On 2010 Aug 23, at 11:10 AM, Tony Duell wrote:
> Looks like a quite fascinating machine! I'd
love to try lunar
> lander on
> one.
I don't rememebr a lunar lander for it (there's a very famous one
for the
DEC GT40 terminal...), but anyway.
The only reason I think there is one is that the web site page at
Oh, there quite probably was. The HP9830 is not a 'natural' for this
sort
of thing because there was no graphical output as standard. I suppose
you
could link up an HP1350 graphics translator (HPIB was available for the
9830 -- in fact I think it was the first desktop machine to have that
interface), but it wasn't a commonly-done thing.
The thermal line printer was a pretty standard piece of equipment with
Indeed it was. It was the HP9866 (a -A, which is what I have was
upper-case only, a -B could do lower case as well). It has a 7 bit
parallel internface similar in concept to the Centronics interface but on
a 19-pin Mil-spec connector (I forget the type number). There were
interaces for this printer available for many HP machines (heck, it could
even be used with the 68K-based HP9000/200 series some 10 years later),
but the HP9830 had a built-in interface for it (possibly becasue there
was no built-in printer on this machine). The interface is a few logic
chips on the top of the I/O backplane, BTW.
The printer will sit on top of the 9830, and looks like part of the machine.
the 9830, and it was a quick printer. One could do
character-based
graphics with it.
But AFAIK no version of the 9866 allowed dot graphics (in fact I think
that would be impossible, as you suggest the 9866 had a fixed printhead
with some 400 heater elements (5 dot for each of 80 characters) and they
were not evenly spaced (to provide gaps between the characters).
Incidetnally, if anyone has one of these printers, thermal fax paper
works fine in them.
-tony