User:Alessia/Plotter art: Difference between revisions

From XPUB & Lens-Based wiki
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 22: Line 22:
  PU;                  (Pen Up)
  PU;                  (Pen Up)
  SP;                  (Select Pen - back in the stall)
  SP;                  (Select Pen - back in the stall)
== History + Models ==
One of the earliest plotter was Konrad Zuse's computer-controlled Graphomat Z64 in 1958, a punch tape or punch card controlled plotter, driven by two gears.<br>
It was used for fully automatic plotting for geodesy, meteorology and road construction. A remarkable artist that used this particular machine for his works was Frieder Nake, who explored computer art in the 60.<br>
<br>
<br>
photos: Graphomat Z64, punch tape, homage to Paul Klee, Nake (1965)<br>
<br>
One of the first mechanical and commercial plotter was the CalComp 565 from 1966, a drum plotter that worked by placing the paper over a roller that moved the paper back and forth for the X motion and the pen moved back and forth for the Y motion.<br>
<br>
http://bitsavers.informatik.uni-stuttgart.de/pdf/calcomp/CalComp_Software_Reference_Manual_Oct76.pdf<br>
<br>
A key hardware piece for the development of CAD applications is the Computervision's Interact I, it used an attached ball point pen to draft pantographs (mechanical drawing aid based on parallelograms). It was really slow and required a lot of space, it was anyway useful as a digitizer (processing information to a digital format).<br>
<br>
Another type of plotter was the flatbed plotter. instead of wrapping the drawing surface around a drum, they laid it out flat.  This was a preferred type of plotter for cases where you needed to see the whole piece while it being plotted.<br>
<br>
Tektronix produced flatbed smaller plotters between the 60s and 70s for “home-use”, they were popular for desktop business graphics and in engineering laboratories,  their pens were mounted on a travelling bar.<br>
<br>
HP's first plotter was the 9125A flatbed plotter, introduced in 1968.<br>
<br>
The HP 7470, in the 80s, introduced the grit wheel mechanism (still used in inkjet based large plotters), at opposite edges of the sheet press against polyurethane coated rollers. The pen is mounted on a carriage that moves back and forth in a line between the grit wheels.<br>
<br>
Plotters were also used in the Create-A-Card kiosks that were available for a while in the greeting card area of supermarkets that used the HP 7475 six-pen plotter.<br>
<br>
Another interesting application of the plotter magic was that of the electronic or microfilm plotters. They worked in a similar way as the mechanical plotter, but instead of a pen they used electron beams and instead of paper microfilm.<br>
The first known computer animation was created by the SC-4020 titled “Simulation of a Two-Gyro Gravity Gradient Attitude Control System” by E. E. Zajac, 1965.<br>
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GBlQb6Me_1k&ab_channel=UltimateHistoryofCGI<br>
<br>
'''photos'''<br>
-Calcomp 565<br>
- Stromberg Carlson SC-4020, 60s http://noll.uscannenberg.org/PDFpapers/40204360.pdf<br>
-example of pantograph<br>
-grit wheel mechanism <br>
-create a card Kiosk  from the 80s<br>
'''photos'''<br>
<br>
Niche application of plotters are braille embossers, used to create tactile images on special thermal cell paper, vinyl cutters (that still use HPGL language), and writing-homework-machines <br>https://www.scmp.com/yp/discover/entertainment/tech-gaming/article/3060907/chinese-schoolgirl-caught-using-robot-write<br>

Revision as of 21:56, 7 February 2024

🚧🚧🚧🚧🚧🚧🚧🚧🚧🚧🚧🚧🚧🚧🚧🚧🚧🚧🚧🚧🚧🚧🚧🚧🚧🚧🚧🚧🚧🚧🚧🚧🚧🚧🚧🚧🚧🚧🚧🚧🚧🚧🚧

intro

Pen plotters are iconic devices pioneers of digital graphic reproduction, magical devices that left an indelible mark on the history of design, visual art, computer graphics and engineering.
Pen plotters are nowadays disused, replaced sadly by large-format inkjet printers, or led toner based printers, that use a very fine matrix of dots to form images.
Anyway most recently we are experiencing, not just into the xpub bubble :) , a re-emerge of pen plotters within the generative art community.

Modern digital plotters, which are still in use today, evolved from analog XY writer plotters, output devices designed as precision measuring instruments and output devices for analog computers. The XY writer was a plotter that operated along two axes of motion, making it the most efficient way to draw vector graphics.

Historically, plotters were made with practical applications in mind like drafting blueprints, graphing data, or drawing large format maps, offering the fastest way to produce very large drawings or colour high-resolution vector-based artwork when computer memory was too expensive and processor power was too limited.

Pen plotters were very time consuming and difficult to use, users often found themselves concerned about the ink in their pens running dry If one pen dried out at the end of a plot, the total plot had to be redone most of the time. In spite of these limitations, the extreme resolution and colour capability of pen plotters made them the favourite output device until the late 80’s.

A number of printer control languages were created to operate this kind of machine, to transmit commands to move the pen itself. Three common ASCII based plotter control languages are HP-GL, the successor HP-GL/2 and DMPL.

example of HP-GL script drawing a line:

SP1;                 (Select Pen)
PA500,500;           (Plot Absolute, x/y coordinates)
PD;                  (Pen Down)
PR0,1000;            (Plot Relative, units in y direction)
PU;                  (Pen Up)
SP;                  (Select Pen - back in the stall)


History + Models

One of the earliest plotter was Konrad Zuse's computer-controlled Graphomat Z64 in 1958, a punch tape or punch card controlled plotter, driven by two gears.
It was used for fully automatic plotting for geodesy, meteorology and road construction. A remarkable artist that used this particular machine for his works was Frieder Nake, who explored computer art in the 60.


photos: Graphomat Z64, punch tape, homage to Paul Klee, Nake (1965)

One of the first mechanical and commercial plotter was the CalComp 565 from 1966, a drum plotter that worked by placing the paper over a roller that moved the paper back and forth for the X motion and the pen moved back and forth for the Y motion.

http://bitsavers.informatik.uni-stuttgart.de/pdf/calcomp/CalComp_Software_Reference_Manual_Oct76.pdf

A key hardware piece for the development of CAD applications is the Computervision's Interact I, it used an attached ball point pen to draft pantographs (mechanical drawing aid based on parallelograms). It was really slow and required a lot of space, it was anyway useful as a digitizer (processing information to a digital format).

Another type of plotter was the flatbed plotter. instead of wrapping the drawing surface around a drum, they laid it out flat. This was a preferred type of plotter for cases where you needed to see the whole piece while it being plotted.

Tektronix produced flatbed smaller plotters between the 60s and 70s for “home-use”, they were popular for desktop business graphics and in engineering laboratories, their pens were mounted on a travelling bar.

HP's first plotter was the 9125A flatbed plotter, introduced in 1968.

The HP 7470, in the 80s, introduced the grit wheel mechanism (still used in inkjet based large plotters), at opposite edges of the sheet press against polyurethane coated rollers. The pen is mounted on a carriage that moves back and forth in a line between the grit wheels.

Plotters were also used in the Create-A-Card kiosks that were available for a while in the greeting card area of supermarkets that used the HP 7475 six-pen plotter.

Another interesting application of the plotter magic was that of the electronic or microfilm plotters. They worked in a similar way as the mechanical plotter, but instead of a pen they used electron beams and instead of paper microfilm.
The first known computer animation was created by the SC-4020 titled “Simulation of a Two-Gyro Gravity Gradient Attitude Control System” by E. E. Zajac, 1965.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GBlQb6Me_1k&ab_channel=UltimateHistoryofCGI

photos
-Calcomp 565
- Stromberg Carlson SC-4020, 60s http://noll.uscannenberg.org/PDFpapers/40204360.pdf
-example of pantograph
-grit wheel mechanism
-create a card Kiosk from the 80s
photos

Niche application of plotters are braille embossers, used to create tactile images on special thermal cell paper, vinyl cutters (that still use HPGL language), and writing-homework-machines
https://www.scmp.com/yp/discover/entertainment/tech-gaming/article/3060907/chinese-schoolgirl-caught-using-robot-write