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- HP Community
- Printers
- LaserJet Printing
- My HP laserjet M281FDW prints red instead of pink

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10-09-2018 06:34 AM
Please help! My M281FDW is printing red instead of pink. I’ve cleaned the printer nozzles & calibrated the printer as well. What could be causing this? Please help!!
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10-09-2018 07:53 AM
Here is my canned answer for image quality problems with LaserJets:
Print quality issues usually boil down to a few common areas:
- HP vs 3rd party toner cartridges
- Paper quality
- Application settings
- Driver settings
- Color profiling
The first big one is to confirm if you are using HP original cartridges or not. If not then you need to work with your 3rd party reseller on print quality issues. It sounds silly, but the printers are only calibrated for OEM cartridges when color quality issues arrise. 3rd party can often do a passable job, but artists and designers like yourself will notice the difference in certain situations where color quality is important.
After that you will want to verify the quality of the paper you are printing on. A mismatch of the paper settings can account for variations in print quality. The printer needs to understand what is loaded in the trays so that it can adjust the heat and electrical charges used to attract the toner to the paper. Perhaps all you have to do is tell teh printer you are printing on "glossy" paper instead of plain.
Application settings are where things get tricky. Design heavy applications like photoshop and indesign are highly adjustable and customizable compared to a more simple application like Windows Photo Gallery. Try printing a diagnostic or demo page directly from the control panel of the printer to confirm if the quality issues are application specific or something on the printer. If the printer prints fine from the control panel then try printing from a few different applications to compare and see if the issue is isolated to your Adobe products or not. Consult Adobe if it is for color profiling options.
Driver settings, or rather the driver language used to send print jobs to the printer. A simple swap from PCL6 to PostScript can have a big impact on your output as some print languages are better able to handle high design print jobs than others. Feel free to dabble in the various model specific drivers HP offers on thier Support Site. Your printer is also compatible with HP Universal Print Drivers if you care to venture out that way and experiment too.
Finally, there is good old fashioned ICC Color Profiles. This one takes some trial and error. In a nutshell, it is a configuration process that helps you calibrate what you see on your screen to what is physically printed from the printer. Lots of info out there on ICC color profiling with a quick Google search.
Let us know if you have more questions.
Experts are not HP Employees. Experts are advanced users, administrators, technicians, engineers or business partners who volunteer their time to answer community questions.
Please mark anything that is helpful with a Kudo.
When you are done troubleshooting, please mark one of the responses as the Solution.
This feedback enhances the community by helping future readers choose between multiple similar responses.
10-09-2018 07:53 AM
Here is my canned answer for image quality problems with LaserJets:
Print quality issues usually boil down to a few common areas:
- HP vs 3rd party toner cartridges
- Paper quality
- Application settings
- Driver settings
- Color profiling
The first big one is to confirm if you are using HP original cartridges or not. If not then you need to work with your 3rd party reseller on print quality issues. It sounds silly, but the printers are only calibrated for OEM cartridges when color quality issues arrise. 3rd party can often do a passable job, but artists and designers like yourself will notice the difference in certain situations where color quality is important.
After that you will want to verify the quality of the paper you are printing on. A mismatch of the paper settings can account for variations in print quality. The printer needs to understand what is loaded in the trays so that it can adjust the heat and electrical charges used to attract the toner to the paper. Perhaps all you have to do is tell teh printer you are printing on "glossy" paper instead of plain.
Application settings are where things get tricky. Design heavy applications like photoshop and indesign are highly adjustable and customizable compared to a more simple application like Windows Photo Gallery. Try printing a diagnostic or demo page directly from the control panel of the printer to confirm if the quality issues are application specific or something on the printer. If the printer prints fine from the control panel then try printing from a few different applications to compare and see if the issue is isolated to your Adobe products or not. Consult Adobe if it is for color profiling options.
Driver settings, or rather the driver language used to send print jobs to the printer. A simple swap from PCL6 to PostScript can have a big impact on your output as some print languages are better able to handle high design print jobs than others. Feel free to dabble in the various model specific drivers HP offers on thier Support Site. Your printer is also compatible with HP Universal Print Drivers if you care to venture out that way and experiment too.
Finally, there is good old fashioned ICC Color Profiles. This one takes some trial and error. In a nutshell, it is a configuration process that helps you calibrate what you see on your screen to what is physically printed from the printer. Lots of info out there on ICC color profiling with a quick Google search.
Let us know if you have more questions.
Experts are not HP Employees. Experts are advanced users, administrators, technicians, engineers or business partners who volunteer their time to answer community questions.
Please mark anything that is helpful with a Kudo.
When you are done troubleshooting, please mark one of the responses as the Solution.
This feedback enhances the community by helping future readers choose between multiple similar responses.
10-12-2018 12:41 PM
Either your Yellow cartridge is printing too much or the other cartridges are not printing enough.
Print off a diagnostic page to see if you can expose more infromation about how the cartridges are printing at the moment. Take a picture with your phone and then attach it to the thread so that we can see the defect issue with you.
If could be that multiple cartridges have failed and need to be replaced. Or if could be a bigger issue like an Image Transfer Belt or some other component in the print path that need to be serviced. The diagnostics page should expose more info to make an accurate suggestion.
Experts are not HP Employees. Experts are advanced users, administrators, technicians, engineers or business partners who volunteer their time to answer community questions.
Please mark anything that is helpful with a Kudo.
When you are done troubleshooting, please mark one of the responses as the Solution.
This feedback enhances the community by helping future readers choose between multiple similar responses.