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Released in 1959, the IBM 1403 Model 1 is the first hammer based printer produced by IBM. It uses type slugs on a chain and is the first IBM printer to do so. In 1967 the IBM 1403 Model N1 is the first IBM printer to use a train rather than a chain. This change is made because it is not possible to achieve higher speeds using a chain.
The IBM 1403 line printer was introduced as part of the IBM 1401 ... Starting with the 1403 model 2 attached to the IBM 2821 Control Unit, most of IBM's hammer-based ...
IBM 1403 line printer, the classic line printer of the mainframe era. A line printer prints one entire line of text before advancing to another line. [1] Most early line printers were impact printers. Line printers are mostly associated with unit record equipment and the early days of digital computing, but the technology is still in use.
Pages in category "IBM printers" ... IBM 1403; IBM 4610; IBM 6400; C. ... IBM 2245; IBM 3800; IBM 6640; IBM 6670; IBM hammer printers; IBM Machine Code Printer ...
Pages in category "IBM 1400 series" ... IBM 1403; IBM 1410; IBM 1440; IBM 1442; IBM 1460; IBM 7010; IBM 7330; A. Autocoder; I. Input/Output Control System; S ...
Carriage control tape on an IBM 1403 printer. One channel punch is visible in this photo. A carriage control tape was a loop of punched tape that was used to synchronize rapid vertical page movement in most IBM and many other line printers from unit record days through the 1960s. The tape loop was as long as the length of a single page.
The World Economic Forum in Davos began in earnest Tuesday. Trump's return to the White House and AI have dominated conversations. This is what BI reporters have been hearing and seeing on the ground.
The 1443 printer uses 120 or 144 print hammers and hammer magnets, [12] conceptually similar to the IBM 1132 printer's one-per-column print magnets. Output is formatted at 10 characters per inch, with a choice of six or eight lines per inch, [2]: p.1 with additional options for single, double or triple-spacing.