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Printing checks on HP Laser Jet 3015 causes text to be skewed slightly on the page

For some reason when we print checks to our HP Laser Jet 3015dn, the page seems to pull more from the top right corner when fed through the printer. This causes the printed text to be aligned properly on the left side of the check paper, but the printed text starts creeping upwards diagonally to the right side of the page. This causes text to be printed on top of the check's pre-printed areas which makes the text printed by the printer illegible, but only on the right side of the page. The text on the left side of the page is spot on, in the middle of the page, it's overlapping with the pre-printed areas a little bit, and by the right side of the page, things have gone horribly wrong and the text is completely overlapping.This had been working for about a year prior before this started happening.

I've tried the following:
Swapping the tray out from another 3015 printer onsite
Printing to another completely different 3015 printer
Printing using the manual feed tray on both printers
Setting the paper type to "heavy" and "light"
Verified the printer settings (such as paper size, type, orientation, margins, etc.) on the computer printing these checks
Checked the rollers for any signs of wear and tear and cleaned them anyway
Printed the check on a blank piece of paper and held up the check along with the regular paper to a light source to check alignment
Removed/re-added the printer

All with the same results. The computer printing these checks is using the PCL 5 HP Universal print driver and has been using that same driver for the past year or so. The computer WAS running Windows 7 Pro 64-bit up until a few months ago and is now using Windows 10 Professional 64-bit. I don't know if the timeline of these problems matches up with the switch to Windows 10, but the printer appears to be using the same old PCL 5 Universal driver, so I wouldn't think that would be the issue. But it was a change so I wanted to include it here.

Has anyone else come across this and have a fix for me?

Thank you
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Dr. Klahn

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I thought it may be the printer at first, but I've tried a completely different printer with the same results
Try print preview and see if the issue appears on the screen.  I'd be surprised if so then it tells you that the problem is occurring before the data is sent to the printer.

I looked on hp.com for drivers.  I'm assuming that the correct model number is p3015dn.  You mentioned that you're using the universal PCL5 driver.  On the HP site I only found PCL6 and PostScript listed for that printer.  I'd install both of those and see how they behave.

I found the drivers at:
http://h20566.www2.hp.com/hpsc/swd/public/readIndex?sp4ts.oid=3815808&swLangOid=8&swEnvOid=4192
I agree, if you have swapped the printer, then it's not a hardware problem.

Which application prints these checks? Is it a DOS application or does it use the Windows driver? DOS does not use the Windows driver, so for DOS applications there is no way that changing the driver will make any difference.

Also, drivers do not "age". Their print quality does not reduce with age, so the text will not start slanting. And, PCL5 is still every bit as good as it was 15 years ago. It works fine. As far as I'm concerned, if anything it's better than PCL6 - but that's only my opinion.
When available, I typically install PCL5 and PCL6 drivers.  When there is an issue with one, using the other will pinpoint whether the specific driver is the issue or not.  In this case, even if I preferred PCL5, I'd try the PS and PCL6 drivers at least for diagnostic purposes.
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... and (as an aside), since version 6.1.0 of the Universal Printer Drivers, HP no longer supply a PCL5 variant.

The (PCL6 and PostScript) drivers available from HP for Windows 10 systems are at version 6.3.0.
Thanks for the help. I'm going to try the newer version of the HP driver and let you know how that goes and try to get a redacted scan up. One thing I also tried is printing a regular document from Word on regular paper, and the text is still skewed. It just seems odd if it's a hardware issue that it happens on two completely different printers. I'll let you know what I find with the drivers.

Thanks!
It ended up actually being the pickup rollers.

Turns out, each of the printers that were tested were the same model numbers, and each had bad pickup rollers. (seriously)

We send them a different model printer, and that solved the problem. Thank you all!