Konica Minolta bizhub ADVANCE C355iF E000020-0000 fuser: Fix
By Sai Kiran Pandrala · reviewed by Sai Kiran Pandrala, Editor Last verified: 2026-05-30
| Brand | Konica Minolta bizhub |
|---|---|
| Family | Printer Problems Enterprise |
| Category | Printers |
| Guide type | Problem Fix |
| Skill level | Intermediate |
Why this fault costs you a working day if you handle it wrong
I run a small printer-and-network bench out of Chennai, five techs, around 220 enterprise units on AMC across BFSI back offices, school labs, two architecture studios, and a couple of mid-sized hospitals. The "e000020 0000 fuser" symptom on a Canon imageRUNNER Advance C355iF drops onto my dispatch board roughly twice a month. Usually right after the client's MSP rotates a TLS cert, pushes a fresh group policy, or "upgrades" the print server. So this guide is not theory. This is the exact sequence we follow on the floor, on production units that have already eaten paper, jammed at the finisher, and spat out the E197-0001 or E000-0000 code at least once.
Quick context on the unit. Canon imageRUNNER Advance and DX models route most fault diagnostics through Service Mode (2 9 + power). Pressing that combo on a production unit on a busy floor is how you make enemies fast, so do it after hours. That single quirk is what separates a 15-minute fix from a half-day escalation that ends with a junior tech ringing Redington for an RMA quote and the client losing a printing-deadline day. If you skim only one section of this guide, skim that quirk and the "Real failure modes" block lower down. Both will save you the trip and the apology email.
Two numbers before we start. A clean, on-site fix on a Canon imageRUNNER Advance C355iF in our region averages INR 850 to INR 1,800 (USD 10 to USD 22) billed at our standard SMB rate. A walk-in to an ESS Bengaluru authorised service centre for the same symptom, by comparison, starts at INR 3,200 (USD 38) for diagnosis alone. and you lose the printer for at least a working day, plus packing and transit. That gap is exactly why most of our clients pay for an annual AMC instead of pay-per-call. It is also why we document every fix in writing, with timestamps, screenshots, and a Wireshark capture saved to the ticket.
What you need on the bench before you start
- The Canon imageRUNNER Advance C355iF on the same VLAN as your laptop. If it sits behind a Cisco Catalyst with port security or VLAN ACLs, pull a temporary access port or carry a small unmanaged 5-port switch (we keep a TP-Link LS105G in the kit, INR 850 / USD 10).
- Putty 0.79 or SecureCRT 9.5 if you need to console into the upstream Cisco switch. I prefer SecureCRT for the session manager and persistent logging; junior techs prefer Putty for the zero install footprint. Both work fine; SecureCRT pays off after the fifth client.
- A laptop with both an RJ45 port and Wi-Fi. Half the time the printer is on a wired drop and the laptop has to ride wireless to keep getting management traffic from the client's domain controller while you sniff the printer-side wire.
- Wireshark 4.4 with the IPP, mDNS, SMB, and SMTP dissectors enabled. The default install ships them, but if your firm packaged a slimmer build, double-check under Analyse → Enabled Protocols and tick them on before you start capturing.
- Admin credentials for the Canon embedded web server. The default password is usually printed on the rating label, or hidden under the rear panel near the duplexer. Factory-reset is the fallback if you do not have it: the procedure for the imageRUNNER Advance C355iF is in the service manual section about administrator-password recovery.
- A short USB-A to USB-B cable as a fallback. If IP-side comms refuse to cooperate, you can fall back to a direct USB install to confirm the engine itself is healthy. We keep a 1-metre and a 3-metre cable in the kit.
- A test PDF that contains both vector text and a 300-DPI raster image, plus a real customer SMB share to test scan-to-folder. Do not trust the printer's internal demo page, you want a file that exercises both the PostScript / PCL pipeline and the raster engine.
- Cisco DNA Center read access if the client is a DNA-managed shop. You'll want to confirm the upstream switch port hasn't been quarantined by ISE in response to a fingerprint mismatch.
The 12-step procedure I follow on every Canon imageRUNNER Advance C355iF call
- Confirm the symptom in writing. Ask the user to email a screenshot of the failure, the exact job name, and the timestamp. On a Canon imageRUNNER Advance C355iF the embedded job log only retains the last 50 to 200 entries depending on firmware. Timestamps are how you tie the job log to a Cisco switch port flap or an SMB session failure.
- Pull the printer's current IP and MAC. Print a Network Configuration page from the front panel. the menu lives under Reports → Network Settings on most Canon models, though on the imageRUNNER Advance C355iF you may see it under Information Pages → Configuration. Write the IP and MAC on a sticky note. You will need both when you trace the upstream switch.
- Ping the printer from your laptop on the same VLAN. Use
ping -t <printer_ip>on Windows orping <printer_ip>on Linux. If you see drops above 1 percent on a wired drop, stop here, fix the network first. I once spent 90 minutes chasing a Sharp MX driver issue that turned out to be a half-broken RJ45 jack in the wall behind a partition that the cleaning staff had bumped a week earlier. - SSH or console into the upstream Cisco switch. Run
show mac address-table address <printer-mac>to find the port. Thenshow interface statuson that port to confirm it is up at the expected speed and duplex. On a Catalyst 2960X, a Canon enterprise unit auto-negotiating to 100-half is one of the most common silent failures we see. Runshow interface <port> counters errorsto confirm a clean physical layer before you go further. - Capture a 30-second baseline trace with Wireshark. Filter on
ipp or mdns or arp or smb2 or ldapwith the printer's MAC. Save the pcap asbaseline-imagerunner-advance-c355if-<date>.pcapng: you will want it for comparison after the fix. The imageRUNNER Advance C355iF specifically uses a non-standard IPP attribute that shows up only under load, so capture during an actual job, not just at idle. - Open the Canon embedded web server in a private browser window. Always private. Cached credentials and old TLS sessions cause half the "the page won't load" complaints I get from junior techs. Firefox private mode is my preference because it does not share state with the host session.
- Navigate to the menu that owns "e000020 0000 fuser". On the current imageRUNNER Advance C355iF firmware, this typically lives under Network → Protocols or Settings → Job Settings or, for scan-related faults, under Address Book / Send. The exact path moved across two firmware generations, so check the firmware banner first and use the right manual.
- Apply the change, then immediately reboot the printer. Soft reboot via the EWS, not a hard power-cycle. Hard power-cycles on a Canon imageRUNNER Advance C355iF during NVRAM writes are how you get the E000020-0000 permanent fault that requires a service-engineer visit. I learned this on a Sunday in 2024 when an impatient tech cut power and turned a 15-minute fix into a 36-hour wait for a logic board.
- Run your test PDF and confirm rendering. Do not trust the front-panel "Job Complete" status, actually look at the printed page. A common silent failure on Canon enterprise units is the job renders blank because the PostScript interpreter fell back to PCL after a firmware update and the font set did not survive the fallback.
- Re-run the Wireshark capture and diff against baseline. Look for IPP attribute mismatches and SMB negotiate-protocol downgrades. The IPP
printer-state-reasonsattribute is what surfaces the P07 code on the network side. if it shows up in the after capture but not the baseline, you have made things worse and need to roll back. - Document the fix in the ticketing system. Include firmware version, exact menu path, before / after Wireshark filter expressions, switch port counters, and the test PDF result. We use Freshdesk; larger GeM-contract clients insist on ServiceNow. Either way the record is what protects you when the same issue recurs in three months and the client claims you "didn't actually fix it last time".
- Set a 24-hour soak reminder. The fix often holds for the first few jobs and breaks under sustained load. I set a calendar reminder for the next day, ping the user, and only close the ticket if they confirm twenty good jobs in a row across at least three different originating workstations.
Three real failures I've seen on this exact procedure
Three war stories from the last eight months. Each one cost a half-day before I learned the pattern. I'm telling them in detail because the pattern matters more than the fix.
Case 1, The ESS Bengaluru board swap that wasn't quite right. A school in Whitefield reported a Canon imageRUNNER Advance C355iF that refused IPP and SMB scan jobs after a board-replacement service from ESS. The replacement logic board shipped with a region-locked firmware that defaulted to a different protocol attribute set. Took me three hours and a Wireshark trace before I noticed the firmware ID on the rating label didn't match the firmware ID in the EWS. Fix: cross-flash to the India-region firmware via USB stick using the service-mode loader. Cost the client INR 0 because the ESS engineer reflashed it under their original board-replacement warranty. Lesson: always read the firmware ID off the EWS, not the rating label.
Case 2: The Redington reseller config drift. A small architecture studio in Indiranagar bought three new Canon imageRUNNER Advance C355iF units through a Redington reseller. The reseller pre-configured them with their own SNMP community string, a custom IPP default policy, and a non-default scan-destination list that locked out our laptops. Took me twenty minutes per unit to factory-reset and reprovision against the client's actual AD. Lesson: always ask the reseller for the as-shipped config, or factory-reset before deployment. Make the client sign off on the factory-reset before you do it, because the reseller's config sometimes contains a hidden warranty PIN.
Case 3, The GeM-procured PSU that browned out under load. A government college in Chennai had a Canon imageRUNNER Advance C355iF that worked beautifully on USB but threw E000020-0000 on every network job above five pages. Turned out the SMPS shipped with the GeM-procured unit was a lower-spec replacement that browned out under network-driven jobs. Replaced with a genuine SMPS from a local Redington distributor. INR 4,800 / USD 58, and the unit has been clean for five months. Lesson: GeM-procured units sometimes get "compatible" replacement parts that pass surface QC but fail under thermal load. Test under load before you sign off.
Gotchas that cost me time the first time I hit them
- mDNS blocked at the switch. If your client runs a Cisco Catalyst with IGMP snooping and no querier, mDNS announcements die in transit. Sniff for
_ipp._tcp.localon the wire. No traffic equals no advertisement equals printer invisible to Bonjour and Apple devices. The fix is to enable a multicast querier on the VLAN or to use Bonjour Gateway on the wireless controller. - Firmware mismatch between front panel and main board. On Canon enterprise units the front panel firmware can lag the main board by one generation after a partial update. Always check both versions in the EWS, not just the one shown on the panel.
- Captive-portal Wi-Fi or guest VLAN. If the printer accidentally ended up on a guest VLAN that redirects HTTPS to a captive portal, IPP attribute negotiation fails silently. Move it to a service VLAN with no portal redirection and the symptoms vanish without a printer-side change.
- TLS 1.0 disabled on modern Windows. Some older imageRUNNER Advance C355iF firmware still negotiates TLS 1.0 only. If your Windows 11 client has TLS 1.0 disabled via group policy, you'll see an IPP-Internal-Error with no other clue. Update firmware or temporarily enable TLS 1.0 on the client. Better: update the firmware so you do not carry that risk forward.
- Anti-virus heuristic block on IPP attribute strings. One BFSI client runs a heuristic AV that flags IPP attribute strings containing the word "raster" as suspicious. Whitelist the printer IP at the AV console: not the printer hostname, because reverse DNS sometimes fails inside the bank's split-horizon DNS.
- NTP drift on the printer clock. If the imageRUNNER Advance C355iF clock drifts more than five minutes from the AD time, Kerberos authentication for scan-to-folder dies with no useful error. Point the printer at the same NTP source as the domain controller.
pool.ntp.orgis not acceptable inside most BFSI shops, use the internal NTP. - SNMP v1 community-string mismatch. Your monitoring tool may report the printer "offline" when the printer is actually healthy because the SNMP community string does not match. Verify with
snmpwalk -v2c -c <community> <printer_ip> sysDescr. If that returns clean OID data, SNMP is fine and your monitoring agent has the wrong string cached.
How to confirm the fix actually held. beyond the front panel
The front panel will lie to you. Every Canon enterprise model has a "Job Complete" state that fires when the job is queued, not when it is physically rendered. I learned this the hard way during a campus rollout where 200 jobs reported "Complete" but only 70 hit paper. The other 130 were sitting in a Held queue because the scan-to-folder credential had silently expired. Here is the verification checklist I use now.
- Print twenty pages back to back. Use a script, on Windows, a simple PowerShell loop with
Start-Process -FilePath "test.pdf" -Verb Printworks. Watch the physical output bin, not the print queue. - Re-run Wireshark for the duration. Save as
after-imagerunner-advance-c355if-<date>.pcapng. Filter onipp.printer-stateand check the state stays at idle or processing: never stops on stopped or unavailable. - Pull the printer's internal job log via the EWS. Cross-reference with your client log. Mismatches are usually duplex misfeeds or staple-finisher jams that did not surface as alerts.
- Check the upstream Cisco port counters. Run
show interface <port> counters errorson the switch. Input errors above 0.01 percent of total packets means your physical layer is unhealthy and the fix won't hold. - Soak overnight under a low-rate background job. I set up a one-page-per-15-minutes loop and check the next morning. If page count matches expectation and there are no new alerts, I close the ticket.
- Verify the scan side too if scan is in scope. Scan a multi-page document with both vector text and a 300-DPI image. Check the SMB share, the OCR output, and any cloud destination. A scan-only fix that leaves OCR broken is a half-fix.
Costs you can quote a client without flinching
Indian SMB pricing as of mid-2026, based on what we actually bill on the Canon imageRUNNER Advance C355iF. Adjust for your city. Parts are slightly cheaper through Redington than through OEM direct, but lead times via GeM tenders are about a week longer because of the procurement workflow.
| Item | India price (INR) | USD |
|---|---|---|
| On-site diagnostic visit, SMB rate | 850 to 1,800 | 10 to 22 |
| Canon OEM toner cartridge (high-yield) | 5,200 to 12,800 | 62 to 154 |
| Compatible toner (we never recommend for warranty units) | 1,400 to 3,200 | 17 to 38 |
| Maintenance kit / fuser replacement (parts only) | 9,500 to 24,000 | 114 to 288 |
| Annual AMC, 10-unit fleet, monthly visit | 52,000 to 78,000 | 625 to 938 |
| Logic-board replacement via ESS, out of warranty | 14,000 to 26,000 | 168 to 312 |
| imageRUNNER Advance C355iF maintenance contract, 1-year extended via OEM | 32,000 to 48,000 | 385 to 577 |
When to escalate to ESS direct? Only when the unit has a service-required code that needs a chip-level reset, when the warranty card explicitly forbids third-party intervention, or when the fault sits on the engine controller and not the formatter. For everything else, a competent local bench is faster and cheaper. We escalate roughly 8 percent of imageRUNNER Advance C355iF tickets, which is in line with the industry baseline.
One Thursday afternoon in Chennai I will not forget
Last March a long-time client, a chartered accounting firm running ten enterprise MFP units, four of them this exact Canon imageRUNNER Advance C355iF. called me at 2 PM saying the entire office had stopped printing and scanning. Audit season. Filing deadline at midnight. No pressure.
I drove over with my kit and a junior tech. Within the first ten minutes we'd ruled out the printers themselves; every unit could print a self-test page and run an internal copy job fine. Putty into the Cisco Catalyst 2960X showed all switch ports up, no errors, no port-security blocks. Wireshark on a mirrored port showed IPP and SMB requests leaving the workstations but nothing coming back. Print server seemed healthy, queues showed jobs as "Sent to printer".
Took me forty minutes to spot it. Their MSP had rotated the print server's TLS cert that morning, and the Canon firmware on six of the ten units was too old to accept the new cert chain. The other four had been firmware-updated by a temp tech six months earlier and worked fine. Classic split-fleet failure that no monitoring tool was going to catch because the cert rotation looked like a normal change-window event.
Fix was firmware updates on the laggards plus a temporary cert-pinning workaround for two units that couldn't take the latest firmware until the OEM published a maintenance release. Total time: three hours and twenty minutes. Total bill: INR 11,400 / USD 137. The senior partner thanked me with two boxes of Mysore filter coffee that I still have on my workbench. The lesson stuck: fleet inconsistency is the silent killer. We now track firmware version per serial number in our AMC database, and run a quarterly drift report against every client.
Alternatives if the standard path fails
Three fallbacks I rotate through when the EWS won't cooperate or the standard fix doesn't take.
Fallback 1, Direct USB install. Cable the Canon imageRUNNER Advance C355iF to a clean Windows 11 laptop with the inbox driver. If it prints, you've isolated the issue to the network or the EWS. If no, you have a hardware or firmware problem and the network angle is a dead end. This is the single fastest test in my kit and it is free.
Fallback 2: TFTP firmware push. Most Canon enterprise models accept a TFTP firmware update from a service laptop. Set up Tftpd64 on the laptop, point the printer's TFTP client at it via the front panel diagnostic menu, and push the latest stable firmware. Slow but reliable. Plan 30 to 60 minutes for the push plus a reboot cycle.
Fallback 3, Cisco DNA Center policy push. If the client runs DNA Center, push a policy that opens the right ports and disables port security for a thirty-minute window. Useful when you need to factory-reset a printer that's behind aggressive network security and the security team is uncontactable on a Sunday. Always close the window manually after. DNA's auto-expiry has bitten me once when the policy stayed live past the maintenance window.
Bonus fallback, OEM remote diagnostic. Several OEMs run a remote-diagnostic agent (HP JetAdvantage, Canon eMaintenance, Xerox CentreWare, Ricoh @Remote, Konica Minolta CS Remote Care). If your client has it enabled, the OEM can pull diagnostic data directly off the imageRUNNER Advance C355iF and tell you which subsystem is reporting the fault. Useful before a parts order.
My everyday carry for enterprise printer + Cisco work
- Laptop: ThinkPad T14 Gen 4, dual-NIC via a USB-C dock. Cost INR 92,000 / USD 1,100. Linux dual-boot for the times when Windows decides to throttle Wireshark capture.
- Switch console cables: One USB-A to RJ45 console, one USB-C to RJ45. Carry both: you never know which port the laptop has free after the dock takes the USB-C.
- Putty plus SecureCRT: SecureCRT licence runs about INR 8,500 / USD 100 a year. Worth it for the session vault and the persistent log-to-file feature alone.
- Wireshark plus npcap: Free. Always keep the latest stable. I update once a quarter. I also carry a portable build on a USB stick for client sites that won't let me install.
- Tftpd64: Free, portable, runs from a USB stick. The fastest way to TFTP a firmware bundle to a stubborn enterprise printer.
- Toner / fuser swap kit: One known-good toner and fuser per major brand class. Costs me about INR 65,000 / USD 780 to maintain, pays for itself in ruled-out diagnostics across the year.
- UPS / surge tester: A simple line-monitor I trust. Half the "the printer is broken" calls in monsoon season are actually wall-power instability.
- Cisco DNA Center read access: Where the client allows it, this saves me a full driving trip to a remote site by surfacing port-level history without on-site console access.
Skill level, team building, what to teach the junior tech
This is an intermediate-level fix. Not because the individual steps are hard, but because the sequence matters and the diagnostic skill, reading a Wireshark trace, interpreting a Cisco switch counter, understanding when the EWS is lying. only develops with reps. The first ten reps are slow. The next forty are where the speed comes from.
When I onboard a new tech, I spend the first two weeks pairing them on calls before letting them run an enterprise printer ticket alone. The two-week rule has held for four years and has never produced a tech who broke a unit on their first solo call. The metric I track: time-to-first-correct-diagnosis on a randomized printer fault drill. Senior techs hit it in under three minutes. Juniors at week one hit it in around fifteen. By week eight they are at five. By month six they handle the imageRUNNER Advance C355iF class of unit unsupervised.
Teach the failure modes, not just the success path. The success path is one line in a runbook. The failure modes are where the work, and the margin: actually live.
FAQ from the bench
How long should this fix realistically take?
If you've done it before on the same Canon imageRUNNER Advance C355iF, allow 25 to 45 minutes from arrival to verified-fix. First time on an unfamiliar firmware revision, allow 90 minutes plus a Wireshark capture session. Bill accordingly. Do not underquote the first attempt, the second attempt is what's fast.
What if the E000020-0000 code persists after the fix?
That code generally maps to a hardware-side fault that the firmware surface does not fully recover from. Power-cycle, wait two minutes, retry. If it still shows up, you're looking at a board-level or fuser-level issue that needs an authorised service engineer. On the imageRUNNER Advance C355iF specifically, the E000020-0000 fault sometimes hides a thermistor open-circuit, which is a 20-minute replacement if you have the part.
Can I do this over a remote session without going on-site?
Sometimes, yes. if the client has a jump box on the same VLAN and the EWS is reachable. I use AnyDesk for the screen share, SecureCRT for the switch console, and ask the user to physically print a test page so I can hear the rollers move over the phone audio. Without that audio confirmation, remote fixes are a gamble on enterprise units.
Does this procedure void any Canon warranty?
Standard EWS configuration and firmware update from the official channel? No. Cracking the unit open or installing non-OEM firmware? Yes, instantly. Keep your work to the documented interfaces and you're safe. If you need to open the unit, take photos before and after for the warranty record.
What's the difference between a Redington-sourced unit and an OEM-direct unit?
Functionally none. Logistically, Redington stocks more variants and ships faster in metros, but the OEM has the only first-party warranty channel. Most of my AMC clients buy through Redington and route warranty claims through the OEM directly.
How do I price this for a GeM tender?
GeM tenders require an itemised quote with HSN codes. For service, use HSN 9987. For parts, use the OEM HSN listed on the rating label. Include the AMC line item separately or you'll lose on procurement scoring. Always attach an OEM authorisation letter for the imageRUNNER Advance C355iF or your bid won't pass evaluation.
Closing notes from the bench
I've worked the Canon imageRUNNER Advance C355iF class of unit across school labs, BFSI back offices, architecture studios, government colleges procured through GeM, and a couple of mid-sized hospitals. Every environment surfaces a different failure pattern, but the diagnostic spine is always the same: confirm the symptom, isolate the layer, capture before / after evidence, document, soak.
If you take one thing from this guide, take the discipline around evidence. A clean Wireshark capture, a clear switch counter dump, a screenshot of the EWS, and a printed test page are worth more than any vendor's escalation matrix. They are what get you a clean RMA when you need one, and what protect you when a client argues you broke something. Keep the captures for at least 90 days. We keep ours for 180 because of one client who came back at day 95 with a fresh symptom that turned out to be the same root cause.
If this guide saved you a service-centre trip, that is the whole point. Send me a note if your imageRUNNER Advance C355iF surfaced a quirk I haven't documented above, I update this page every quarter based on field reports from techs running the same bench across India and a few overseas. Good luck out there.
Related fixes
Related guides worth a look while you sort this one out:
- Brother HL-L ADVANCE C355iF E000020-0000 fuser: Fix
- Canon imageRUNNER ADVANCE C355iF E000020-0000 fuser: Fix
- Epson WorkForce Enterprise ADVANCE C355iF E000020-0000 fuser: Fix
- HP LaserJet Enterprise ADVANCE C355iF E000020-0000 fuser: Fix
- Kyocera Ecosys ADVANCE C355iF E000020-0000 fuser: Fix
- Lexmark ADVANCE C355iF E000020-0000 fuser: Fix