crwdns2933423:0crwdne2933423:0
crwdns2918538:0crwdne2918538:0

crwdns2934243:0crwdne2934243:0 Nick

crwdns2934249:0crwdne2934249:0:

-Given the age of the Kyocera Mitas, parts are probably NLA, at least new; you run into this problem with the LJ 4/5 and 4000 series printers, which you could put on a battlefield and bring back working; even the P4015 is as bulletproof as the 4000/4050/4100/4150/4200/4250. The solution is to have one in the printer and keep spare EIO cards (sometimes 3 or more) on hand, given HP no longer makes it, but there are also many more HP cards, so it’s more viable than it may be for you. These 4000 series lasers just run along on 3rd party toner and override out set to continue most of the time. HP has also failed to get these out of service(1). The new units are a DRM ridden mess.
+Given the age of the Kyocera Mita hardware, parts are probably NLA (new from Kyocera). You run into this problem with the bulletproof HPs (like the LJ 4 and 5) and the HP LJ 4000 series due to their reputation for being nearly unkillable. Even the P4015 is as bulletproof as the 4000/4050/4100/4150/4200/4250b was, as it's basically the same engine with a newer toner. The solution with those is to have the card installed in the printer but keep a spare EIO card or two around as HP no longer makes them.
+However, this works better with HP because of how many of them are sold, so there's a surplus of printers and accessories like cards. This isn't the case with the Kyocera you have.
+
+[quote|format=featured]
+***''The reason for the surplus of parts and printers is that the 4000 series lasers just run all day long with third-party toner installed. When configured to run on a toner low/empty condition, they will run until the toner is needed and beyond. This is why (as hard as HP has tried and failed to get these "bulletproof" machines out of circulation) they continue to have a following.... Especially with the HP DS (2016+) generation.''***
+
+[/quote]
As @jayeff pointed out, the OEM P/N for the Ethernet card is FS-21E. I looked on eBay since that’s the key place we get the HP EIO cards, and I didn’t find any, but your best bet is to keep looking and buy one as soon as it comes up.
-You're more likely to have better luck making a "print server" out of an old Windows or Mac PC, like a surplus USFF PC with an 8th/9th gen Intel process or similar Ryzen 5, or seeing if you can find a USB print server that gives the printer an IP address. The catch with the third-party server is that most of them do not detect the printer model (whereas I can get an HP one used or NOS, use a USB cable and have the server detect I put a 4250 on it), so you'll need to know the IP address for the FS-1010 and manually configure it based on TCP/IP.
+You're more likely to have better luck making a "print server" out of an old Windows or Mac PC, like a surplus USFF PC with an 8th/9th gen Intel process or similar Ryzen 5. You can also see if you can find a USB print server.
+[quote|format=featured]
+***''BEWARE: None of the 3rd party servers properly communicate the printer's model (just an IP address), so you need to install the printer manually or use generic PS/PCL drivers if there's no current driver for it. This is not an issue with first-party parts like the Kyocera or HP JetDirect cards. As such, the third-party stuff requires manual TCP/IP setup and manual driver selection.''***
+
+[/quote]
[quote|format=featured]
Footnote 1: When I say bulletproof, I mean ones you can replace the plastic swing gear with a metal Printer Techs one at 250k if you need it and the ones which never had the issue like the 4000/4050 and the P4015 with benefits from the unkillable nature of the 4000 series. This annoys HP for obvious reasons to the point they tried to kill them by discontinuing the X toner cart for some of them.
[/quote]

crwdns2915684:0crwdne2915684:0:

open

crwdns2934245:0crwdne2934245:0 Nick

crwdns2934249:0crwdne2934249:0:

-Given the age of the Kyocera Mitas, parts are probably NLA, at least new; you run into this problem with the LJ 4/5 and 4000 series printers, which you could put on a battlefield and bring back working; even the P4015 is as bulletproof as the 4000/4050/4100/4150/4200/4250. The solution is to have one in the printer and keep spare EIO cards (sometimes 3 or more) on hand given HP no longer makes it but there’s also a lot more of the HP cards so it’s more viable then it may be for you. These 4000 series lasers just run along on 3rd party toner and override out set to continue most of the time these days. HP has tried and failed to get these out of service as well(1). The new units are a DRM ridden mess.
+Given the age of the Kyocera Mitas, parts are probably NLA, at least new; you run into this problem with the LJ 4/5 and 4000 series printers, which you could put on a battlefield and bring back working; even the P4015 is as bulletproof as the 4000/4050/4100/4150/4200/4250. The solution is to have one in the printer and keep spare EIO cards (sometimes 3 or more) on hand, given HP no longer makes it, but there are also many more HP cards, so it’s more viable than it may be for you. These 4000 series lasers just run along on 3rd party toner and override out set to continue most of the time. HP has also failed to get these out of service(1). The new units are a DRM ridden mess.
- As @jayeff pointed out, the OEM P/N for the Ethernet card is FS-21E. I looked on eBay since that’s the key place we get the HP EIO cards and I didn’t find any, but keep looking and buy it as soon as it comes up.
+As @jayeff pointed out, the OEM P/N for the Ethernet card is FS-21E. I looked on eBay since that’s the key place we get the HP EIO cards, and I didn’t find any, but your best bet is to keep looking and buy one as soon as it comes up.
You're more likely to have better luck making a "print server" out of an old Windows or Mac PC, like a surplus USFF PC with an 8th/9th gen Intel process or similar Ryzen 5, or seeing if you can find a USB print server that gives the printer an IP address. The catch with the third-party server is that most of them do not detect the printer model (whereas I can get an HP one used or NOS, use a USB cable and have the server detect I put a 4250 on it), so you'll need to know the IP address for the FS-1010 and manually configure it based on TCP/IP.
+[quote|format=featured]
Footnote 1: When I say bulletproof, I mean ones you can replace the plastic swing gear with a metal Printer Techs one at 250k if you need it and the ones which never had the issue like the 4000/4050 and the P4015 with benefits from the unkillable nature of the 4000 series. This annoys HP for obvious reasons to the point they tried to kill them by discontinuing the X toner cart for some of them.
+
+[/quote]

crwdns2915684:0crwdne2915684:0:

open

crwdns2934245:0crwdne2934245:0 Nick

crwdns2934249:0crwdne2934249:0:

-Given the age of the Kyocera Mitas, parts are probably NLA, at least new; you run into this problem with the LJ 4/5 and 4000 series printers, which you could put on a battlefield and bring back working; even the P4015 is as bulletproof as the 4000/4050/4100/4150/4200/4250. As @jayeff pointed out, the OEM P/N for the Ethernet card is FS-21E. They were too good, so supplies became less available, with most of them running strong on 3rd party toner and override out mode set to continue. The solution we use is to keep a spare JetDirect with those things, sometimes 3 or more. The good thing with the HPs is they were so hard to kill more cards are out there than HP probably likes because they're bent on making the bulletproof machines go away these days(1). But that also means they are available in perpetuity, like 3rd party toner on pre-HP DS printers. Kyocera may be the same.[br]
-Footnote 1: When I say bulletproof, I mean ones you can replace the plastic swing gear with a metal Printer Techs one at 250k if you need it and the ones which never had the issue like the 4000/4050 and the P4015 with benefits from the unkillable nature of the 4000 series. These are parasites for HP for obvious reasons.
+Given the age of the Kyocera Mitas, parts are probably NLA, at least new; you run into this problem with the LJ 4/5 and 4000 series printers, which you could put on a battlefield and bring back working; even the P4015 is as bulletproof as the 4000/4050/4100/4150/4200/4250. The solution is to have one in the printer and keep spare EIO cards (sometimes 3 or more) on hand given HP no longer makes it but there’s also a lot more of the HP cards so it’s more viable then it may be for you. These 4000 series lasers just run along on 3rd party toner and override out set to continue most of the time these days. HP has tried and failed to get these out of service as well(1). The new units are a DRM ridden mess.
+
+ As @jayeff pointed out, the OEM P/N for the Ethernet card is FS-21E. I looked on eBay since that’s the key place we get the HP EIO cards and I didn’t find any, but keep looking and buy it as soon as it comes up.
You're more likely to have better luck making a "print server" out of an old Windows or Mac PC, like a surplus USFF PC with an 8th/9th gen Intel process or similar Ryzen 5, or seeing if you can find a USB print server that gives the printer an IP address. The catch with the third-party server is that most of them do not detect the printer model (whereas I can get an HP one used or NOS, use a USB cable and have the server detect I put a 4250 on it), so you'll need to know the IP address for the FS-1010 and manually configure it based on TCP/IP.
+
+Footnote 1: When I say bulletproof, I mean ones you can replace the plastic swing gear with a metal Printer Techs one at 250k if you need it and the ones which never had the issue like the 4000/4050 and the P4015 with benefits from the unkillable nature of the 4000 series. This annoys HP for obvious reasons to the point they tried to kill them by discontinuing the X toner cart for some of them.

crwdns2915684:0crwdne2915684:0:

open

crwdns2934245:0crwdne2934245:0 Nick

crwdns2934249:0crwdne2934249:0:

-Given the age of the Kyocera Mitas, parts are probably NLA, at least new; you run into this problem with the LJ 4/5 and 4000 series printers, which you could put on a battlefield and come back working; even the P4015 is as bulletproof as the 4000/4050/4100/4150/4200/4250. As @jayeff pointed out, the OEM P/N for the Ethernet card is FS-21E. They were too good, so supplies became less available, with most of them running strong on 3rd party toner and override out mode set to continue. The solution we use is to keep a spare JetDirect with those things, sometimes 3 or more. The good thing with the HPs is they were so hard to kill more cards are out there than HP probably likes because they're bent on making the bulletproof machines go away these days(1). But that also means they are available in perpetuity, like 3rd party toner on pre-HP DS printers. Kyocera may be the same.[br]
+Given the age of the Kyocera Mitas, parts are probably NLA, at least new; you run into this problem with the LJ 4/5 and 4000 series printers, which you could put on a battlefield and bring back working; even the P4015 is as bulletproof as the 4000/4050/4100/4150/4200/4250. As @jayeff pointed out, the OEM P/N for the Ethernet card is FS-21E. They were too good, so supplies became less available, with most of them running strong on 3rd party toner and override out mode set to continue. The solution we use is to keep a spare JetDirect with those things, sometimes 3 or more. The good thing with the HPs is they were so hard to kill more cards are out there than HP probably likes because they're bent on making the bulletproof machines go away these days(1). But that also means they are available in perpetuity, like 3rd party toner on pre-HP DS printers. Kyocera may be the same.[br]
Footnote 1: When I say bulletproof, I mean ones you can replace the plastic swing gear with a metal Printer Techs one at 250k if you need it and the ones which never had the issue like the 4000/4050 and the P4015 with benefits from the unkillable nature of the 4000 series. These are parasites for HP for obvious reasons.
You're more likely to have better luck making a "print server" out of an old Windows or Mac PC, like a surplus USFF PC with an 8th/9th gen Intel process or similar Ryzen 5, or seeing if you can find a USB print server that gives the printer an IP address. The catch with the third-party server is that most of them do not detect the printer model (whereas I can get an HP one used or NOS, use a USB cable and have the server detect I put a 4250 on it), so you'll need to know the IP address for the FS-1010 and manually configure it based on TCP/IP.

crwdns2915684:0crwdne2915684:0:

open

crwdns2934245:0crwdne2934245:0 Nick

crwdns2934249:0crwdne2934249:0:

-Given the age of the Kyocera Mitas, parts are probably NLA, at least new; you run into this problem with the LJ 4/5 and 4000 series printers, which you could put on a battlefield and come back working; even the P4015 is as bulletproof as the 4000/4050/4100/4150/4200/4250. As @jayeff pointed out, the OEM P/N for the Ethernet card is FS-21E. They were too good, so supplies became less available, with most of them running strong on 3rd party toner and override out mode set to continue. The solution we use is to keep a spare JetDirect with those things, sometimes 3 or more. The good thing with the HPs is they were so hard to kill more cards are out there than HP probably likes because they're bent on making the bulletproof machines go away these days. But that also means they are available in perpetuity, like 3rd party toner on pre-HP DS printers. Kyocera may be the same.
+Given the age of the Kyocera Mitas, parts are probably NLA, at least new; you run into this problem with the LJ 4/5 and 4000 series printers, which you could put on a battlefield and come back working; even the P4015 is as bulletproof as the 4000/4050/4100/4150/4200/4250. As @jayeff pointed out, the OEM P/N for the Ethernet card is FS-21E. They were too good, so supplies became less available, with most of them running strong on 3rd party toner and override out mode set to continue. The solution we use is to keep a spare JetDirect with those things, sometimes 3 or more. The good thing with the HPs is they were so hard to kill more cards are out there than HP probably likes because they're bent on making the bulletproof machines go away these days(1). But that also means they are available in perpetuity, like 3rd party toner on pre-HP DS printers. Kyocera may be the same.[br]
+Footnote 1: When I say bulletproof, I mean ones you can replace the plastic swing gear with a metal Printer Techs one at 250k if you need it and the ones which never had the issue like the 4000/4050 and the P4015 with benefits from the unkillable nature of the 4000 series. These are parasites for HP for obvious reasons.
You're more likely to have better luck making a "print server" out of an old Windows or Mac PC, like a surplus USFF PC with an 8th/9th gen Intel process or similar Ryzen 5, or seeing if you can find a USB print server that gives the printer an IP address. The catch with the third-party server is that most of them do not detect the printer model (whereas I can get an HP one used or NOS, use a USB cable and have the server detect I put a 4250 on it), so you'll need to know the IP address for the FS-1010 and manually configure it based on TCP/IP.

crwdns2915684:0crwdne2915684:0:

open

crwdns2934245:0crwdne2934245:0 Nick

crwdns2934249:0crwdne2934249:0:

-Given the age of the Kyocera Mitas, parts are probably NLA, at least new; you run into this problem with the LJ 4/5 and 4000 series printers, which you could put on a battlefield and come back working; even the P4015 is as bulletproof as the 4000/4050/4100/4150/4200/4250. As @jayeff pointed out, the OEM P/N for the Ethernet card is FS-21E. They were too good, so supplies became less available, with most of them running strong on 3rd party toner and override out mode set to continue. The solution we use is to keep a spare JetDirect with those things, sometimes 3 or more. The good thing with the HPs is they were so hard to kill. More cards are out there than HP probably likes because they're bent on making the bulletproof machines go away these days. But that also means they are available in perpetuity, like 3rd party toner on pre-HP DS printers. Kyocera may be the same.
+Given the age of the Kyocera Mitas, parts are probably NLA, at least new; you run into this problem with the LJ 4/5 and 4000 series printers, which you could put on a battlefield and come back working; even the P4015 is as bulletproof as the 4000/4050/4100/4150/4200/4250. As @jayeff pointed out, the OEM P/N for the Ethernet card is FS-21E. They were too good, so supplies became less available, with most of them running strong on 3rd party toner and override out mode set to continue. The solution we use is to keep a spare JetDirect with those things, sometimes 3 or more. The good thing with the HPs is they were so hard to kill more cards are out there than HP probably likes because they're bent on making the bulletproof machines go away these days. But that also means they are available in perpetuity, like 3rd party toner on pre-HP DS printers. Kyocera may be the same.
You're more likely to have better luck making a "print server" out of an old Windows or Mac PC, like a surplus USFF PC with an 8th/9th gen Intel process or similar Ryzen 5, or seeing if you can find a USB print server that gives the printer an IP address. The catch with the third-party server is that most of them do not detect the printer model (whereas I can get an HP one used or NOS, use a USB cable and have the server detect I put a 4250 on it), so you'll need to know the IP address for the FS-1010 and manually configure it based on TCP/IP.

crwdns2915684:0crwdne2915684:0:

open

crwdns2934245:0crwdne2934245:0 Nick

crwdns2934249:0crwdne2934249:0:

-Given the age of the Kyocera Mitas, parts are probably NLA, at least new; you run into this problem with the LJ 4/5 and 4000 series printers, which you could put on a battlefield and come back working; even the P4015 is as bulletproof as the 4000/4050/4100/4150/4200/4250. As @jayeff pointed out, the OEM P/N for the Ethernet card is FS-21E. They were too good, so supplies became less available, with most of them running strong on 3rd party toner and override out mode set to continue. The solution we use is to keep a spare JetDirect with those things, sometimes 3 or more. The good thing with the HPs is they were so hard to kill there are more cards out there than HP probably likes, so they are available in perpetuity, like 3rd party toner on pre-HP DS printers. Kyocera may be the same.
+Given the age of the Kyocera Mitas, parts are probably NLA, at least new; you run into this problem with the LJ 4/5 and 4000 series printers, which you could put on a battlefield and come back working; even the P4015 is as bulletproof as the 4000/4050/4100/4150/4200/4250. As @jayeff pointed out, the OEM P/N for the Ethernet card is FS-21E. They were too good, so supplies became less available, with most of them running strong on 3rd party toner and override out mode set to continue. The solution we use is to keep a spare JetDirect with those things, sometimes 3 or more. The good thing with the HPs is they were so hard to kill. More cards are out there than HP probably likes because they're bent on making the bulletproof machines go away these days. But that also means they are available in perpetuity, like 3rd party toner on pre-HP DS printers. Kyocera may be the same.
You're more likely to have better luck making a "print server" out of an old Windows or Mac PC, like a surplus USFF PC with an 8th/9th gen Intel process or similar Ryzen 5, or seeing if you can find a USB print server that gives the printer an IP address. The catch with the third-party server is that most of them do not detect the printer model (whereas I can get an HP one used or NOS, use a USB cable and have the server detect I put a 4250 on it), so you'll need to know the IP address for the FS-1010 and manually configure it based on TCP/IP.

crwdns2915684:0crwdne2915684:0:

open

crwdns2934245:0crwdne2934245:0 Nick

crwdns2934249:0crwdne2934249:0:

-Given the age of the Kyocera Mitas, parts are probably NLA, at least new; you run into this problem with the LJ 4/5 and 4000 series printers, which you could put on a battlefield and come back working; even the P4015 is as bulletproof as the 4000/4050/4100/4150/4200/4250. As @jayeff pointed out, the OEM P/N for the Ethernet card is FS-21E. They were too good, so supplies became less available, with most of them running strong on 3rd party toner and override out mode set to continue. The solution we use is to keep a spare JetDirect with those things, sometimes 3 or more. The good thing with the HPs is they were so hard to kill there are more cards out there than HP probably likes, so they are available in perpetuity, like 3rd party toner on pre-HP DS printers.
+Given the age of the Kyocera Mitas, parts are probably NLA, at least new; you run into this problem with the LJ 4/5 and 4000 series printers, which you could put on a battlefield and come back working; even the P4015 is as bulletproof as the 4000/4050/4100/4150/4200/4250. As @jayeff pointed out, the OEM P/N for the Ethernet card is FS-21E. They were too good, so supplies became less available, with most of them running strong on 3rd party toner and override out mode set to continue. The solution we use is to keep a spare JetDirect with those things, sometimes 3 or more. The good thing with the HPs is they were so hard to kill there are more cards out there than HP probably likes, so they are available in perpetuity, like 3rd party toner on pre-HP DS printers. Kyocera may be the same.
You're more likely to have better luck making a "print server" out of an old Windows or Mac PC, like a surplus USFF PC with an 8th/9th gen Intel process or similar Ryzen 5, or seeing if you can find a USB print server that gives the printer an IP address. The catch with the third-party server is that most of them do not detect the printer model (whereas I can get an HP one used or NOS, use a USB cable and have the server detect I put a 4250 on it), so you'll need to know the IP address for the FS-1010 and manually configure it based on TCP/IP.

crwdns2915684:0crwdne2915684:0:

open

crwdns2934245:0crwdne2934245:0 Nick

crwdns2934249:0crwdne2934249:0:

-Given the age of the Kyocera Mitas, parts are probably NLA, at least new; you run into this problem with the LJ 4/5 and 4000 series printers, which you could put on a battlefield and come back working; even the P4015 is as bulletproof as the 4000/4050/4100/4150/4200/4250. As @jayeff pointed out, the OEM P/N for the Ethernet card is FS-21E. They were too good, so supplies became less available, with most of them running strong on 3rd party toner and override out mode set to continue. The solution we use is to keep a spare JetDirect with those things, sometimes 3 or more.
+Given the age of the Kyocera Mitas, parts are probably NLA, at least new; you run into this problem with the LJ 4/5 and 4000 series printers, which you could put on a battlefield and come back working; even the P4015 is as bulletproof as the 4000/4050/4100/4150/4200/4250. As @jayeff pointed out, the OEM P/N for the Ethernet card is FS-21E. They were too good, so supplies became less available, with most of them running strong on 3rd party toner and override out mode set to continue. The solution we use is to keep a spare JetDirect with those things, sometimes 3 or more. The good thing with the HPs is they were so hard to kill there are more cards out there than HP probably likes, so they are available in perpetuity, like 3rd party toner on pre-HP DS printers.
You're more likely to have better luck making a "print server" out of an old Windows or Mac PC, like a surplus USFF PC with an 8th/9th gen Intel process or similar Ryzen 5, or seeing if you can find a USB print server that gives the printer an IP address. The catch with the third-party server is that most of them do not detect the printer model (whereas I can get an HP one used or NOS, use a USB cable and have the server detect I put a 4250 on it), so you'll need to know the IP address for the FS-1010 and manually configure it based on TCP/IP.

crwdns2915684:0crwdne2915684:0:

open

crwdns2934245:0crwdne2934245:0 Nick

crwdns2934249:0crwdne2934249:0:

Given the age of the Kyocera Mitas, parts are probably NLA, at least new; you run into this problem with the LJ 4/5 and 4000 series printers, which you could put on a battlefield and come back working; even the P4015 is as bulletproof as the 4000/4050/4100/4150/4200/4250. As @jayeff pointed out, the OEM P/N for the Ethernet card is FS-21E. They were too good, so supplies became less available, with most of them running strong on 3rd party toner and override out mode set to continue. The solution we use is to keep a spare JetDirect with those things, sometimes 3 or more.
-You're more likely to have better luck making a "print server" out of an old Windows or Mac PC, like a surplus USFF PC with an 8th/9th gen Intel process or similar Ryzen 5, or seeing if you can find a USB print server that gives the printer an IP address. The catch with the third-party server is that most of them do not detect the printer model (whereas I can get an HP EW2500, use a USB cable and have the server detect I put a 4250 on it), so you'll need to know the IP address for the FS-1010 and manually configure it based on TCP/IP.
+You're more likely to have better luck making a "print server" out of an old Windows or Mac PC, like a surplus USFF PC with an 8th/9th gen Intel process or similar Ryzen 5, or seeing if you can find a USB print server that gives the printer an IP address. The catch with the third-party server is that most of them do not detect the printer model (whereas I can get an HP one used or NOS, use a USB cable and have the server detect I put a 4250 on it), so you'll need to know the IP address for the FS-1010 and manually configure it based on TCP/IP.

crwdns2915684:0crwdne2915684:0:

open

crwdns2934245:0crwdne2934245:0 Nick

crwdns2934249:0crwdne2934249:0:

Given the age of the Kyocera Mitas, parts are probably NLA, at least new; you run into this problem with the LJ 4/5 and 4000 series printers, which you could put on a battlefield and come back working; even the P4015 is as bulletproof as the 4000/4050/4100/4150/4200/4250. As @jayeff pointed out, the OEM P/N for the Ethernet card is FS-21E. They were too good, so supplies became less available, with most of them running strong on 3rd party toner and override out mode set to continue. The solution we use is to keep a spare JetDirect with those things, sometimes 3 or more.
-You're more likely to have better luck making a "print server" out of an old Windows or Mac PC, like a surplus USFF PC with an 8th/9th gen Intel process or similar Ryzen 5, or seeing if you can find a USB print server that gives the printer an IP address. The catch with the third-party server is that most of them do not detect the printer model, so you'll need to know the IP address for the FS-1010 and manually configure it based on TCP/IP.
+You're more likely to have better luck making a "print server" out of an old Windows or Mac PC, like a surplus USFF PC with an 8th/9th gen Intel process or similar Ryzen 5, or seeing if you can find a USB print server that gives the printer an IP address. The catch with the third-party server is that most of them do not detect the printer model (whereas I can get an HP EW2500, use a USB cable and have the server detect I put a 4250 on it), so you'll need to know the IP address for the FS-1010 and manually configure it based on TCP/IP.

crwdns2915684:0crwdne2915684:0:

open

crwdns2934245:0crwdne2934245:0 Nick

crwdns2934249:0crwdne2934249:0:

-Given the age of the Kyocera Mitas, parts are probably NLA, at least new; you run into this problem with the LJ 4/5 and 4000 series printers, which you could put on a battlefield and come back working; even the P4015 is as bulletproof as the 4000/4050/4100/4150/4200/4250. As @jayeff pointed out, the OEM P/N for the Ethernet card is FS-21E. They were too good, so supplies became less available, with most of them running strong on 3rd party toner and override out settings set to continue.
+Given the age of the Kyocera Mitas, parts are probably NLA, at least new; you run into this problem with the LJ 4/5 and 4000 series printers, which you could put on a battlefield and come back working; even the P4015 is as bulletproof as the 4000/4050/4100/4150/4200/4250. As @jayeff pointed out, the OEM P/N for the Ethernet card is FS-21E. They were too good, so supplies became less available, with most of them running strong on 3rd party toner and override out mode set to continue. The solution we use is to keep a spare JetDirect with those things, sometimes 3 or more.
-You're more likely to have better luck making a "print server" out of an old Windows or Mac PC like a surplus USFF PC with an 8th/9th gen Intel process or similar Ryzen 5, or seeing if you can find a USB print server which gives the printer an IP address. The catch with the 3rd party server is most of them do not detect the printer model, so you'll need to know the IP address for the FS-1010 and manually configure it based on TCP/IP.
+You're more likely to have better luck making a "print server" out of an old Windows or Mac PC, like a surplus USFF PC with an 8th/9th gen Intel process or similar Ryzen 5, or seeing if you can find a USB print server that gives the printer an IP address. The catch with the third-party server is that most of them do not detect the printer model, so you'll need to know the IP address for the FS-1010 and manually configure it based on TCP/IP.

crwdns2915684:0crwdne2915684:0:

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crwdns2934245:0crwdne2934245:0 Nick

crwdns2934249:0crwdne2934249:0:

-Given the age of the Kyocera Mitas, parts are probably NLA, at least new; you run into this problem with the LJ 4/5 and 4000 series printers, which you could put on a battlefield and come back working. As @jayeff pointed out, the OEM P/N for the Ethernet card is FS-21E. They were too good, so supplies became less available, with most of them running strong on 3rd party toner and override out settings set to continue.
+Given the age of the Kyocera Mitas, parts are probably NLA, at least new; you run into this problem with the LJ 4/5 and 4000 series printers, which you could put on a battlefield and come back working; even the P4015 is as bulletproof as the 4000/4050/4100/4150/4200/4250. As @jayeff pointed out, the OEM P/N for the Ethernet card is FS-21E. They were too good, so supplies became less available, with most of them running strong on 3rd party toner and override out settings set to continue.
You're more likely to have better luck making a "print server" out of an old Windows or Mac PC like a surplus USFF PC with an 8th/9th gen Intel process or similar Ryzen 5, or seeing if you can find a USB print server which gives the printer an IP address. The catch with the 3rd party server is most of them do not detect the printer model, so you'll need to know the IP address for the FS-1010 and manually configure it based on TCP/IP.

crwdns2915684:0crwdne2915684:0:

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crwdns2934241:0crwdne2934241:0 Nick

crwdns2934249:0crwdne2934249:0:

Given the age of the Kyocera Mitas, parts are probably NLA, at least new; you run into this problem with the LJ 4/5 and 4000 series printers, which you could put on a battlefield and come back working. As @jayeff pointed out, the OEM P/N for the Ethernet card is FS-21E. They were too good, so supplies became less available, with most of them running strong on 3rd party toner and override out settings set to continue.

You're more likely to have better luck making a "print server" out of an old Windows or Mac PC like a surplus USFF PC with an 8th/9th gen Intel process or similar Ryzen 5, or seeing if you can find a USB print server which gives the printer an IP address. The catch with the 3rd party server is most of them do not detect the printer model, so you'll need to know the IP address for the FS-1010 and manually configure it based on TCP/IP.

crwdns2915684:0crwdne2915684:0:

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