Or the drum isn't getting charged in the first place, before light exposure 
then toner dusting.
A way to check this: while the machine is in mid-copy, cut the power then open 
it up and look at the drum.
Is there a toner image adhered to the drum section between where the surface is 
image-exposed then dusted, and where it rolls against the paper?

Btw, if the fuser roller isn't heated enough, the symptom is that the paper 
comes out with a normal image, except
the toner wipes off with finger swipe. Since it's just sitting on the paper not 
stuck to it.

Old toner cartridges should be given a strong end-to-end shaking before being 
put into use. Toner can settle in
lumps and block the path to the duster. 

While you have the machine apart, always clean all the optical path lens 
surfaces. Dust greatly reduces the print contrast. And because most machines 
use fan-blown air, dust gets everywhere that isn't absolutely airtight sealed.

One other tip that might be useful. Very commonly with old photocopiers and 
laser printers the rubber pick-up and paper feed rollers lose their 'tack' and 
slip on the paper.  I found that briefly soaking them in teatree oil restores 
the 'tack' quite well. It soaks in and seems to have the right spread of 
rubber-soluble oils to keep the surface a little tacky.
Anyone else found other solvent/oils with similar effect?

Guy

At 01:47 PM 2/04/2019 -0700, you wrote:
>>If I'm not mistaken, high voltage capacitors on power supply. The corona wire 
>>isn't >charging the paper, so the image doesn't get transferred from the 
>>cylinder to the paper to >be pressed/fused in the fusor.
>
>
>Alexander,
>
>Thanks for the reply. Grant also suggested the same thing. I am turning the 
>printer upside down as I write this to pull out the HV and see if anything 
>looks bad from the get go. Thanks!
>
>-Ali
>
>
>
>

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