Diablo 630
The Diablo 630 is a discontinued daisy wheel style computer printer sold by the Diablo Data Systems division of the Xerox Corporation beginning in 1980. The printer is capable of letter-quality printing; that is, its print quality is equivalent to the quality of an IBM Selectric typewriter or printer, the de facto quality standard of the time.
Overview
The printer is capable of this quality at a nominal speed of 30 characters per second. Several technologies were introduced to enable this quality and speed:- The lightweight daisy wheel is rotated by a closed-loop servo and can be positioned rapidly and accurately. Because the wheel can turn in either direction, the next character is never more than 180° away from the previous character.
- Like the "typeball" element on a Selectric, the daisy wheel can be easily changed, allowing for a wide variety of fonts and character pitches.
- Some models, the 630ECS can use wheels with two rows of characters, allowing for the machine to print in two different languages or with a large set of special symbols. The entire extended ASCII character set, introduced on the IBM PC, could be printed with the appropriate print wheel.
- The printer uses cartridge-loaded ribbons; both an economical endless cloth ribbon and a high-quality single-use film ribbon were available, with colored ribbons provided by third parties. By contrast, Selectric-based printers can use only one type of ribbon—cloth or single-use carbon film—and were almost always equipped for the former for economic reasons.
- The carriage is also servo-controlled and the printer can print with the carriage moving either forward or backward, saving most of the time that would otherwise be spent executing carriage returns.
- The servo control of the carriage permitted the use of proportionally spaced fonts, wherein each character does not have to occupy the same amount of horizontal space.
- Unlike Selectric-based printers, daisy wheel printers support the entire ASCII printing character set.
- Bidirectional paper motion is similarly servo-controlled, allowing quick printing of subscripts and superscripts as well as fast slewing past white space.
- Servo control of both paper and carriage permitted the unit to be used for plotting, with resolution of 120×48 steps per inch. This was popular enough that special daisy wheels were made with a reinforced period, the character most often used for plotting.
- The logic permits simultaneous motion of the wheel, the carriage, and the paper. The hammer automatically strikes only after all three motions complete. This minimized the time spent waiting for the motions to complete.
- Originally, the 630 could be ordered with either a Centronics or an RS-232 interface. Later, the API was introduced and RS-232, Centronics, and GPIB were available on every printer, selected with the use of a specific cable.
The same mechanism was used in Xerox's 850 display typing system and 860 IPS word processor, and was also sold to OEMs. One notable user was Digital Equipment Corporation, who resold the printer as the LQP01 and the LQPSE, supported by Digital's WPS-8 word processing software. Hewlett Packard sold the 630 as the 2601A .
The printer became so common, with so much software supporting its command language, that Diablo emulation became an expected feature on other daisy-wheel printers and even on early laser printers. This was so pervasive that at least one company lived by testing printers for full Diablo 630 compatibility.