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User: kolloid

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  1. Re:I liked the dot-band technology on How the IBM 1403 Printer Hammered Out 1,100 Lines Per Minute (ieee.org) · · Score: 1

    Yes!!! How did you guess?? ;-)

  2. Re:I liked the dot-band technology on How the IBM 1403 Printer Hammered Out 1,100 Lines Per Minute (ieee.org) · · Score: 1

    Ha ha, yes, the fans. We had the fans in a underground garage just below us. The air came through a duct from the garage, under the false floor and in our room through the 1401. So we mostly didn't notice the fans noise. But ... one morning at 6:00, dense clouds of black smoke started to come from the computer, which was however running apparently fine. The morning operator (not me luckily) switched off everything and called the general manager (we were IBM in a South American country). When he came, the sleepy manager was not happy to discover that the smoke came from a burning car in the garage. The fans were absorbing all the smoke and sending it up. After that "event" the air circuit was changed a bit and the machine had to be cleaned.

  3. Re:I liked the dot-band technology on How the IBM 1403 Printer Hammered Out 1,100 Lines Per Minute (ieee.org) · · Score: 2

    Well, I spent 8 hours a day or more during a year working in the same room with the 1401, the card reader and the printer. After that time I was mercifully promoted to programming and that was on another floor. Sometimes I was standing just in front of the printer, checking if all went smoothly. Now I'm 75, and not much deafer than any of my friends my age :-)

  4. Re:I liked the dot-band technology on How the IBM 1403 Printer Hammered Out 1,100 Lines Per Minute (ieee.org) · · Score: 3, Interesting

    It was my first printer too. One of the first models of 1403 on a 1401. Around 1967. Before learning to program the machine I spent some time as operator. Our 1403 was not that fast. It printed 600 lpm with the "commercial" printchain, which only had upper case characters, numbers and a small number of special characters. There were fuller printchains, with lowercase letters and such which were also correspondingly slower because there were less repetitions of the character set along the chain, so a given character took more time to get to its hammer. The noisiest "scream" was when the machine printed a line of 132 hyphens, a very popular decoration on headings. A single hyphen would pass over all the hammers on the line, which fired one after the other producing a high frequency shriek. Not too merciful on your ears but one gets accustomed to anything...