When you can see daylight between a fuser's rollers, you know something is amiss.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgfOtSyCeywaVZV8y83PlpnrShar_47wNqMvW9DzIalCUw-FwHcUv3BUerVFxIeLFo9qFaJXQlvZTWh7VkxKn97J2vc7A_UMETruqV-aIfi06PGWCg4aPbeKARFoioQb2kRxcjg9LdYDwJt/s280/DSC00182.JPG)
Here's a view of it with the cover removed.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh4y8P-RLM1GH251Z11nisqWz2MXqcNNBeyA9vQ-ai0Jvg85qKbZ4fGgKDlIJhZa4MpYUMYv0UhCCZI8iDwcudDBHOC08Wy-Vq59tHS9bKJSLw5YkbXVo5Oosa1MVLRmZn20Mkc3__Wy-iu/s280/DSC00184.JPG)
Metal fatigue, I guess. Where the reduced-diameter end of the roller meets the body of the roller, there's not a great deal of material. Here's a close-up of the broken-off end.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjo87dVfYx3B5sZZizdKQbD_JduKPNg0BcYPJz5Diq_RPoqn0cwldZwqcpO3RQIuBwEMSlVsfD6U6FcsjBdZoE1rGM8UBIscD2Qo8Zk4hXHsJXkt5kmg508PVU7nBsRzjUwLYMNnU5XtApT/s280/DSC00188.JPG)
The rest of the fuser was ok. Sometimes, a broken fuser roller will cause the thermal fuse to go open.
This fuser had gotten a new pressure roller and pressure roller bearings only 1,300 pages ago. The coated roller had looked fine at the time, so there's no way you can see this coming.
I put a new roller in the fuser and it's good to go.
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