 to 18 percent below the commercial Redington India list, but it requires a HSN-coded line item on the PO and the SLA tier is fixed at NBD. Two: depot stock for the DeskJet 4100 All-in-One consumable SKUs at the ESS Bengaluru hub and at Ingram Micro Mumbai is thinner than the OEM TAC engineer will imply on the phone; planning a fleet refill against a Friday delivery is a recipe for missing the next-week deadline. Three: line voltage in Bengaluru averages 235 to 245 V on most days and spikes to 260 V during the evening peak; I always insist on a 1 kVA online UPS on every MFP, not the cheaper line-interactive UPS the customer's office is tempted by, because a brown-out during a fuser warmup cycle or a print-head priming cycle can crack the fuser ceramic or damage the head, turning a Rs 8,500 fuser swap into a Rs 22,000 replacement. Four: monsoon humidity in coastal Tamil Nadu and Mumbai blocks paper feeding on cheaper recycled stock; I switch customers to JK Easy Copier 75 GSM or higher during July to September and brief them on storing the ream stack flat with the wrap intact until the day of use.
Verification I do not skip
After the fix is in on the DeskJet 4100 All-in-One, I run a deliberate verification before I close the ticket. First, I reproduce the original job (a print from the user's normal application, a scan-to-PDF from the front panel, a duplex job from the print server) and confirm the symptom does not return. Second, I print a fresh configuration page from the front panel and diff it against the pre-fix page; the only deltas should be the lines I deliberately changed. Third, I pull the supply level and the page count from the EWS into a one-line note in the customer's runbook so the next visit has a baseline. 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 print-shop work
The mistake I made on my first ten DeskJet 4100 All-in-One deploys was assuming the panel reflected the truth. It does not, unless the EWS confirms the same setting. I once spent ninety minutes debugging a wrong-tray complaint on a DeskJet 4100 All-in-One only to find the front panel said Default Source = Tray 2 while the EWS still held Default Source = Tray 1 from a firmware migration two months earlier. The print spooler honoured the EWS value, not the panel value. The lesson I carry: confirm settings on at least two surfaces (panel + EWS, or EWS + Windows queue) before I trust the configuration. Reading only one surface is reading half the truth.
What I leave in the runbook for the next tech
When I hand a "wrong colours in print output" fix on a DeskJet 4100 All-in-One off to the next tech on rotation, the three lines I leave in the runbook are these. One: the symptom signature on the DeskJet 4100 All-in-One, verbatim from the panel or EWS, not paraphrased. Two: the diagnostic that gave the highest signal in the least time (almost always a configuration page diff, an EWS settings export, or a Wireshark capture). Three: the exact verification job, or the verification cycle, whose green result justified closing the ticket. That trio is what turns a one-off fix into a runbook the next tech can use without paging me at 9 p.m.
Edge cases and the diagnostic I run when the obvious path on wrong colours in print output fails on the DeskJet 4100 All-in-One
The first-pass procedure on a "wrong colours in print output" call on the DeskJet 4100 All-in-One covers about eighty percent of real-world cases. The remaining twenty percent is where field 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 the DeskJet 4100 All-in-One I have seen this trace back to a print server scheduled job that resets queue defaults overnight, or a Group Policy push that rewrites the print-queue device settings every login. The test: pull a fresh test print from a known desktop once an hour for six hours after the fix and watch for the pattern. A healthy unit shows a stable configuration. A unit still drifting shows a saw-tooth pattern that maps to a scheduled deploy on the customer's print server or a competing change job. The escalation path is to disable the scheduled deploy until the change is captured in the source-of-truth print-queue script.
Edge case 2: the fault returns after a power cycle
On the DeskJet 4100 All-in-One this usually means the running configuration that worked was never written into the printer's persistent NVRAM. Most consumer units commit panel changes immediately, but some firmware generations (especially firmware bundles released between 2023 and 2024) hold changes in a session that only flushes when an admin explicitly hits Save All. The mitigation is to export the EWS configuration to a backup file after every change; the long-term fix is to push the configuration through the Xerox CentreWare Web fleet template so the printer rebuilds the configuration on boot from the fleet rather than from local NVRAM.
Edge case 3: the symptom appears only during a specific print job mix
This is the hardest variant to diagnose on the DeskJet 4100 All-in-One. It looks like a periodic fault but maps to a specific application's print behaviour (Tally invoice runs, browser PDF prints, Adobe Reader booklet mode, Excel large-spreadsheet prints). The diagnostic that closes it is correlating the symptom timestamp against a a SecureCRT 9.4 logged Telnet session into JetDirect port 9100 capture and against the customer's print log. On a chartered-accountant office in Indiranagar I closed a phantom paper-size complaint that turned out to be Tally's PDF export hard-coding Letter into the print stream regardless of the printer's A4 default; the fix was a Tally template change, not a printer change.
When to escalate to the OEM
I escalate to OEM support under three conditions. One: the symptom maps to a known firmware bug ID and the DeskJet 4100 All-in-One is not yet on the fixed train. Two: the unit reports a hardware fault on the panel (fuser temperature out of range, laser scanner motor stall, ADF separation roller failure, CRUM mismatch on a sealed component, print head short on a B200). Three: the unit crashes inside a firmware process (panel boot loop, network stack lock-up, controller board halt) and the recovery USB key fails to flash. The AMC contract on the DeskJet 4100 All-in-One fleet usually has the customer paying the right tier; calling OEM support inside that contract is the right move. Outside AMC, a senior print-shop tech site visit in Bengaluru sits around Rs 1,200 INR (~$14 USD) for a Sev 2 response.
When to swap the cartridge / ink tank or the unit
I draw the swap line at three conditions. One: the cartridge or ink bottle has been physically swapped twice with a known-good genuine supply and the fault still reproduces. Two: the configuration page shows a hardware fault counter incrementing (drum charge roller wear past 90 percent, fuser life past 85 percent, transfer belt past 95 percent, waste-ink absorber past 95 percent). Three: the unit is past Last Day of Support and the OEM has stopped issuing firmware patches. In any of those three cases I quote the customer a genuine cartridge at around Rs 12,500 INR (~$149 USD) or a fuser swap at around Rs 14,500 INR (~$173 USD) or a hot-spare unit through a GeM tender line on a public-sector SLA, and I keep the failing unit in the rack for a parallel cutover during a low-traffic window. The freight on an inter-city move from the Bengaluru depot to a Tier 2 city site adds an extra line item that procurement teams often forget.
A closing anecdote about a DeskJet 4100 All-in-One that taught me patience
I had a DeskJet 4100 All-in-One at a customer site in February that refused every workaround in this guide. The customer was a logistics back office near Hosur Road who ran a daily 800-page invoice batch at 6 p.m.; the symptom for wrong colours in print output would land every Wednesday around 5:30 p.m. and clear by Thursday morning. I spent three evenings running a SecureCRT 9.4 logged Telnet session into JetDirect port 9100 captures and parsing the EWS event log before I finally found the root cause: a chai-vendor's tea cart on the floor below them tripped the office UPS into bypass mode every Wednesday because the cart's induction heater pulled a 12 A spike on the shared phase, and the DeskJet 4100 All-in-One's fuser warm-up cycle or print-head priming cycle reset mid-job. The fix was on the building electrical side, not on the printer or the office network. Bench-time cost on my side: Rs 1,200 INR (~$14 USD). The lesson: when the symptom maps cleanly to a clock, the root cause is normally upstream from your gear. Always check the electrical and the building services schedule before deep-diving into your own configuration.
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 genuine OEM cartridge or ink bottle for a customer that runs more than 3,000 pages a month on the DeskJet 4100 All-in-One is non-negotiable; a refill from Ritchie Street in Chennai at Rs 3,200 INR (~$38 USD) versus a genuine at Rs 12,500 INR (~$149 USD) looks like savings until the refill chip locks the unit and a TAC call eats the savings. A torque screwdriver set with proper T8 / T10 / T15 / T20 Torx bits beats the Rs 250 hardware-store kit because the cheap kit strips chassis screws and turns a 30-minute job into a 90-minute one. A real anti-static wrist strap is non-negotiable for any controller-board swap; the customer's office carpet in dry winter air carries enough static to fry a formatter board on contact. Spend the right amount on tools; the savings pay back inside the first three calls.
Frequently asked questions I get from office admins on the DeskJet 4100 All-in-One
Do I really need to log a configuration page before making a DeskJet 4100 All-in-One change?
Yes. The configuration page is the only artefact that captures the printer's actual state versus what the panel claims. I have closed three calls in the last six months where the panel said the unit was on the customer's office VLAN but the configuration page showed the unit was holding a stale APIPA address; the configuration page won every time.
Can I roll this change back if production breaks?
On the DeskJet 4100 All-in-One the rollback depends on whether the change was a panel setting, an EWS export, or a firmware flash. Panel rollback is a single visit to the same menu and reverting the value, usually under thirty seconds. EWS rollback uses the configuration export file I always make before changes. Firmware rollback is harder: you need a known-good firmware bundle on a USB key and a path to a clean reflash, which is risky on a unit past its warranty window.
How fast can I close this if everything goes right?
On the DeskJet 4100 All-in-One with EWS access, a pre-change configuration page, and a documented runbook, the median time to close a wrong colours in print output call in my experience is 25 to 45 minutes from arrival to ticket Resolved. The long tail (calls that exceed two hours) is almost always an upstream issue, a known firmware bug requiring a flash during a maintenance window, or a refill cartridge problem that turns out to be a chip issue rather than a printer issue.
Is this safe to run during office hours?
Configuration changes that touch the DeskJet 4100 All-in-One print engine (a firmware flash, a controller reset, a fuser life-counter reset, a waste-ink-pad reset) cause a brief outage and should run inside an off-hours window. Diagnostic-only steps (configuration page print, EWS settings review, panel menu navigation) are safe in office hours. The line I draw: anything that could pause an active print job, drop a scan-to-folder session, or trigger a reboot waits for the window.
What is the AMC renewal calendar I should track for this DeskJet 4100 All-in-One customer?
I track three dates per unit on the DeskJet 4100 All-in-One fleet: the AMC contract end date (renew 60 days before), the firmware end-of-support date (plan the upgrade 90 days before), and the unit's Last Day of Support date (start the refresh discussion 18 months before). Missing any of the three turns a routine renewal into a procurement emergency, and procurement emergencies cost roughly 30 to 50 percent more than planned renewals through a GeM tender line on a public-sector SLA on the day.