![]() ![]() When these kinds of machines came into offices and such, this became a security concern. If you rewind it, you can see the letters that have been pressed out of it. You can have ribbon and plain paper or no ribbon and fax paper. So the consumables are the batteries and the fax paper, and the ribbon, but at least the ribbon is optional. According to, 1034105 is as unknown as all the others. Here is a fuzzy picture of the ‘compliance plate’. I found it inside the machine and, with a bit of jiggery pokery and a little dismantling and remantling, got it to work again. It turned out the little cog that drags the tape through the cassette had come off. Of course, they are worth more than the machine is.Īt first it would not print properly using ink. It actually looks a lot better than this scan.ĭid not come with a carry bag or AC adapter, but runs fine off 4 D-cells. Here is the test page (insert paper, hold down ‘code’ while turning on). ![]() On the other hand, this old Casio can print thermally as well as using ink, and I have a bunch of old fax rolls kicking around. A significant problem with these old things is that the cartridges/cassettes/ribbons/whatever are proprietary and no longer getting made.
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