Hp Psc 2410 Scanner Drivers For Mac

Posted on
Hp Psc 2410 Scanner Drivers For Mac Rating: 3,8/5 2555 votes

HP PSC 1200 driver download Windows, Mac, Linux HP PSC 1200 driver compatibility:. Windows XP (32bit). Windows Vista (32bit or 64bit). Windows 7 (32bit or 64bit). Windows 8 (32bit or 64bit). Windows 8.1 (32bit or 64bit).

  1. Psc 2410 Photosmart Driver

Windows 10 (32bit or 64bit). Mac OS X. Linux How to install HP PSC 1200 driver:. Turn on the printer first, then turn on the computer. Close any screen savers, virus protection programs, or other software programs running on your computer. Click on Download Now and a File Download box will appear. Select Save This Program to Disk and a Save As box will appear.

Select a directory to save the file in and click Save. Locate the file using Windows Explorer when the download has completed. Double click on the file. This will extract all the driver files into a directory on your hard drive.

For

Select the name of the folder where the files will be extracted (for example c: designjet). Open the Printers window click Start-Settings-Printers. How to install the driver and create a print queue. Click Add New Printer 2. Follow the instructions of the Add Printer Wizard. When a printer listing box appears, click on Have Disk. Another box Install from Disk appears.

Click the Browse to locate the expanded files directory (i.e., c: designjet). Click on the file ending with.inf. Click Open and then OK and let files install. HP PSC 1200 driver download for Windows: Install the HP Printer Driver and Software provided within your operating system for Windows 10/8.1/8.7/Vista HP Print and Scan Doctor for Windows 10/8.1/8/7 (32bit or 64bit) Description: The HP Print and Scan Doctor was designed by HP to provide users with troubleshooting and problem solving features, needed to resolve many common problems experienced with HP print and scan products connected to Windows-based computers. File name: HPPSdr.exe Driver size: 10.6 Mb HP PSC 1200 driver download for MAC OS X: Install the HP Printer Driver and Software provided within your operating system for Mac OS X 10.14/10.13/10.12/10.11/10.10/10.9/10.8/10.7 HP Print Driver for Mac OS X 10.6 Description: HP printing only software for Mac OS X 10.6 File name: Inkjet7106PrintMac1.dmg Driver size: 18.6 Mb HP PSC 1200 driver download for Linux OS: For Linux downloads, HP recommends another website. If you need to download Linux drivers - Hope can help you and please comment or if get broken link, so we can fix as soon as possible.

I had the same problem. Here are steps I did to fix it. It works great now. First I reset the psc 2410 several times, several ways. Pressing OK and Cancel at the same time when plugging it in this resets some memory registers # and 3 while plugging in the power cord = this is a partial reset # and 6 while plugging in the power cord = this is a semi reset # and 9 while plugging in the power cord = this is a full reset Check on HP's website how to reset your specific printer.

This is for the 2410. I also noticed that my plastic cover to the scanner was starting to yellow a little. So when turning on the printer, I put a white piece of paper closest to the scanner light. This helps the printer know exactly where the scanner head is and allign itself. (I took the printer apart and there is a white plastic strip with notches in it just under the edge of the glass where the head stops. This stip I bet is what the scanner detects and uses to allign itself. Without the white paper covering the yellowing part of my lid, the scanner would take a longer time booting up and then copying and scanning was very slow.

The paper fixed it I think!!!!). Thank Goodness (and Magic Marc, of course), I had not been able to use my 2410 photosmart printer in over a month and was on my way out to purchase a new one, when I decided to search on the web for help.again. I've had issues with this printer several times in the past after power outtages or when I would accidentally unplug it but, it never took this long for it to get going usually I'll get it working by the next day or so. Thanks to Magic Marc, I did the reseting options followed by the cleaning and it is working just fine! Thanks Again!

Thank you to everyone who added their comments to this forum. I had the exact same problem. I spent a wasted hour with HP Support, only to not get my problem resolved.

They said it was a hardware issue and that my 2410 was out of warranty. They then proceeded to try to get me to 'trade-up' to a new HP model and quoted me prices. I checked out their prices against CNET and found that even if I wanted to upgrade, that HP prices were HIGHER than I could get at BestBuy or Circuit City. I found the answer on this forum. Holding down the 'Cancel' key on start-up worked perfectly. HP IS PATHETIC. It is definitely not the company of the good old HP LaserJet 3 days.

THIS WILL BE MY LAST HP. I just bought a PSC 2410 at the 'Bay' for 'parts'. I do have another here that needs a couple of parts, but when I got the scanner here today.it seemed to try to initialize, but the scanner would start out, return back (which is normal) and then, the motor kept going, and the belt would jump the gear.over and over.

Came here and read, took the scanner apart.cleaned the glass underside, especially over the white strip (which must tell the scanner to shut down), reassembled the unit and it works perfectly. Thanks forum.this is a real money saver here. PS.if the scanner glass is that critical, perhaps a no smoking sign should be displayed near it! Nicotine is known to get through any crack or opening, and Nicotine will discolor anything. Regards, Rob. My wife Eva and myself, have followed every procedure available on the Internet.

First we tried to reset using all the procedures available. But it didn't work: The noise was always coming back! We called HP Support from Spain and the Indian HP people followed over and over the unplug procedure, the reset procedure, etc.

Did not work! We unplug the printer for a week, didn't work!

As we need the printer, we remove the glass, we clean it! Did not work! Finally we remove the white strip that is under the glass.

Was not very dirty but we clean it. We set it back and the printer started smoothly!!! I can not tell you how bad is the product if I do not compare it with the HP Support. The problem is related the design of the printer, they know it and they do not provide a simple official procedure to put the printer back online!!! Jose and Eva (Madrid, Spain).

Great tips - mine was hanging on startup, and would stick in a noisy 'jerking' loop for a minute or two, with the hourglass icon never going away on the printer, and the printer being useless. I took mine apart, cleaned glass AND gently cleaning scanner lamp with alcohol and a q-tip, taking great care to not leave any lint behind. It now works perfectly. Mine, also, has a yellowing mark on the white surface on the underside of the lid facing the glass.

It may not affect anything, but I am going to leave a clean sheet of paper on the glass for all power-ups to assist in the bootup and alignment that occurs for every power-up. Thanks to all for their help. All resetting stuff and other clues did not work and finally I opened the top as described in hp link I followed every single advice (i did not touch the lamp and covered with scotch tape) but failed to respond-still that jerky sound. Then i closely inspected the lamp and I saw that almost 15% of it was darkened with soot. I took the risk of cleaning this soot with a slightly damped q-tips with gentle approach and touch. I then left it to dry for 1/2 hour while giving air with hair blower. NOT HOT.(Hot air may bend plastic) Now it's ALL OKAY.

Anyhow, I am reluctant for a future HP Purchase. I tried all the methods posted, but none can work. Cleaning the glass, reseting the printer, removing the white strip from the glass and then cleaning it.

All did not work. While I planed to give up, I tried one more time to trun on the power and did not noticed that the cover of the glass did not fit well on the printer; it was slightly lower. Then the miracle happened, the printer started successfully. At that moment, I realized that maybe it was the problem of the location of the white sripe. So I removed it from the glass, and put it back to lower location (about 1 mm lower than the original location). It really works!! Now this annony thing is away from me.

I think the root cause of my machine's problem is that the glass was shifted upward due to the plastic clips holding it was somewhat loose, so the white stripe, which was believed for the purpose of locating the scanner head, was a little bit shifted upward. Anyway, if you have tried all the methods but still don't work, maybe you would like to try this method. I posted this on another site a long time ago, and I hope this helps: Hello, I read your post, “Mind you, the problem that's really worrying me now is that when the HP is turned on, its self test goes mad and the scan head repeatedly tries to bury itself in the right hand side of its path, making a horrible noise and meaning the printer has to be turned off and left for a while.” I found this website doing research on this very same problem that I was having on my HP 2410 printer, scanner, copier. After doing extensive research, I found no credible software or hardware conflicts, and the fix, in my case, was very simple.

I had noticed from the first day that I got the machine that the underside of the scanner glass was not all that clean, and this filmy build up got worse as time went on (over the next two years). I also read your entry, “In frustration, I've just pulled the machine apart to try to figure what's going on, and it's as thought the printer can't detect that the scan head has reached the end of its travel during initialisation - the noise I hear is the driver wheels trying and failing to move the belt that moves the scan head. I'd expected to see some sort of microswitch being used to detect when the scan-head is fully over, but can't see any such switch, so am now assuming that the electronics of the drive mechanism have some tension-detection circuitry that isn't detecting that the head can't move any further.” Well, I too took the top of my scanner off, and I figured that since I had it removed I would clean the underside of the glass and this took three good tries and multiple cloths to clean off the white filmy mess. I followed the directions for cleaning my model of printer that are posted on the HP website. I noticed on my machine that there was the clear portion of the scanner glass on which the white cover sits and then there was the dark plastic and then a strip of white tape. I wondered if the scanner tray used the reflectivity of the scanner light to determine when it has reached the end of its travel.

Like I said earlier it took a good three times to clean the entire underside of the glass, but as soon as the unit was put back together and turned on it worked immediately. I am reasoning that the filmy buildup on the bottom of the scanner glass reflected the light in such a way that it may not have been able to sense when it had reached the dark plastic area between the open scanner surface and the white strip and thus not able to sense when it reached the end of its travel. I’ve had nothing but good luck with HP printers and they are the exclusive printers that I use.

I hope this helps you. I know it is a year after your post, but I hope it helps others who have the same problem. UPDATE: I encountered this problem again and cleaned the glass agian with no luck this time. What had I used in the past to clean the glass? Regular glass cleaner.

DO NOT USE GLASS CLEANER! It will leave a film that will affect the reflectivitiy.

Use alcohol and a rag, cloth, or towl that does not have any chemicals that could leave a filmy deposit. I cleaned let dry reassembled and it works fine. UPDATE #2 Though cleaning the glass has worked for me in the past, the situation was getting worse and worse and fianlly cleaning the underside of the glass was no longer working. If you look on the scanner head next to the light there is a mirror surface down inside.

The gunk that was on this mirror was worse then it ever was on the underside of the scanner surface. You can reach this surface with a Q-tip. I sprayed alcohol onto the Q-tip and cleaned the mirror; this took several attempts to clean the surface thoroughly, that's how dirty it was. I cleaned this mirror reassembled and the scanner works better then it ever has. It now scans in one pass where as it use to stop and start several times while scanning pictures or documents. I hope this helps.

I had the same problem. Here are steps I did to fix it.

It works great now. Thanks to all. Remove the white strip that is under the glass.

Was not very dirty but we clean it. We set it back and the printer started smoothly!!!

How to remove the glass, see this link The link shows how to clean the inside glass, but don't show you how to remove the white strip. Just carefull for remove the white strip, use the thin material to move the white strip, before that you must move the glass a little bit to the right at opposite position while you clean the inside glass (number 13 at link), the glass cannot be taken out from the plastic cover, remember that. Clean the white strip with alcohol and tissue or clean soft cloth Put the white strip to the position before you remove it. Well I'll be blowed. I am not in any way shape or form a technical person but I followed the link to how to take the screen off. I could not work out how to remove the white strips so I just slid the control panel down them and rested it behind the printer.

I cleaned the underside of the glass but for the life of me could not work out where the bulb was. I was looking for a mini lightbulb. Then I realised it was a long thin tube and cleaned with a q tip as advised. I put it back together carefully, plugged in and held my breath.

There was the familiar clicking noise and my heart sank but I was patient and slowly but surely the screen came to life and offered up a test print page. I was thrilled! I had been told to throw it away as well and I felt it was a shameful waste if it could be fixed rather than thrown into a landfill. Thanks to you wonderful, wonderful people, it works. I feel so proud of myself that I didn't give up and kept searching for an answer. My hubby is doing the ironing and I am fixing the printer. Thanks again.

I've had this problem for longer than I want to admit. I've been able to 'fix' it temporarily a few times following the steps posted here (mostly doing resets, taping a clean sheet of white paper to the underside of the lid, cleaning under glass) but the same problem always comes back. It comes back when my printer is ON when my home power goes off (typically during a lightning storm). When my power comes back on, the printer goes back to this annoying routine described in this thread. Therefore I'm pretty sure that this thread has been treating symptoms and not the real problem. I suspect it might be a combination of things, one of which is probably in the printer software/hardware itself.

Another reason I believe this is because my printer is not used that often and even when I 'clean' it, the glass or lamp was not dirty or hazy as many of you describe. I suspect that the cleaning process is really not fixing the problem, but that when cleaning you are shutting down the system, unplugging the cables, which is probably doing some sort of internal reset that 'fixes' the issue for a while. So cleaning is really hiding the 'fix'. Anyway, my system is typically able to get past the annoying clicking sound but my screen still stays locked with the hour glass.

System resetting with # 9 doesn't seem to do anything. I just did a full cleaning just now and it didn't do anything either. Does anyone else besides me have this problem come back again and again?

Any other ideas how to fix this before I go all Office Space on this damn thing?!?:-). More info: I'm in the middle of messing around some more. I have the power cable disconnected, top off, lid/glass off, data ribbons disconnected, control panel removed. My goal was to test if the same problem occurs in the env above. If it does, then the problem is NOT a cleaning issue as the glass/lid is not even on the printer during this test.

And surprise, surprise, the problem still occurs. I can watch the scanner/lamp move over about an inch and then the problem starts. As many others pointed out, the scanner seems to be having an initialization problem and is stuck in a loop of some kind. Some of you have been able to break out of this loop using resets, etc. I was hoping that the 'cleaning' was actually resetting something when the data ribbons were disconnected but that doesn't seem to be the case.at least for me.

The only thing I'm doing different this time is also unplugging the 3rd data ribbon that I see on the back of the control panel. It is copper in color and appears to be used as a connection mechanism between the LCD board and the keypad board. There is a small silver/metal band around the ribbon connection point. Pull back on the band to unlock the ribbon and then pull it out. To plug it back in, simply make sure the metal band is pulled out (you should be able to move it a few milimeters to indicate that it is open or closed) and then plug back in the ribbon. After the ribbon is in, push the metal band back so it locks the ribbon in place and guarantees it is secure. Here are my exact steps I will try next.again: Step 1: make sure power cable is disconnected for at least 30 seconds!!!

Step 2: hold down OK and Cancel buttons as the same time Step 3: plug power cable back in Step 4: system starts and after a few seconds displays the following message: 'Deriv. Turn power off.' Step 5: I pull the power cable and wait 30 seconds. This is the key.

WAIT 30 SECONDS OR MORE!!!! Step 6: I hold down # and 9 keys at the same time Step 7: I plug power cable back in Step 8: screen shows Full Reset Step 9: Align Print Cartridges screen appears and says 'Press OK to print Align Page' Step 10: Click OK button and the print test page should get printed and then the system seems to be OK. The screen is back to normal and the dreaded hour glass icon is gone!!!

At Step 5, if you don't wait a full 30 seconds the system always seems to go back in the problem loop again. I'm guessing that the printer needs a certain amount of time to do a full reset.

Note: At Step 9 I've also seen a Language screen appear which takes you though the steps of selecting a language to use for the menu. At the end the system should also be OK because at this point you are already out of the problem loop. So net-net, I don't think any sort of cleaning is required (though it can't hurt). I think it all has to do with a true system reset, and for me I could only achieve that using the 10 steps above.

They key to me seems to be waiting a full 30 seconds before plugging the power cable. When I only waiting 5 seconds, the problem would always happen. I hope some of you can try these steps and let me know how it works. It would be nice to finally put this one to bed:-) One last note: I highly recommend that you turn your printer OFF when you are not using it.

It seems to go into the problem loop if the system loses power. So to avoid it, I plan to just keep my printer OFF when I'm not using it (probably a good GREEN idea anyway). Hopefully this will keep me out of any future problems if I lose power in my house. The reset stuff works in most cases. But after a year or two, when the psc services for long time, it is unavoidable that the optical parts which also function for initializing the moving part is dirty and can not understand where the cradle is stationed. I doubt that this case is most valid for the users who are also cigarette smokers.:-) This is why we hear the rumbles inside. It is also advisable that we must not leave the psc rumbling for elongated time since it will cause the toothed belt wear out.

If all resetting steps fail, then move ahead for the disassembling and cleaning phase. Your 10-step solution works perfectly!

The only additional directions I would add would be to steps 6 and 8. In step 6 I would add, 'release #9 as soon as you see 'Full Reset' on the screen.' For step 8 I would add that it may take awhile before you see the 'OK to print align page.' It took my printer a good minute and a half (a minute can be a long time if you don't know what you're waiting for!)of making all kinds of resetting noises before I got the message. Anyway, thank you for your detailed help! I did all the steps (1-8 anyway).

Display stays saying Full Reset (after mech things move and reset). I never get the Step 9 msg about printing Align page. I used to get the clicking noise. That has stopped, but still cannot get past the Full Reset msg. The clicking comes back after the full reset but stops. So, I think I need to go on to the cleaning idea.

Can someone tell me how to get the screws out after removing the keyboard? They don't have a phillips or flat head on them, so what tool did you use? Thanks for any help! -Sandy Ogden. Hello everyone! This step helped me fix my printer, sure hope it helps you fix yours.

Source: 'Solution six: Perform a partial reset A partial reset returns user settings to factory defaults. You might have to reset the language and country/region settings after the partial reset. Press the Power button ( ) to turn on the product. Disconnect the power cord from the HP product. Unplug the power cord from the wall outlet. Press and hold # and 3.

Hp Psc 2410 Scanner Drivers For MacHp Psc 2410 Scanner Drivers For Mac

While holding down the # and 3 buttons, plug the power cord back into the wall outlet, and then reconnect the power cord to the back of the product. When reset displays, release both buttons.

Try to print a self-test report. Refer to the steps on how to print a self-test report at the top of this document. NOTE: If the product prints when plugged directly into a wall outlet, the power strip or surge suppressor might not be allowing enough voltage to reach the product. If these steps resolved the issue, and the self-test report prints, there is no need to continue troubleshooting.

Reconnect the USB cable, and then try to print again. If the self-test report prints successfully, but you continue to experience an issue with your product, then the issue is not related to the hardware.

Psc 2410 Photosmart Driver

Go to HP Product Support Home Page, and then search for another document that relates to the issue you are experiencing. NOTE: If the page displays in the wrong region or language, click the Region - Language link in the upper right corner of your browser. Then you can select the correct region and language. If the product does not print a self-test report, there is an issue with the product hardware. Continue to the next solution.'

I had the clicking scanner head at power outage problem for years. It would resolve itself with multiple full resets. I finally decided to clean the glass, mirror, and white strip. That did nothing.

I did the 10 point step for a true reset outlined above and that did the trick. I did not get the 'Deriv. Turn power off' message on the screen.

I just had the four functions buttons blink green. Once it worked again, I did a simulated power outage and the problem can right back. It corrected it with the 10 point step, but that is a pain since power outages are common this time of year during storms.

I've had this problem with the printer-scanner for years and have reset several times (didn't work), have taken the printer apart and cleaned both the underside of the glass and the light (sometimes works). One thing I've done that seems to work even more often is to create a simple Word document - typing one word, etc. Then I turn on the priner-scanner and before it has time to completely warm up and try to find 'home' position, I hit print on the document.

Many times, the printer will start to print before trying to find 'home.' After it prints the page, it automatically goes back to home position. This works more often than cleaning. Hope this helps someone. You said 'everything works' fine, that means it prints, faxes and copies.

The latter two functions use scan function. If you are unable to scan, something wrong with software side.

Wow private server for mac. Runescape private servers, RSPS list ranked by votes and reviews. Add your runescape private server for free to get more players.

Detach your printer first. Try to uninstall all HP drivers and software, do a registry cleaning to get rid of all remaining, restart a few times and then do a fresh re install. One little clue. Without your hp connected to your computer, insert an sd card or similar memory card to the appropriate slot and try to scan a document by pressing the 'scan' button. If it fails to scan, then the problem exceed my knowledge which points an internal eprom or something. Keep us posted and lets see what comes next.

Bought the printer about a year or two ago. Scanned a SINGLE document, nothing else, when the printer failed. HP didn't do jack, left it around. Since it's been taking up space, I decided I'd try to fix it before possibly junking/scrapping/selling/destroying the damned thing. Man, HP really does suck at service, both physical and over-the-phone. Even my HP t1000us laptop fails a lot, due to it overheating which HP wouldn't service at all.

SO, back to the printer. Printer Model: HP PSC 2410 Photosmart All-in-One Issue: The scanner head is 'stuck' underneath the control panel. Details: After the preliminary tests consisting of the printing wheels and whatnot, during the scanner test, the scanner head would move to the left about a centimeter before moving back to the right up against the end of the rail, ramming it while accompanied to the sweet, harmonic melody of the 'CLICK CLICK JAM' sounds. All the LCD displays is the HP logo of shame and an hourglass.

Procedures: Between each procedure, the printer was given a resting period of a minute or more (mainly out of frustration and my girlfriend stopping me from playing 'baseball' with the printer). As well, the printer was assembled and tested after reach procedure.Hold down cancel while powering on FAIL -Hold down power and cancel while powering on FAIL -Hold down # and 3 while powering on FAIL -Hold down # and 6 while powering on FAIL -Hold down # and 9 while powering on FAIL -Hold down #, 3, 6, 9, power, and cancel while powering on (for S&G) FAIL From here on out, every start up consists of a full reset (# & 9) as well as covering the scanner glass with a blank piece of paper.