CGP-115

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Manuals

Operation Manual
Service Manual

ALPS Plotter Engine

The Tandy CGP-115 is based on the same ALPS DPG-1302 plotter engine as several other plotters.

Plotter Models:

ALPS DPG-1302
Astron MCP-40X
Atari 1020
Canon X-710
Casio FA-10
Casio FA-11
Commodore 1520
Convergent Microprinter WP-100
Mattel Aquarius 4615
MCP-40 (not the Oric one)
Olivetti PL 10
Oric MCP-40
Sega SP-400
Sharp CE-1600P
Sharp MZ-1P01
Sharp MZ-1P16
Silver Reed EB50
Tandy CGP-115
Texas Instruments HX-1000
Vtech Laser PP-40I

There is another version of the same ALPS engine that just takes narrower paper, but is otherwise the same, using the same pens and pinion gears.

Sharp CE-150
Tandy 26-3605

And another version that takes wider paper.

Panasonic Penwriter RK-P400
Sharp CE-515P
Sharp CE-516P
Sony PRN-C41

Pens

lass-shop.de

Search box: "stifte" ("pen" in German)

http://www.lass-shop.de/epages/63686166.sf/de_DE/?ObjectID=30124112&ViewAction=FacetedSearchProducts&SearchString=stifte

There are two part number you can order. One is a pack of 4 black pens, one is a pack of one each of 4 colors.

  • US 016.01 - 4 black
  • US 017.01 - 4 color, black blue green red

Web shop does not handle US shipping address. Order by email to:

Peter at info@lass-hno.de

Peter speaks English, you can write the email in English.

They will make an invoice / request for payment via PayPal.

Gears

The pinion/spindle gears on the X and Y motors are made of Nylon, which has shrunk over time, and essentially all of these gears are split by now, or soon will be. There is at least one good working replacement. The new gear is brass instead of nylon, which is not necessarily a great thing, but they are the right dimensions and teeth size and teeth count, modulus, bore hole, etc. It's practically a miracle to find these.

Specs

13 tooth
0.25 modulus
1.5mm bore


Sources

The original gears are nylon. You can't get exactly those any more, but you can get two other forms of new gears.

Machined brass gears: https://www.soigeneris.com/alps-printer-plotter-mechanism-pinion-gears
We may thank Jeff Birt for getting a batch of these made.

3d-printed: http://shpws.me/Si9K

CAD model source for the 3d-printed gears: https://github.com/bkw777/ALPS_plotter_gears


To install brass gears, I used a small hobby/electronics table-top vise with plastic jaws (Panavise 301) to press the gears onto the motor shafts without deforming the end of the shaft. One end of the shaft is very close to the bearing and so you want to be extra careful to avoid even a tiny impreceptible damage to the shape of the shaft. You can remove a thin metal sheet that covers the motors on the back, and that exposes the motors enough to get the corners of the vise jaws on both ends of the motor shaft without having to remove the motors. The jaws on that model are plastic, so they don't harm the motor shaft on the back of the motors. If you use a steel jaw vice, be sure to protect the rear motor shaft from direct metal to metal contact with the vice jaw, to prevent the vise jaw from deforming the motor shaft.

Paper

Specs

plain bond
4.5" wide
7/16" core
up to 3" diameter
160 feet

Original Radio Shack item was 180 feet but that's not a common size. The Original paper may have been a thinner bond too. 160 feet of plain bond does fit in the machine with room to spare. Often the selling sites will list the roll diameter which removes all guessing.

Typical search term: "4.5" bond roll"

http://www.itplanet.com/parts/Star__87999850.htm

https://www.cibowares.com/4-5-x-160-white-bond-1-ply-register-roll-package-of-20/

http://www.sunshinesupport.com/prod/receipt-paper-rolls/1-ply-45-inch-x-165-paper-25-rolls-45165.htm


Refilling Pens

The new pens from the German medical supplies company are pretty expensive considering that they are so small and don’t last very long.

The new pens can be refilled fairly easily with insulin syringes available from local drug stores. Example:

Walgreens item 677232
10-pack, 29 gauge, 0.3mL
super thin syringes for insulin

When looking for alternative inks, you need to know that the original ink is water-based.
You want to use an ink that is water-based, and uses dye not pigment. In other words, not India ink! That has pigments made of particulates like a paint. That clogs up the wick fibers and the ball and wrecks the pen. You need inks that are purely liquid, which means dyes not pigments.
The simplest way to identify a good ink is to search for water-based drafting/plotter pen ink.

These Koh-I-Noor/Chartpak model numbers are perfect:

3080-F-BLA black
3080-F-BLU blue
3080-F-RED red
3080-F-GRE green

Fill a syringe to about the 20 mark. (0.2ml)

Around the tip of the pen (the new plastic german ones) there are 3 vent holes. Insert the syringe into one of those. Angle towards the center a little to minimize how much the vent passage gets mushed open by the needle.

Slowly, giving the ink time to soak into the fiber filler inside, push the plunger from about 20 to about 10. When you see ink in the other vent holes, you’ve actually gone slightly too far, or too fast.

Put the printer in 80 column mode ( jumper 2 = off ) and LLIST a basic program until the writing looks clean. It may splatter a little at first.

Clean up with a calligraphy pen cleaning solution, like:

http://artid.com/members/calligraphy/blog/post/1529-pen-and-brush-cleaner-recipe

or Koh-I-Noor Rapido-Eze.

It works to restore old dried pens too if you soak the disassembled parts in a jar for a day or so. Most original (30 year old) pens are not recoverable, but some are.

I have no idea how many times a pen can be refilled before the ball point wears out, but even once is worth it, considering how expensive they are and how quickly they run out. I have only refilled each color about twice so far.

For the original steel barrel pens:
You have to completely disassemble the pens and soak the parts in the cleaning solution for a few hours, or even days.
If the metal ball point still does not roll or flow, try passing the tip into a flame briefly to free up the ball from being stuck. This is just for METAL tips! I don't know if it works by melting the dried ink or by expanding the metal around the ball, but it works. It only takes a brief exposure, less than a second. Just pass it above a flame back and forth once or twice, don't hold it in place. This breaks the ball free and allows the ball to roll again, and the ink to flow again.
You have to inject ink with the pen tip off. You can’t go in through a vent hole like you can for the new plastic pens.
All in all, I’ve generally had less than 50% success rate refilling and reviving old pens. Even after completely disassembling and cleaning all parts and freeing the stuck ball points. But occasionally it does work, and a few pens are better than no pens.

Pen/Ink Storage

Store pens and ink in something that is more vapor-proof than oridinary plastic bags or boxes. You want metal or glass, like glass jars with metal lids or foil bags with actual aluminum foil not merely a silvery appearance.

The plastic ink bottles and pen bodies will lose both alcohol and water right through the plastic over time. If they are stored in ordinary plastic bags or containers, even with seals, the vapor pases right through that plastic over time the same way. So you want to store them inside something that will actually trap the vapor inside over long periods, which slows down the loss of volotiles from the ink. Metal in particular also protects the dye from UV.

Example: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B006L80T2O/

This item comes with dessicant packs. Do NOT include the dessicant packs! The whole point is to keep the moisture trapped IN the bag.

Pics / Video

https://goo.gl/photos/8HNKcnyMKBJupYnq9

Other

https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/0Bys6eLbSbYyhSUpfQVdWc2VrdTA?resourcekey=0-kYFofyxhQLoKkG_phO0KHg&usp=sharing