Difference between revisions of "Gould 5200"

From Computer History Wiki
Jump to: navigation, search
(Add detail of how it worked)
m (Link 'dielectric')
 
Line 1: Line 1:
The '''Gould 5200''' was an [[electrostatic printer]] introduced in 1975, succeeding the Gould 5100 plotter. It used a an 11"-wide roll of special dielectric-coated paper. The output was a 200 DPI [[raster]], much like the [[Xerox Graphics Printer|XGP]]; it took 5 seconds to print a page.
+
The '''Gould 5200''' was an [[electrostatic printer]] introduced in 1975, succeeding the Gould 5100 plotter. It used a an 11"-wide roll of special [[dielectric]]-coated paper. The output was a 200 DPI [[raster]], much like the [[Xerox Graphics Printer|XGP]]; it took 5 seconds to print a page.
  
 
At [[MIT]], one such printer was associated with the MIT-MC [[KL10]].  The supporting software accepted all the XGP file formats.  According to archived files, it seems to have been connected first to the IO-11 front end.  Later it was moved to the Plasma Group in MIT Building 38 and connected to another PDP-11 with was also the hub for several terminals there.  The connection back to MC was first a serial line, but later replaced with Chaosnet; the printer was available at the "GOULD" contact.
 
At [[MIT]], one such printer was associated with the MIT-MC [[KL10]].  The supporting software accepted all the XGP file formats.  According to archived files, it seems to have been connected first to the IO-11 front end.  Later it was moved to the Plasma Group in MIT Building 38 and connected to another PDP-11 with was also the hub for several terminals there.  The connection back to MC was first a serial line, but later replaced with Chaosnet; the printer was available at the "GOULD" contact.

Latest revision as of 02:41, 18 February 2024

The Gould 5200 was an electrostatic printer introduced in 1975, succeeding the Gould 5100 plotter. It used a an 11"-wide roll of special dielectric-coated paper. The output was a 200 DPI raster, much like the XGP; it took 5 seconds to print a page.

At MIT, one such printer was associated with the MIT-MC KL10. The supporting software accepted all the XGP file formats. According to archived files, it seems to have been connected first to the IO-11 front end. Later it was moved to the Plasma Group in MIT Building 38 and connected to another PDP-11 with was also the hub for several terminals there. The connection back to MC was first a serial line, but later replaced with Chaosnet; the printer was available at the "GOULD" contact.

External links