In the late 1960s IBM began development work on flexible band technology. The goal was to create lower cost printers that still had good print quality. Initial printers used one hammer for two print positions and were relatively slow. However over time IBM switched back to one hammer per print position so they could attain higher speeds.
IBM 3618 Administrative Line Printer The first IBM band printer, it was released in 1974. It is a 155 lpm printer with a 48 character set and uses one hammer for two print positions. It has 80 printer positions, but could be ordered with 132 print positions as a feature. It is part of the IBM 3600 banking system and is loop attached to an IBM 3601 controller. The 64 character set band reduces nominal print speed to 120 lpm, while the 96 character set band reduces it to 80 lpm. It was announced on August 10, 1973. Models 1 and 2 were withdrawn on May 1, 1984. The C1 model is intended to be Customer Set-up (CSU). It uses a steel band with 288 characters.
IBM 5262 Announced October 2, 1984 as a replacement for the IBM 3262, although the print bands are not compatible. It is also a 650 lpm printer. First shipments were October 1984. The model 001 was twinax attached. It emulated an IBM 5256.
IBM 4245 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. There are four consumable items: • Print band. • Printer ribbon. • Plastic ribbon shield. • Vacuum cleaner bag. This was used with the inbuilt vacuum cleaning system and was supplied free-of-charge by IBM provided the printer was under maintenance. For the European market, they were manufactured in Jarfalla, Sweden. There are seven models:
Model 001 This was announced on May 3, 1983. It is a 2000 line per minute printer. It is physically the same size as the 3203–005. There is no scheduled maintenance for the IBM 4245. It has a 3-month warranty. The Model 1 is long, wide (with side stacker) and high and weighs . It was withdrawn by IBM on July 16, 1985, directly replaced by the 4245–020.
Models 12 and 20 These were announced on April 16, 1985, with first shipments planned for planned for June 28, 1985. The model 12 is rated at 1200 lpm while the model 20 is rated at 2000 lpm. The model 020 was announced as being a significant Improvement over the model 001 with the following enhancements: • Could print OCR • Improved print quality • Higher reliability • Easier access to the paper loading area via removal of a bar on the front of the machine • Improved top cover • Improved power stacker • 25% smaller than the 4245-001 • Operated at 64 dB The model 12/20 and other models are long, wide (with side stacker) and high and weighs . It prints at 2000, 3000 or 3600 lpm. At announcement it is IBMs fastest ever impact printer. IBM claims it uses 46% less power and produce 26% less heat than the IBM 3211. It comes standard with 132 print positions, but can optionally be upgraded to use 168 print positions allowing for two documents to be printed side by side. The band reportedly travels at 45 miles per hour, while the hammers move for only 30 microseconds for each row of characters. There are six consumable items: • Forms retention belts. This took 4 minutes to replace. • Platen wear strip. This took 4 minutes to replace. • Print band. This took 2 minutes to change. • Printer ribbon. This took 2 minutes to replace. • Ribbon shield. This took 4 minutes to replace. • Vacuum cleaner bag, for the inbuilt vacuum cleaning system. This took 2 minutes to replace. It operates in two modes: • 3211 compatible mode • 4248 mode It has the following features: • The Automatic Flight Time Compensation (AFTC) system electronically adjusted hammer delay times, meaning that no mechanical adjustments are needed. An operator can run the AFTC program manually and results are stored on the printer's inbuilt diskette. • The Automatic Band Image Buffer (BIB) means the 4248 can read the band ID from the band and thus load the correct band image into the band image buffer as well as detect if a mismatch between the desired and fitted band exists. • It can print OCR quality at 2200 LPM. • It can underscore and multi-strike. • It has a flashing operator attention light. IBM claim this is necessary as the printer is so quiet. IBM reported it is half as quiet as the IBM 3211. At announcement it is intended to be channel attached to IBM 370/3148 and above, 44xx, 303x and 308x mainframes. It is long, wide and high. It is high with the cover raised. It weighs with stacker.
Model 002 The Model 002 was announced on January 26, 1987, with planned availability in February, 1987. It features new hammer technology that allow it to print at 4000 lpm. It no longer needs platen wear strips and requires no preventative maintenance by an IBM Service Representative. IBM extended the warranty from 3 months to 12 months on the Model 001 and announced it as 12 months on the Model 002, on the basis it is so reliable. The Model 002 was withdrawn on December 15, 1992. IBM stated the replacement product was the 6262–022, with the proviso that two 6262-022s may be needed to replace one 4248–002.
IBM 6262 The 6262 is smaller and quieter than earlier printers. For instance it produces 57 dB versus 64 dB for the 4245. • It uses 64% of the footprint compared to the 4245-012 or 4245–020. • It operates at 58 dB versus 64 dB for the 4245–020. It offers three types of print band which affected speed based on the number of characters in the character set: There are several models:
Replacement product The replacement product for the 6262 was effectively the
IBM 6400, which is not a hammer based printer. It instead was a
line matrix printer. == Universal Character Set feature ==