The fuser and power supply on these are fixed voltage, not SMPS parts. If you want to region convert a 110V printer to 220V you will need to swap both the fuser and power supply as those are regionalized. The rest of the printer is unaffected outside of some possible region locks on OEM toners if you do not use 3rd party supplies. I know HP dropped some of their region locking BS on some of the older HP 60 ink cartridges where the 901 used to be the EU part(?) but just made the 60 universal. So it may be less of an issue or a non issue. I've never seen a regional map on the OEM 80A OR 80X so the supplies could be unlocked. Which is not true with the DS machines so count yourself lucky if there's no chip/region lock.
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Look for a power supply from a M401a or other ROW model, and you will be fine as the 401a power supply is the same as the others in terms of fit. For the fuser if you just have a plain 'n' model, get the M401a fuser as this is inherently going to be 220V as it's built for regions like the EU. If you have a dw/dne, you may need to get the fuser for these machines as it may have specific parts. I have one I partially retired for a Lexmark and the fusers appear to be the same across the series (duplexing is a coding and back swap option to add it on), but I would double check to be sure if you have a dw or dne.
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Look for a power supply from an M401a or other ROW model (the same as the 401n most of the world has, but it lacks the option for LAN networking), and you will be fine, as the 401a power supply is the same as the others in terms of fit. For the fuser, if you have a plain 'n' model, the m401a fuser will also work for the same reason the 401a power supply works—it's also 220V.
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If you have a DW/DNE, you may need to get the fuser built for these machines since it may be a part specially built for the duplexing printers. I have one I partially retired for a Lexmark and generally my understanding is it's the same fuser, but it's done though the back panel with additional gearing and maybe a different gearbox with factory coding enabling it. That said, I would double-check to see if there's a difference between the DW and DNE.
The fuser and power supply on these are fixed voltage, not SMPS parts. If you want to region convert a 110V printer to 220V you will need to swap both the fuser and power supply as those are regionalized. The rest of the printer is unaffected outside of some possible region locks on OEM toners if you do not use 3rd party supplies. I know HP dropped some of their region locking BS on some of the older HP 60 ink cartridges where the 901 used to be the EU part(?) but just made the 60 universal. So it may be less of an issue or a non issue.
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The fuser and power supply on these are fixed voltage, not SMPS parts. If you want to region convert a 110V printer to 220V you will need to swap both the fuser and power supply as those are regionalized. The rest of the printer is unaffected outside of some possible region locks on OEM toners if you do not use 3rd party supplies. I know HP dropped some of their region locking BS on some of the older HP 60 ink cartridges where the 901 used to be the EU part(?) but just made the 60 universal. So it may be less of an issue or a non issue. I've never seen a regional map on the OEM 80A OR 80X so the supplies could be unlocked. Which is not true with the DS machines so count yourself lucky if there's no chip/region lock.
Look for a power supply from a M401a or other ROW model, and you will be fine as the 401a power supply is the same as the others in terms of fit. For the fuser if you just have a plain 'n' model, get the M401a fuser as this is inherently going to be 220V as it's built for regions like the EU. If you have a dw/dne, you may need to get the fuser for these machines as it may have specific parts. I have one I partially retired for a Lexmark and the fusers appear to be the same across the series (duplexing is a coding and back swap option to add it on), but I would double check to be sure if you have a dw or dne.
The fuser and power supply on these are fixed voltage, not SMPS parts. If you want to region convert a 110V printer to 220V you will need to swap both the fuser and power supply as those are regionalized. The rest of the printer is unaffected outside of some possible region locks on OEM toners if you do not use 3rd party supplies.
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The fuser and power supply on these are fixed voltage, not SMPS parts. If you want to region convert a 110V printer to 220V you will need to swap both the fuser and power supply as those are regionalized. The rest of the printer is unaffected outside of some possible region locks on OEM toners if you do not use 3rd party supplies. I know HP dropped some of their region locking BS on some of the older HP 60 ink cartridges where the 901 used to be the EU part(?) but just made the 60 universal. So it may be less of an issue or a non issue.
Look for a power supply from a M401a or other ROW model, and you will be fine as the 401a power supply is the same as the others in terms of fit. For the fuser if you just have a plain 'n' model, get the M401a fuser as this is inherently going to be 220V as it's built for regions like the EU. If you have a dw/dne, you may need to get the fuser for these machines as it may have specific parts. I have one I partially retired for a Lexmark and the fusers appear to be the same across the series (duplexing is a coding and back swap option to add it on), but I would double check to be sure if you have a dw or dne.
The fuser and power supply on these are fixed voltage, not SMPS parts. If you want to region convert a 110V printer to 220V you will need to swap both the fuser and power supply as those are regionalized. The rest of the printer is unaffected outside of some possible region locks on OEM toners if you do not use 3rd party supplies.
Look for a power supply from a M401a or other ROW model, and you will be fine as the 401a power supply is the same as the others in terms of fit. For the fuser if you just have a plain 'n' model, get the M401a fuser as this is inherently going to be 220V as it's built for regions like the EU. If you have a dw/dne, you may need to get the fuser for these machines as it may have specific parts. I have one I partially retired for a Lexmark and the fusers appear to be the same across the series (duplexing is a coding and back swap option to add it on), but I would double check to be sure if you have a dw or dne.