I found another for sale here, but I can't really afford to buy it and
ship to the UP....
Date: Mon, 25 Feb 2013 11:06:53 +0000
From: Dave <dave.g4ugm at gmail.com<mailto:dave.g4ugm at gmail.com>>
To: General Discussion: On-Topic and Off-Topic Posts
<cctalk at classiccmp.org<mailto:cctalk at classiccmp.org>>
Subject: Re: Strobe plotter documentation or information?
Message-ID: <512B45CD.8090903 at gmail.com<mailto:512B45CD.8090903 at
gmail.com>>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed
On 25/02/2013 11:06, Dave wrote:
Hi Dave
Yes, those links were the three mentions that I had previously found (plus links to some
ads in archived magazines).
However, since the interface board is a S-100 bus card labeled as "Strobe 100
parallel interface" I believe the RS232 is a different option that this does not
have, or the link from the plotter enclosure to the card itself is using RS232.
The Burroughs document defines their graphics subroutine library and mentions that these
can be used (unsupported) on the Strobe plotter, but not enough to write anything that
will talk to the box. Further, they mention in appx B the configuration file that defines
the format for talking to each peripheral that there is a format Strobe which is different
from the HP plotter formats. The review link mentions commands, which do not sound like
HPGL to me, but with only these three documents to go on, it is a grain of data and a
pound of interpolation to decide what the protocol might look like.
The DR Graph document mentions a unique driver for the plotter, in a long list of many
different monitors, plotters and printers. All of these documents suggest to me there is a
unique programmatic interface, thus I was hoping for a one in a million chance that
someone has the manual or enough documented about this plotter to allow me to send it
valid sequences. All mention RS232 so that may at least resolve the question of
communications protocol - well documented across the three links you listed. What to send
over that link is the question now. Reverse engineering may be quite challenging, but I
might be able to replace the controller inside the plotter with my own controller, driving
the servos and motor myself, thus free to create my own programming interface.
Thank you for looking and posting the citations.
Carl
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