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On Wed, 15 Jan 2014 13:54:47 -0600, Califbill wrote: wrote: On Tue, 14 Jan 2014 09:00:42 -0500, Hank wrote: On 1/13/2014 10:50 PM, Califbill wrote: Or you be like me that worked with card sorters and pneumatic card readers with 110 db 3' from the heads, and you are missing certain frequency ranges. Makes cheap players sound OK. Nothing beats adjusting hammers on a high speed drum printer printing lines of e's or dashes. Maybe that's why my Creative speakers sound so good. IBM's loudest printer in absolute dBs was the 3211 (2000+ line a minute train printer) but the band printers may have had a more irritating sound. I was very happy to see the 3800 laser printer and the fact that the DC companies embraced them. NCR train printer was not as loud as the drum printer during hammer adjustment. All hammers triggered almost simultaneously. The 3211 train had separate type slugs for each character and they were hit from behind into a fixed platten, similar to a typewriter. Each slug would ring and the 4400 "bells" a second added up to a heluva racket. That may actually have been the resonant frequency. It was certainly oppressive. Fortunately you did the adjustment electronically and there was a way to do it with the cover closed. The 1100 LPM 1403 train printer was the one that sold for the highest print quality and that was still the old school adjustment. (Usually one guy adjusting, one guy watching. I didn't really work in a shop that was anal about print quality but we had some. NIH guys used to have to check every printer every day and they had a dozen of them. They used "T"s The top bar and the vertical bar had to line up in both directions, sighting down the page. NCR had a train printer also. But was more of a buss saw effect. We used M to check hammers. Wanted line up and even color across the M. |
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