[Coco] DMP-106 Pinter sighted

Gene Heskett gene.heskett at verizon.net
Wed Mar 15 23:21:56 EST 2006


On Wednesday 15 March 2006 15:57, KnudsenMJ at aol.com wrote:
>In a message dated 3/15/06 12:55:40 AM Eastern Standard Time,
>
>gene.heskett at verizon.net writes:
>>Unless the printer was a xerox daisy.  Absolutely the only  thing
>> that can stop a 1650-ro is a broken ribbon.  It stops in  its
>> tracks, you slip a new ribbon into it, push the reset button and  it
>> takes off on the next character with no hint of a problem in the 
>> output of that line of text.
>
>That's  terrific feature.  Especially good since daisy wheels  were
> often used with carbon ribbons, which were good for one pass only --
> no  rewind or reverse.  My wife used mostly carbon ribbons.
>
>Yeah, those carriage returns were something else.  Hers was on top a 
> small dresser -- I think the glue joints were still intact when we
> gave the  dresser away :-)
>--Mike K.

I'd have to see it to believe it Mike.  I had this thing on a tv cart, 
an el-cheepo chipboard thing with castors.  I had to put a new 1/4" 
plywood back on it early on after it wore the nail holes out in the 
original piece of 1/8" solid cardboard & it all fell apart.  I put the 
plywood on with drywall screws & they seemed to do the trick.  That and 
a yearly tightening of all those big bugle head allen screws that tried 
to hold it together.  Its still sitting on it but I haven't checked to 
see if the unheated, and well ventilated from the bottom shed its in 
now is causeing it any further damage.  When I can get the shed 
excavated back to it again that is...  I'd drag it back in and hook it 
back up to the coco in the basement, but I'm running out of basement 
too, darn it.

-- 
Cheers, Gene
People having trouble with vz bouncing email to me should add the word
'online' between the 'verizon', and the dot which bypasses vz's
stupid bounce rules.  I do use spamassassin too. :-)
Yahoo.com and AOL/TW attorneys please note, additions to the above
message by Gene Heskett are:
Copyright 2006 by Maurice Eugene Heskett, all rights reserved.



More information about the Coco mailing list