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UK diy (uk.d-i-y) For the discussion of all topics related to diy (do-it-yourself) in the UK. All levels of experience and proficency are welcome to join in to ask questions or offer solutions. |
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#1
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Whats that stuff...
in a Ink-Jet printers ink tank dump called?
Stripped and cleaned the printer down but want to replace the waste mat the excess ink soaks into but don't know what its called. cheers. |
#2
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Whats that stuff...
"George" wrote in message om... in a Ink-Jet printers ink tank dump called? Stripped and cleaned the printer down but want to replace the waste mat the excess ink soaks into but don't know what its called. Sponge |
#3
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Whats that stuff...
"RW" wrote in message ... "George" wrote in message om... in a Ink-Jet printers ink tank dump called? Stripped and cleaned the printer down but want to replace the waste mat the excess ink soaks into but don't know what its called. Sponge Nah! man,Tis like a thick bed of blotting paper...just can't think what to replace it with? as getting an original would be impossible. |
#4
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Whats that stuff...
RW wrote:
"George" wrote in message om... in a Ink-Jet printers ink tank dump called? Stripped and cleaned the printer down but want to replace the waste mat the excess ink soaks into but don't know what its called. Sponge Folded up kitchen paper??? |
#5
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Whats that stuff...
"Chewbacca" wrote in message ... RW wrote: "George" wrote in message om... in a Ink-Jet printers ink tank dump called? Stripped and cleaned the printer down but want to replace the waste mat the excess ink soaks into but don't know what its called. Sponge Folded up kitchen paper??? What about MDF...would this work? |
#6
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Whats that stuff...
"George" wrote in message om... in a Ink-Jet printers ink tank dump called? It's usually a thick felt pad. |
#7
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Whats that stuff...
George wrote:
What about MDF...would this work? Doesn't act as a great sponge IME (though it doesn't like prolonged exposure to water) |
#8
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Whats that stuff...
On Sun, 26 Oct 2008 09:44:43 GMT, George wrote:
in a Ink-Jet printers ink tank dump called? Stripped and cleaned the printer down but want to replace the waste mat the excess ink soaks into but don't know what its called. cheers. can you just soak the old ink out of it, rinse it a few times then dry it out and replace it? |
#9
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Whats that stuff...
"pete" wrote in message ... On Sun, 26 Oct 2008 09:44:43 GMT, George wrote: in a Ink-Jet printers ink tank dump called? Stripped and cleaned the printer down but want to replace the waste mat the excess ink soaks into but don't know what its called. cheers. can you just soak the old ink out of it, rinse it a few times then dry it out and replace it? No that doesn't work,tried that years ago on an old olivetti,turns out when you wash it and dry it out its loses its thickness and absorbancy. |
#10
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Whats that stuff...
"George" wrote in message om... "pete" wrote in message ... On Sun, 26 Oct 2008 09:44:43 GMT, George wrote: in a Ink-Jet printers ink tank dump called? Stripped and cleaned the printer down but want to replace the waste mat the excess ink soaks into but don't know what its called. cheers. can you just soak the old ink out of it, rinse it a few times then dry it out and replace it? No that doesn't work,tried that years ago on an old olivetti,turns out when you wash it and dry it out its loses its thickness and absorbancy. Isn't it poor technology - You pay a fortune for a bit of felt impregnated with ink - the cartridge - and when you clean the heads most of it ends up as waste. Laser printers are getting cheaper. Anyone tried a £100 laser yet? |
#11
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Whats that stuff...
"John" wrote in message ... "George" wrote in message om... "pete" wrote in message ... On Sun, 26 Oct 2008 09:44:43 GMT, George wrote: in a Ink-Jet printers ink tank dump called? Stripped and cleaned the printer down but want to replace the waste mat the excess ink soaks into but don't know what its called. cheers. can you just soak the old ink out of it, rinse it a few times then dry it out and replace it? No that doesn't work,tried that years ago on an old olivetti,turns out when you wash it and dry it out its loses its thickness and absorbancy. Isn't it poor technology - You pay a fortune for a bit of felt impregnated with ink - the cartridge - and when you clean the heads most of it ends up as waste. Laser printers are getting cheaper. Anyone tried a £100 laser yet? The printer I have is still giving me good results...I thought I'd just give it a cleaning service from stripping it down to reassembling.. If you want to talk about laser printers please start your own thread about them. |
#12
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Whats that stuff...
"George" wrote in message om... "RW" wrote in message ... "George" wrote in message om... in a Ink-Jet printers ink tank dump called? Stripped and cleaned the printer down but want to replace the waste mat the excess ink soaks into but don't know what its called. Sponge Nah! man,Tis like a thick bed of blotting paper...just can't think what to replace it with? as getting an original would be impossible. You could just try thick blotting paper. However, open cell polyethylene foam would work and it can be washed out next time. Colin Bignell |
#13
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John wrote:
Anyone tried a £100 laser yet? Yes, HP CP1215 colour printer. Print quality is OK but lower resolution than even modest inkjets. The same rip-off model is applied to the toner cartridges as to inkjet cartridges, it costs £200 at discount prices to replace the cartridges - instore at Staples they cost £320. It makes no sense to me to save money on the printer when the cartidges cost three times the amount paid for it. Also the cartridges are pathetic, offering 1,400 pages at 5% coverage. I do a lot of high volume colour printing for my job, and had to think carefully about which printers to buy. I used to get Xerox Phaser 850s which cost a couple of thousand pounds each, but they came with free black refills for life. Then Xerox dropped the free ink offer and reduced the price of the printers to a few hundred quid. I currently have a mix of 850s and 8200s. I still get the free ink for the 850 making them the economical workhorse printers. The 8200s are higher resolution and better quality print so I use those for the magazine quality output. These printers aren't lasers they are solid-ink printers which melt wax blocks then apply them from an inkjet type head. The inks are sprayed onto a drum then pressed onto the page which makes the effective resolution higher than a laser since all inks are overprinted and mixed on the drum. The basic resolution is 1200dpi, enhanced photo quality is 2400dpi but CMYK inks are all printed on top of each other leading to an effective resolution of 7200dpi compared to the 300-600 dpi of a cheap laser printer. Best of all is the price. A set of refills capable of printing 20,000 pages at full coverage costs me £185. The printers can be bought for between £50 and £200 secondhand, with a long life left on them. Service manuals are available on the web and I found it cheaper to buy another printer from eBay and cannibalise it for spares than to pay Xerox to make repairs. In the time I've used the printers (the last six years) I've needed to replace one print head, one wax-melting unit and one drum heater. All simple jobs for anyone with a Torx driver set. |
#14
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Whats that stuff...
On Sun, 26 Oct 2008 14:55:51 +0000, John wrote:
"George" wrote in message om... "pete" wrote in message ... On Sun, 26 Oct 2008 09:44:43 GMT, George wrote: in a Ink-Jet printers ink tank dump called? Stripped and cleaned the printer down but want to replace the waste mat the excess ink soaks into but don't know what its called. cheers. can you just soak the old ink out of it, rinse it a few times then dry it out and replace it? No that doesn't work,tried that years ago on an old olivetti,turns out when you wash it and dry it out its loses its thickness and absorbancy. Isn't it poor technology - You pay a fortune for a bit of felt impregnated with ink - the cartridge - and when you clean the heads most of it ends up as waste. Laser printers are getting cheaper. Anyone tried a £100 laser yet? I've been using a Samsung ML-1210 for several years now. Only for domestic purposes, not as an everyday business machine. It's proved to be very good! One of my reasons for getting it is that I've had enough of inkjets getting clogged and having to scrap cartridges (or even complete machines!) because of it. Another reason is that Samsung machines are well supported in linux. :-) It's replacement appears to be the ML-2010 and that's what I'll probably get when my current cartridge runs out - it's about the same price as just replacing the cartridge. I wouldn't recommend these machines for photos. They are very good for text & line diagrams though. -- Mick (Working in a M$-free zone!) Web: http://www.nascom.info Filtering everything posted from googlegroups to kill spam. |
#15
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Whats that stuff...
We were somewhere around Barstow, on the edge of the desert, when the
drugs began to take hold. I remember "George" saying something like: If you want to talk about laser printers please start your own thread about them. 1. Thread drift is to be expected. 2. This isn't your thread. |
#16
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Whats that stuff...
"mick" wrote in message ... On Sun, 26 Oct 2008 14:55:51 +0000, John wrote: "George" wrote in message om... "pete" wrote in message ... On Sun, 26 Oct 2008 09:44:43 GMT, George wrote: in a Ink-Jet printers ink tank dump called? Stripped and cleaned the printer down but want to replace the waste mat the excess ink soaks into but don't know what its called. cheers. can you just soak the old ink out of it, rinse it a few times then dry it out and replace it? No that doesn't work,tried that years ago on an old olivetti,turns out when you wash it and dry it out its loses its thickness and absorbancy. Isn't it poor technology - You pay a fortune for a bit of felt impregnated with ink - the cartridge - and when you clean the heads most of it ends up as waste. Laser printers are getting cheaper. Anyone tried a £100 laser yet? I've been using a Samsung ML-1210 for several years now. Only for domestic purposes, not as an everyday business machine. It's proved to be very good! One of my reasons for getting it is that I've had enough of inkjets getting clogged and having to scrap cartridges (or even complete machines!) because of it. Another reason is that Samsung machines are well supported in linux. :-) It's replacement appears to be the ML-2010 and that's what I'll probably get when my current cartridge runs out - it's about the same price as just replacing the cartridge. I wouldn't recommend these machines for photos. They are very good for text & line diagrams though. Seconded. I too have an ML-1210. It's brilliant for text printing (although only single sided). I have a Canon Pixma iP6700D for photos, which quite recently replaced the old Epson Stylus Photo 1200. That was becoming a right pain as it needed repeated head cleanings every time I used it. The only feature I'll miss is its A3 ability, although TBH I only ever used that about twice in the several years I had it. Before dumping it I taught it a lesson by taking it all to pieces. That waste ink pad in the base contained a remarkable quantity of ink, and took up most of the base of the printer. Being an A3 the base was pretty big too. Regards, Simon. |
#17
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Whats that stuff...
Grimly Curmudgeon wrote:
We were somewhere around Barstow, on the edge of the desert, when the drugs began to take hold. I remember "George" saying something like: If you want to talk about laser printers please start your own thread about them. 1. Thread drift is to be expected. 2. This isn't your thread. (It is actually) -- Dave - The Medway Handyman www.medwayhandyman.co.uk |
#18
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Whats that stuff...
On Sun, 26 Oct 2008 16:41:23 +0000, mick wrote:
On Sun, 26 Oct 2008 14:55:51 +0000, John wrote: "George" wrote in message om... "pete" wrote in message ... On Sun, 26 Oct 2008 09:44:43 GMT, George wrote: in a Ink-Jet printers ink tank dump called? Stripped and cleaned the printer down but want to replace the waste mat the excess ink soaks into but don't know what its called. cheers. can you just soak the old ink out of it, rinse it a few times then dry it out and replace it? No that doesn't work,tried that years ago on an old olivetti,turns out when you wash it and dry it out its loses its thickness and absorbancy. Isn't it poor technology - You pay a fortune for a bit of felt impregnated with ink - the cartridge - and when you clean the heads most of it ends up as waste. Laser printers are getting cheaper. Anyone tried a £100 laser yet? I've been using a Samsung ML-1210 for several years now. Only for domestic purposes, not as an everyday business machine. It's proved to be very good! One of my reasons for getting it is that I've had enough of inkjets getting clogged and having to scrap cartridges (or even complete machines!) because of it. Another reason is that Samsung machines are well supported in linux. :-) It's replacement appears to be the ML-2010 and that's what I'll probably get when my current cartridge runs out - it's about the same price as just replacing the cartridge. I wouldn't recommend these machines for photos. They are very good for text & line diagrams though. ========================================= You can get cheap re-fills for the ML-1210 which makes it a very economical printer. Re-filling is easy if you use a small domestic funnel to get the powder in. I've been using mine for about five years. I can't find a bottle of toner at the moment but I'm pretty sure this is the one I've been using: http://www.consumablecafe.co.uk/acat...LED_TONER.html Cic. -- ========================================== Using Ubuntu Linux Windows shown the door ========================================== |
#19
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Whats that stuff...
On Mon, 27 Oct 2008 22:06:03 +0000, Cicero wrote:
snip ========================================= You can get cheap re-fills for the ML-1210 which makes it a very economical printer. Re-filling is easy if you use a small domestic funnel to get the powder in. I've been using mine for about five years. I can't find a bottle of toner at the moment but I'm pretty sure this is the one I've been using: http://www.consumablecafe.co.uk/acat...LED_TONER.html Thanks. :-) I'll have to try that... At least, if it doesn't work, it's not too important as I'd resigned myself to having to buy a new machine! -- Mick (Working in a M$-free zone!) Web: http://www.nascom.info Filtering everything posted from googlegroups to kill spam. |
#20
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Whats that stuff...
"Cicero" wrote in message news http://www.consumablecafe.co.uk/acat...LED_TONER.html They have interesting prices.. I can buy original Samsung toner for my clp300 for the same they charge for the compatibles. Maybe cheaper when Staples have a 15% off for two or more carts. |
#21
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Whats that stuff...
We were somewhere around Barstow, on the edge of the desert, when the
drugs began to take hold. I remember "The Medway Handyman" saying something like: 2. This isn't your thread. (It is actually) Nobody owns it. |
#22
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Whats that stuff...
"Grimly Curmudgeon" wrote in message ... We were somewhere around Barstow, on the edge of the desert, when the drugs began to take hold. I remember "The Medway Handyman" saying something like: 2. This isn't your thread. (It is actually) Nobody owns it. True,but theres a prat going by the initials GC making himself known. Did I say I owned it? |
#23
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Whats that stuff...
On Oct 26, 1:03*pm, Andy Burns wrote:
George wrote: What about MDF...would this work? Doesn't act as a great sponge IME (though it doesn't like prolonged exposure to water) Whatever you use has to be rotproof, so natural fibre felt and paper are out. Microfibre cloth maybe. Re low cost lasers, they're surely the way to go if you can do without colour. I'd have to be mad to go back to an inkjet, what a PITA technology they were. Reminds me... I still remember being seriously impressed when seeing a daisy wheel that double printed to give bold! Anyone remember 7 pin dot matrixes with no descenders? NT |
#24
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Whats that stuff...
wrote:
On Oct 26, 1:03�pm, Andy Burns wrote: George wrote: What about MDF...would this work? Doesn't act as a great sponge IME (though it doesn't like prolonged exposure to water) Whatever you use has to be rotproof, so natural fibre felt and paper are out. Microfibre cloth maybe. Re low cost lasers, they're surely the way to go if you can do without colour. I'd have to be mad to go back to an inkjet, what a PITA technology they were. Reminds me... I still remember being seriously impressed when seeing a daisy wheel that double printed to give bold! Anyone remember 7 pin dot matrixes with no descenders? NT I long for a 7-pin dot matrix! Seriously, I have a real world application which I can't satisfy with any printer technolgy I can find at the moment. In competition diving (springboard and highboard not sub-aqua) we use an electronic score recording system in which the judges enter their scores on wireless units and they are collated on a central PC. Obviously the central PC becomes a critical failure node in that if anything were to happen to it during the event the scores might be lost. We do things to mitigate against that and ultimately someone ends up copying the raw awards from the screen onto a piece of paper. Back in the days of line printers we could simply have spat a line to the printer each time a diver dived and we'd have had a safe paper copy. Now we have inkjet and laserjet page printers I've not been able to find a windows based line driver at all. So there's something to be said for old technolgy if it happens to meet the requirement! |
#25
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Whats that stuff...
Calvin wrote:
wrote: On Oct 26, 1:03�pm, Andy Burns wrote: George wrote: What about MDF...would this work? Doesn't act as a great sponge IME (though it doesn't like prolonged exposure to water) Whatever you use has to be rotproof, so natural fibre felt and paper are out. Microfibre cloth maybe. Re low cost lasers, they're surely the way to go if you can do without colour. I'd have to be mad to go back to an inkjet, what a PITA technology they were. Reminds me... I still remember being seriously impressed when seeing a daisy wheel that double printed to give bold! Anyone remember 7 pin dot matrixes with no descenders? NT I long for a 7-pin dot matrix! Seriously, I have a real world application which I can't satisfy with any printer technolgy I can find at the moment. In competition diving (springboard and highboard not sub-aqua) we use an electronic score recording system in which the judges enter their scores on wireless units and they are collated on a central PC. Obviously the central PC becomes a critical failure node in that if anything were to happen to it during the event the scores might be lost. We do things to mitigate against that and ultimately someone ends up copying the raw awards from the screen onto a piece of paper. Back in the days of line printers we could simply have spat a line to the printer each time a diver dived and we'd have had a safe paper copy. Now we have inkjet and laserjet page printers I've not been able to find a windows based line driver at all. So there's something to be said for old technolgy if it happens to meet the requirement! You made me think about a label printer like this: http://www.amazon.co.uk/Brother-QL-500-printer-thermal-capacity/dp/B00067SC66 Looks like it would do what you need - or close. -- Rod Hypothyroidism is a seriously debilitating condition with an insidious onset. Although common it frequently goes undiagnosed. www.thyromind.info www.thyroiduk.org www.altsupportthyroid.org |
#26
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Whats that stuff...
"Calvin" wrote in message ... wrote: On Oct 26, 1:03�pm, Andy Burns wrote: George wrote: What about MDF...would this work? Doesn't act as a great sponge IME (though it doesn't like prolonged exposure to water) Whatever you use has to be rotproof, so natural fibre felt and paper are out. Microfibre cloth maybe. Re low cost lasers, they're surely the way to go if you can do without colour. I'd have to be mad to go back to an inkjet, what a PITA technology they were. Reminds me... I still remember being seriously impressed when seeing a daisy wheel that double printed to give bold! Anyone remember 7 pin dot matrixes with no descenders? NT I long for a 7-pin dot matrix! Seriously, I have a real world application which I can't satisfy with any printer technolgy I can find at the moment. http://www.ebuyer.com/product/117712 Why not print to a file using a line printer driver in windows. Put the file on a usb stick or two. |
#27
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Whats that stuff...
Rod wrote:
Calvin wrote: wrote: On Oct 26, 1:03�pm, Andy Burns wrote: George wrote: What about MDF...would this work? Doesn't act as a great sponge IME (though it doesn't like prolonged exposure to water) Whatever you use has to be rotproof, so natural fibre felt and paper are out. Microfibre cloth maybe. Re low cost lasers, they're surely the way to go if you can do without colour. I'd have to be mad to go back to an inkjet, what a PITA technology they were. Reminds me... I still remember being seriously impressed when seeing a daisy wheel that double printed to give bold! Anyone remember 7 pin dot matrixes with no descenders? NT I long for a 7-pin dot matrix! Seriously, I have a real world application which I can't satisfy with any printer technolgy I can find at the moment. In competition diving (springboard and highboard not sub-aqua) we use an electronic score recording system in which the judges enter their scores on wireless units and they are collated on a central PC. Obviously the central PC becomes a critical failure node in that if anything were to happen to it during the event the scores might be lost. We do things to mitigate against that and ultimately someone ends up copying the raw awards from the screen onto a piece of paper. Back in the days of line printers we could simply have spat a line to the printer each time a diver dived and we'd have had a safe paper copy. Now we have inkjet and laserjet page printers I've not been able to find a windows based line driver at all. So there's something to be said for old technolgy if it happens to meet the requirement! You made me think about a label printer like this: http://www.amazon.co.uk/Brother-QL-500-printer-thermal-capacity/dp/B00067SC66 Looks like it would do what you need - or close. -- Rod Hypothyroidism is a seriously debilitating condition with an insidious onset. Although common it frequently goes undiagnosed. www.thyromind.info www.thyroiduk.org www.altsupportthyroid.org Many thanks for that idea, I use one of those at work but it had never occured to me to use one in that way, it's something I'll certainly explore. |
#28
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Whats that stuff...
dennis@home wrote:
"Calvin" wrote in message ... wrote: On Oct 26, 1:03�pm, Andy Burns wrote: George wrote: What about MDF...would this work? Doesn't act as a great sponge IME (though it doesn't like prolonged exposure to water) Whatever you use has to be rotproof, so natural fibre felt and paper are out. Microfibre cloth maybe. Re low cost lasers, they're surely the way to go if you can do without colour. I'd have to be mad to go back to an inkjet, what a PITA technology they were. Reminds me... I still remember being seriously impressed when seeing a daisy wheel that double printed to give bold! Anyone remember 7 pin dot matrixes with no descenders? NT I long for a 7-pin dot matrix! Seriously, I have a real world application which I can't satisfy with any printer technolgy I can find at the moment. http://www.ebuyer.com/product/117712 Why not print to a file using a line printer driver in windows. Put the file on a usb stick or two. That's exactly what we do with the slight tweak that if we have enough computers around we run the ticker-tape application on a seperate machine. The recording machine spits the scores out as a UDP packet and all machines on the network can listen and record as they wish. That gives quite a lot of redundancy especially as laptops don't die if the power disappears. I always save the backup file to USB stick immediately the competition is over but the real danger time is during the competition itself when you really can't save the file off. The rules of the sport, which pre-date the use of computers, demand that the awards are recorded on paper contemporaneously and there's something about having a real paper copy which makes you feel so much better than if you're told not to worry the computer will keep a record! |
#29
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On Tue, 28 Oct 2008 14:16:23 -0700 (PDT), Calvin wrote:
I long for a 7-pin dot matrix! Does it have to 7 pin? 9 pin are still available but cheap they are not compared to inkjets. A quick google in the UK on dot matrix 9 pin produced: http://www.printerland.co.uk/acatalog/9_Pin.html Which shows a range of what is available. -- Cheers Dave. |
#30
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Whats that stuff...
We were somewhere around Barstow, on the edge of the desert, when the
drugs began to take hold. I remember "George" saying something like: Did I say I owned it? You implied it, idiot. |
#31
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On Tue, 28 Oct 2008 23:31:39 +0000 (GMT) Dave Liquorice wrote :
Does it have to 7 pin? 9 pin are still available but cheap they are not compared to inkjets. A quick google in the UK on dot matrix 9 pin produced: http://www.printerland.co.uk/acatalog/9_Pin.html Which shows a range of what is available. Before leaving the UK I sold our trusty Epson LQ570 24-pin on eBay for a whole £2. We had it for printing continuous labels. -- Tony Bryer, 'Software to build on' www.superbeam.co.uk |
#32
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Whats that stuff...
"Grimly Curmudgeon" wrote in message ... We were somewhere around Barstow, on the edge of the desert, when the drugs began to take hold. I remember "George" saying something like: Did I say I owned it? You implied it, idiot. You left this out... True,but theres a prat going by the initials GC making himself known. |
#33
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Whats that stuff...
"Dave Liquorice" wrote in message ll.net... On Tue, 28 Oct 2008 14:16:23 -0700 (PDT), Calvin wrote: I long for a 7-pin dot matrix! Does it have to 7 pin? 9 pin are still available but cheap they are not compared to inkjets. A quick google in the UK on dot matrix 9 pin produced: http://www.printerland.co.uk/acatalog/9_Pin.html Which shows a range of what is available. -- Cheers Dave. I acquired a Panasonic KX-P1131 24 pin multimode printer when my local GP moved to a "Health Centre" (spit). An excellent piece of kit using either tractor paper or single sheets. The print cartridge costs a tenner & lasts for years (literally) and are supposed to print something in the region of 6 million characters. I would have thought there would be loads of 'em floating about given that they were standard printers used by the NHS. Don. |
#34
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On Wed, 29 Oct 2008 15:32:51 +1100, Tony Bryer wrote:
Before leaving the UK I sold our trusty Epson LQ570 24-pin on eBay for a whole £2. We had it for printing continuous labels. I tried to eBay an LQ1050 24pin not long ago, then freecycle, no takers ended up at the dump. B-( -- Cheers Dave. |
#35
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Whats that stuff...
On Oct 29, 9:33*am, "Don" wrote:
"Dave Liquorice" wrote in message ll.net... On Tue, 28 Oct 2008 14:16:23 -0700 (PDT), Calvin wrote: I long for a 7-pin dot matrix! Does it have to 7 pin? 9 pin are still available but cheap they are not compared to inkjets. A quick google in the UK on dot matrix 9 pin produced: http://www.printerland.co.uk/acatalog/9_Pin.html Which shows a range of what is available. -- Cheers Dave. I acquired a Panasonic KX-P1131 24 pin multimode printer when my local GP moved to a "Health Centre" (spit). An excellent piece of kit using either tractor paper or single sheets. The print cartridge costs a tenner & lasts for years (literally) and are supposed to print something in the region of 6 million characters. I would have thought there would be loads of 'em floating about given that they were standard printers used by the NHS. Don. Any 9 pin dot matrix will work with the same commands fed to a 7 pin. The only difference is the internally stored font. Might require setting the DIP switches correctly, but theyre simple enough that even with no manual you can quickly figure it out. Could you send your data line by line to another hand coded app (eg in basic or C) which does nothing but get the line of data and spit it out to the parallel port, adding a return & linefeed character at the end. It would be elementary to write that in Basic. IOW bypass any windows printer driver entirely. DM ribbon carts can be modded to reink themselves over and over again. Felt pad where the ribbon's pulled past, hole in top of cart over pad, and 50/50 paraffin plus ink, eg endorsing or printer's ink. A roll of paper would probably be easier to get than fanfold. 9 pin machines are much more robust than 24 pinners, if the historic letter quality is ok. The hammering of a DM churning its way through a big job is one thing I dont miss. NT |
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Whats that stuff...
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Whats that stuff...
Dave Liquorice wrote:
On Wed, 29 Oct 2008 07:06:55 -0700 (PDT), wrote: The hammering of a DM churning its way through a big job is one thing I dont miss. Hammering from a Dot Matrix? The ones I had where more of a whine or buzz. Now a Daisy Wheel or Golf Ball on the other hand... B-) Line printer? Edgar |
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Whats that stuff...
"Edgar" wrote in message ... Dave Liquorice wrote: On Wed, 29 Oct 2008 07:06:55 -0700 (PDT), wrote: The hammering of a DM churning its way through a big job is one thing I dont miss. Hammering from a Dot Matrix? The ones I had where more of a whine or buzz. Now a Daisy Wheel or Golf Ball on the other hand... B-) Line printer? I used a line printer that printed a entire horizontal line of dots and then advanced the paper one row of dots and printed the next horizontal line. It did the entire width of the paper in one go. It was noisy but very quick. It replaced a band printer that was slower and even more noisy but it produced typewriter quality prints. |
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