Banding in Your Prints? The $15 Part Nobody Thinks to Check (Encoder Strip Guide)
Banding in Your Prints? The $15 Part Nobody Thinks to Check (Encoder Strip Guide)
Last updated: April 12, 2026 | Author: iColorPro Technical Team
Here's a scenario we hear about constantly: a shop is getting horizontal banding in their prints. Not the random kind caused by clogged nozzles — the regular, evenly-spaced kind. They run nozzle checks, perfect. They clean the head, no change. They replace dampers, still there. They align the head, it gets slightly better but the banding comes back within a few prints.
They've spent hours troubleshooting the head, the ink system, the software settings. Nobody thinks to look at the encoder strip.
The encoder strip is that thin, transparent plastic ribbon that runs horizontally across the carriage rail. The print carriage has a sensor that reads marks on this strip to know exactly where it is at any moment. If the strip is dirty, scratched, or misaligned, the carriage positioning becomes inaccurate, and you get perfectly spaced horizontal banding that no amount of head cleaning or alignment will fix.
The fix? Clean it with isopropyl alcohol. Takes 3 minutes. Costs essentially nothing. If it's damaged, a replacement is $10-20.
What the Encoder Strip Does
The encoder strip is the printer's GPS. It has thousands of tiny, precisely spaced marks along its length. A photoelectric sensor on the carriage reads these marks as the carriage moves, telling the printer's controller exactly where the carriage is at any given moment — down to fractions of a millimeter.
This positioning data controls two things:
Carriage speed and timing. The printer needs to know the exact carriage position to fire nozzles at the right moment. If the position reading is off by even a tiny amount, nozzle firings land in the wrong spot, creating visible banding.
Bi-directional alignment. When printing in bi-directional mode (carriage prints both left-to-right and right-to-left), the printer relies on the encoder strip to align passes from both directions. A dirty or damaged strip causes the two directions to misalign, producing ghosting or doubled lines.
When the encoder strip works correctly, you never think about it. When it doesn't, the symptoms look like a dozen other problems, and most operators chase their tail through nozzle cleans and head alignments before someone finally suggests cleaning the strip.
Symptoms of a Dirty or Damaged Encoder Strip
| Symptom | What's Happening | Often Mistaken For |
|---|---|---|
| Evenly spaced horizontal banding | Dirty marks cause the sensor to misread position | Clogged nozzles |
| Bi-directional prints are misaligned | Position errors cause left-to-right and right-to-left passes to not line up | Head alignment needed |
| Carriage moves erratically or makes unusual sounds | Sensor is losing tracking on dirty/damaged section of strip | Carriage rail issue |
| Prints look shifted or skewed on one side | Position accuracy degrades in the damaged area | Media feed problem |
| Print quality degrades over time, then suddenly improves after carriage moves to maintenance position | Clean section of strip passes sensor during maintenance cycle | Intermittent head problem |
The last symptom is the most diagnostic. If your prints look worse at certain positions on the bed but fine at others, or if quality temporarily improves after the carriage parks and returns, the encoder strip is almost certainly the issue. The carriage sensor reads a different section of the strip at different positions — if one section is dirty, only prints in that area will be affected.
How to Clean the Encoder Strip
This is a 3-minute job. Here's exactly how to do it:
What you need:
- Isopropyl alcohol (90% or higher)
- A clean, lint-free cloth or clean room wipe
- Nitrile gloves (optional, but IPA dries out skin)
Steps:
1. Power off the printer and move the carriage to the center of the rail so you can access the full length of the encoder strip. On most printers, you can manually slide the carriage after releasing the rail lock. Check your printer's manual if you're not sure how to release it.
2. Locate the encoder strip. It's a thin, transparent plastic ribbon running horizontally behind or above the carriage rail. It's usually about 1-2 cm wide and spans the full width of the printer.
3. Dampen a lint-free wipe with isopropyl alcohol. Don't soak it — damp is enough. Excess alcohol dripping onto other components isn't ideal.
4. Gently pinch the encoder strip between the folds of the wipe and slide it along the full length of the strip. Use light pressure — you're wiping off ink mist and dust, not scrubbing off a stain. Go from one end to the other in smooth, even strokes.
5. Repeat with a fresh section of the wipe until the wipe comes away clean. If there's heavy ink buildup, you may need 3-4 passes.
6. Let the strip air-dry for 30 seconds (IPA evaporates quickly). Then move the carriage back to the home position and power on the printer.
7. Run a test print. The banding should be gone or significantly reduced.
What NOT to Do When Cleaning
- Don't use paper towels. Paper fibers can stick to the strip and make the problem worse. Use lint-free wipes or clean room wipes only.
- Don't use water or soap. Isopropyl alcohol is the correct solvent. Water leaves residue and doesn't dissolve ink effectively.
- Don't scrub hard. The marks on the encoder strip are extremely fine. Aggressive scrubbing can scratch or remove them, permanently damaging the strip.
- Don't stretch or bend the strip. Encoder strips are precisely tensioned. Pulling on it or bending it can stretch it out of spec, causing permanent positioning errors.
- Don't touch the strip with bare fingers. Skin oils leave residue that attracts dust. Wear gloves or handle the strip only through the wipe.
When Cleaning Isn't Enough: Replace the Strip
If cleaning doesn't fix the banding, the strip is likely physically damaged. Signs that you need a replacement:
- Visible scratches or gouges on the strip surface
- The strip has a yellowish or cloudy discoloration that doesn't clean off
- The strip is stretched or sagging (not taut across the rail)
- Cleaning improves things temporarily but the banding returns within a few prints
Encoder strips are model-specific. Here's what we carry:
| Product | Compatible With | Price |
|---|---|---|
| Encoder Strip for Epson 7800/7880 | Epson 7800, 7880 | — |
| Epson SC-30680 Raster Encoder Strip | Epson SC-30680 | — |
| Epson R330 Raster Encoder Strip | Epson R330 | — |
| Mimaki Raster Encoder Strip for JV3/JV5 | Mimaki JV3, JV5 | — |
| Mimaki Raster Encoder Strip for UJF-7151 | Mimaki UJF-7151 | — |
| Mutoh Raster Encoder Strip for 900C/900X/901X | Mutoh 900C, 900X, 901X | — |
| Mutoh Raster Encoder Strip for 1204E-1682 | Mutoh 1204E-1682 | — |
| Roland Raster Encoder Strip for LEJ640/SJ740 | Roland LEJ640, SJ740 | — |
| Roland Raster Encoder Strip for RS640/VS640 | Roland RS640, VS640 | — |
| Roland Raster Encoder Strip for VS540/VP540/SP540/RS540 | Roland VS540, VP540, SP540, RS540 | — |
| Roland Raster Encoder Strip for XJ640/SJ640 | Roland XJ640, SJ640 | — |
| Roland Raster Encoder Strip for XC540/LEC540 | Roland XC540, LEC540 | — |
Don't see your model? Contact us with your printer model and we'll find the right strip.
How to Install a New Encoder Strip
Replacing an encoder strip is straightforward but requires care:
1. Power off the printer and move the carriage to the center.
2. Unhook the old strip from its mounting points on both ends of the rail. Most strips hook onto small tabs or pins — note how the old one is attached before removing it.
3. Compare the new strip to the old one. They should be the same length and width. Encoder strips are model-specific — if the new one doesn't match exactly, don't force it.
4. Hook one end of the new strip onto its mounting tab. Then stretch it gently across the rail and hook the other end. The strip should be taut with no sagging.
5. Make sure the strip passes through the carriage's sensor slot. The sensor is a small U-shaped component on the back of the carriage — the strip needs to slide through the slot so the sensor can read the marks.
6. Power on the printer and run a nozzle check and a test print. The banding should be completely resolved.
Encoder Strip Maintenance Schedule
| Task | Frequency | Time Required |
|---|---|---|
| Clean encoder strip | Every 1-3 months | 3 minutes |
| Visual inspection for scratches/damage | Monthly | 30 seconds |
| Check strip tension (no sagging) | Monthly | 30 seconds |
That's it. Three minutes every few months is all it takes to prevent encoder strip issues. Add it to your weekly or monthly maintenance checklist alongside the capping station and damper inspections.
The Full Troubleshooting Order for Horizontal Banding
If you're dealing with banding right now, here's the order we recommend troubleshooting — cheapest and easiest fixes first:
1. Nozzle check. (Free, 1 minute) — Confirm nozzles are firing correctly. If there are gaps, run a clean and recheck.
2. Clean the encoder strip. (Free, 3 minutes) — If nozzle check is clean but banding persists, clean the strip with IPA.
3. Run head alignment. (Free, 5 minutes) — If banding is from bi-directional misalignment, alignment may fix it.
4. Check dampers. ($28-50, 10 minutes) — If banding is random/inconsistent, inspect damper membranes.
5. Check the capping station. ($40-160, 10 minutes) — If head is drying out between prints.
6. Replace the encoder strip. ($10-20, 15 minutes) — If cleaning didn't help and the strip is visibly damaged.
7. Replace the print head. ($300-3,000) — Last resort, only if everything else checks out.
Following this order, most banding issues are resolved by step 2 or 3 — no expensive parts needed.
Frequently Asked Questions
How often should I clean the encoder strip?
Every 1-3 months for most shops. If you're in a dusty environment or running heavy UV ink production (which creates more ink mist), clean it monthly. It takes 3 minutes and costs nothing — there's no reason not to do it regularly.
Can a dirty encoder strip cause nozzle dropouts?
Not directly. The encoder strip affects carriage positioning, not nozzle firing. However, a dirty strip can cause the carriage to move erratically, which may result in ink being deposited unevenly — this can look like nozzle dropouts but is actually a positioning issue. The way to tell: if your nozzle check pattern is clean but the actual print has problems, the encoder strip is a likely cause.
Can I use Windex or glass cleaner on the encoder strip?
No. Use isopropyl alcohol (90% or higher) only. Windex and glass cleaners contain ammonia and other chemicals that can damage the strip's surface or leave residue that interferes with the sensor reading. Stick to IPA.
My encoder strip has a small tear. Can I tape it?
No. Any repair attempt — tape, glue, anything — will change the strip's thickness and surface properties at that point, causing the sensor to misread. If the strip is torn, replace it. They're $10-20 and take 15 minutes to install.
Will a damaged encoder strip damage my print head?
Not directly, but it can cause the carriage to move erratically, which may cause the head to crash into the media or the printer's frame. In extreme cases, this can scratch the nozzle plate or damage the carriage mechanism. A $15 encoder strip replacement is cheaper than any of those outcomes.
Seeing banding you can't diagnose? Contact our tech team — we'll walk you through the troubleshooting steps for your specific printer.


