zlacker

[parent] [thread] 3 comments
1. throwa+(OP)[view] [source] 2022-06-24 12:23:06
Time for an open hardware printer manufacturer? Or more lobbying for right-to-third-party-ink protection (including not making the quality worse) ?
replies(2): >>kuon+Q3 >>franga+F6
2. kuon+Q3[view] [source] 2022-06-24 12:46:13
>>throwa+(OP)
It is surprinsigly hard to move paper the way a printer does it. The easiest way for DIY would be to use a continuous roll of paper and a very thin pen on a 3d printer like stepper motor, like older dot matrix printers.
replies(1): >>yjftsj+lH
3. franga+F6[view] [source] 2022-06-24 13:01:55
>>throwa+(OP)
Printer hardware is very specific, so you don't have generic versions of everything, defacto standards and official/unofficial documentation like you do in other DIY-able fields like 3D printers and CNC. The best you can do is buy replacements or salvaged parts for existing {HP,Canon,Epson} printers and spend months reverse engineering them. This will not only cost you more than buying a very nice new printer, but will suffer from the same availability issues every project depending on parts that aren't regularly for sale.
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4. yjftsj+lH[view] [source] [discussion] 2022-06-24 15:08:58
>>kuon+Q3
If it fits the quality you need, I think a plotter is actually the best option; the FOSS ones seem to just take arbitrary pens for ink and there's a fair few projects implementing open source plotters that seem to get decent results.
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