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Daisy wheel printer 

Metal Daisy Wheel for Xerox & Diablo printers
Metal Daisy Wheel for Xerox & Diablo printers
Plastic Daisy Wheel for Qume printers
Plastic Daisy Wheel for Qume printers
Samples of Daisy Wheel printer output
Samples of Daisy Wheel printer output

A daisy wheel printer is a printing technology which produces high-quality output comparable to that produced by high-end typewriters such as the IBM Selectric. It was used in computer printers and typewriters from the early 1970s, before falling from use in printers in the late 1980s following the introduction of cheap laser and inkjet printers which could produce high-quality output at far higher speeds. It is now found only in electronic typewriters.

Contents

Description

The heart of the system is a readily replaceable metal or plastic "daisy wheel" holding an entire character set as raised characters moulded on each "petal". In use, a servo motor rotates the daisy wheel to position the required character between the hammer and the ribbon. The solenoid-operated hammer then fires, driving the character type on to the ribbon and paper to print the character on the paper. The daisy wheel and hammer are mounted on a sliding carriage similar to that used by dot matrix printers.

Different fonts and sizes can be used by replacing the daisy wheel, and software allowed for convenient wheel change, usually spacing the carriage to the center of the platen and prompting the user to change the wheel before continuing printing. However, printing a document which frequently alternated fonts and thus required frequent wheel changes was still an arduous task.

Most daisy wheel machines offered a bold type facility, though this is mostly found on later or high-end machines. Bold printing was accomplished by double or triple striking the specified character(s); servo-based printers would advance the carriage fractionally for a wider (and therefore blacker) character, while cheaper machines would perform a carriage return without a line feed to return to the beginning of the line, space through all non-bold text, and restrike each bolded character. The inherent imprecision in attempting to restrike on exactly the same spot after a carriage return provided the same effect as the more expensive servo-based printers, with the unique side effect that as the printer aged and wore, bold text would become bolder.

Like all other impact printers, daisy wheel printers are noisy. Unlike the more familiar whine of a dot matrix printer, a high speed daisy wheel printer sounded like intermittent machine gun fire.

Thimble printers

Thimble printers were closely related to daisy wheel printers, but instead of a flat wheel the petals were bent to form a cup-shaped "thimble" print element. Introduced by NEC in 1977 as their "Spinwriter" series, thimble printers were considered more durable than the daisy wheel and reportedly had higher quality print. The replaceable thimbles each held 128 characters.

History

In 1972 a team at Diablo Systems led by engineer David S. Lee developed the first commercially successful daisy-wheel printer, a device that was faster and more flexible than IBM's golf-ball devices, being capable of 30 cps (characters per second), whereas IBM's Selectric operated at 10 cps.[1]

Xerox acquired Diablo that same year, following which Lee departed to set up Qume Corporation in 1973. Xerox's Office Product Division had already been buying Diablo printers for its Redactron text editors. After 7 years trying to make Diablo profitable, the OPD focused on developing and selling the Diablo 630 which was mostly bought by companies such as DEC. The Diablo 630 was capable of producing letter quality output that was as good as that produced by an IBM Selectric or Selectric-based printer, but at a lower cost. A further advantage over the Selectric-based printers, was that it supported the entire ASCII printing character set. Its servo-controlled carriage also permitted the use of proportional spaced fonts, where characters occupy a different amount of horizontal space according to their width.

The decision was taken to use Diablo's daisy wheel technology in a typewriter that would sell for less than $500 and an automated factory was constructed near Dallas, which took less than 30 minutes to assemble a Xerox typewriter due to the low number of parts. The Xerox typewriter was well received but never achieved the projected sales numbers due to the advent of the PC and word processing software. The typewriter was later modified to be compatible with PCs but the engineering which made it a low cost device reduced its flexibility.[2]

By the mid-1980s daisy wheel technology was rapidly becoming obsolete due to the growing spread of affordable laser and inkjet machines, and daisy wheel machines soon disappeared except for the small remaining typewriter market.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Hirahara, Naomi (2002). Distinguished Asian American Business Leaders. Greenwood Publishing Group, p. 120. ISBN 1573563447. 
  2. ^ Strassman, Paul A. (June 5, 2008). The Computers Nobody Wanted; My Years with Xerox. Strassmann, Inc., pp. 96-97. ISBN 1427632707. 
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