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The IBM 4245 is a high-speed impact printer that uses an engraved band. IBM proposed it as a replacement for the 1403, 3203 and the 3211/3811. As an example the Montana Department of Administration bought three 4245s (a model 12 and two model 20s) in October 1985 to replace two IBM 1403s and a 3211/3811. [21] [22] There are four consumable items:
These printers were manufactured by Printronix Corp and rebranded for IBM. All internal parts had the Printronix Logo and/or artwork. Although they once did, IBM no longer manufactures printers. One of their old printer divisions became Lexmark The other became the IBM Printing Systems Division, which was subsequently sold to Ricoh in 2007. [4]
The IBM 1416 is an interchangeable train cartridge introduced with the 1403-N1 and also used with the IBM 3203. This means instead of using a chain of linked characters, the printer uses a train of unlinked characters. The cartridge allows the operator to change the font and/or character set arrangement being used by the printer.
The IBM 6670 Information Distributor (6670-001) was a combination laser printer and photocopier introduced by IBM. [1] Announced on February 14, 1979, as part of Office System/6, its feature set included two-sided printing. [2] The New York Times described it in 1979 as "A key component of the office of tomorrow."
The printer for an Office System/6 model 6/440 and 6/450 was an IBM 6640 without a Magnetic Card reader, being instead hard-wired to the 6/440 or 6/450 console for direct printing. [7] In the picture of the IBM Office System/6 a 6640 without magnetic card reader is shown on the right.
IBM 1443 exposed in the IBM 1460 presentation stand. The IBM 1443 Printer (sometimes referred to as the 1443 Flying Type Bar Printer [1]) is an obsolete computer line printer used in the punched card era. It was offered in three models: Models 1, 2 and N1; the last two could print up to 240 lines per minute (LPM) with a full character set. [2 ...
Pages in category "IBM printers" The following 17 pages are in this category, out of 17 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. 0–9. IBM 370 printer;
The IBM 3820, announced on February 12, 1985, was IBM's first AFP cut-sheet printer. [27] [47] The 3820 could be attached to a host mainframe system via Systems Network Architecture SNA/SDLC, or to a PC using the IBM Personal Computer Network (PCLAN) or Corvus Omninet. An entry-level 3820 sold for $29,900 (equivalent to $84,704 in 2023). [53]