How to Network a Parallel Port Printer?

How 'bout getting this plus a USB-LPT adapter:

formatting link

USB-LPT used to be available at Walmart for under $20 but their web site seems to be toast right now. Again. No idea if such a combo works but per the Lantronix ad there is a good chance that it might. Then you could hang all kinds of other stuff onto this box.

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Regards, Joerg

http://www.analogconsultants.com
Reply to
Joerg
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"Jim Thompson" schreef in bericht news: snipped-for-privacy@4ax.com...

...Jim Thompson

Well, HP has a nice solution: The HP Jetdirect 170x. They have more, more expensive solutions as well. My local computer store has much cheaper parallel printer servers. (About 50 Euro). Personally I fired up an old WIN98 engine with some adapter cards. It served me well for the printers. The scanner gave some problems however.

petrus bitbyter

Reply to
petrus bitbyter

Buy a 50 foot (or whatever it takes, that was the longest one I recall seeing when I bought a 25 foot one last year to solve a similar problem) parallel printer cable, unless you have some other reason to want to network it - but if the logical PC as print server is not also going to live in the closet, it still might be the cheaper solution.

If that seems like an expensive solution, shop better - some places charge way too much for cables.

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Cats, coffee, chocolate...vices to live by
Reply to
Ecnerwal

Jim, what server are you using, if any?

Reply to
PeterD

Everything is plugged into an 8-port router (SMC Barricade) right now.

...Jim Thompson

--
|  James E.Thompson, P.E.                           |    mens     |
|  Analog Innovations, Inc.                         |     et      |
|  Analog/Mixed-Signal ASIC\'s and Discrete Systems  |    manus    |
|  Phoenix, Arizona            Voice:(480)460-2350  |             |
|  E-mail Address at Website     Fax:(480)460-2142  |  Brass Rat  |
|       http://www.analog-innovations.com           |    1962     |
             
         America: Land of the Free, Because of the Brave
Reply to
Jim Thompson

My SMC router has a parallel port for a printer to be used as a network printer.

--
"I\'m never wrong, once i thought i was, but was mistaken"
Real Programmers Do things like this.
http://webpages.charter.net/jamie_5
Reply to
Jamie

did you look on the back and see if it has a P-port? mine does. of course, I only have a 8 port with a WAN port, but I also have a 9 pin serial port for an external dial up modem :) I was using that before I got high speed at the house. Got kind of slow how ever, when the kids wanted to down load MP3's and all.

--
"I\'m never wrong, once i thought i was, but was mistaken"
Real Programmers Do things like this.
http://webpages.charter.net/jamie_5
Reply to
Jamie

network?

way.

it into a

64MB ram

P60 wasn't that also known as the "fire hazard" :) that *was* just a joke (although true), sorry could not resist , robb

Reply to
robb

So does my Barricade, but I want to move some of this pile out of my office ;-)

...Jim Thompson

--
|  James E.Thompson, P.E.                           |    mens     |
|  Analog Innovations, Inc.                         |     et      |
|  Analog/Mixed-Signal ASIC\'s and Discrete Systems  |    manus    |
|  Phoenix, Arizona            Voice:(480)460-2350  |             |
|  E-mail Address at Website     Fax:(480)460-2142  |  Brass Rat  |
|       http://www.analog-innovations.com           |    1962     |
             
         America: Land of the Free, Because of the Brave
Reply to
Jim Thompson

Use the Net Use command in a DOS box from windows.

Share the printer on the windows box it is on.

Give it a share name.

The code:

For starters, type "net use ?" without the quotes of course.

for coding it, type:

Net use LPT1 \\\\sharename

You also delete it later. It may default to persistent, which takes that physical local port out of your control.

Then all print jobs sent to LPT1 on that machine go to the shared printer over the net.

You have to have that printer's driver set in place, and nothing actually attached to LPT1 (if so, use LPT2).

Reply to
ChairmanOfTheBored

Yes. Standard windows share functions usually work great.

My NET USE suggestion allowed us to even use DOS apps which typically specifically look for things attached directly to specific ports.

Either way, a dedicated box to print from is the right way. He could also use it as a mail gateway, and stop all the local machine hack attempts that way.

Reply to
ChairmanOfTheBored

Yes, if he is on a wireless LAN, there are plenty out there. Most won't allow the HP utility functions or print job feedback communications to occur though.

Reply to
ChairmanOfTheBored

25 feet is the max for parallel port cabling, unless a line extender gets introduced.

A dedicated PC to serve through a short cable is cheaper than some cables I've seen.

Reply to
ChairmanOfTheBored

Get longer net cabling and move the router and the printer out of proximity then.

Reply to
ChairmanOfTheBored

Well, the simplest way is to put it on a computer with a printer port and then network share it.

Reply to
flipper

The most simple way is to buy a wireless or ethernet print server ($40 to $100 or so), and send the print jobs to it's address. There are other similar options that also don't require the printer to be connected to a computer.

Reply to
Don Bowey

Jim I use a TrendNet 10/100Mbps Parallel Print Server TE100-P1P hooked up to an HP DJ890C printer and no problems.

formatting link

Purchased at SWS Electronics here in Tucson. Also have a USB to Network server as well. I had to change the address on both of them to the local networks addressing. Dave Foreman

Reply to
David L. Foreman

I got nothing against that but it depends on how you define 'simple', I guess. and if the computer is there you plug it in for no cost and that, to me, is simple.

Reply to
flipper

I have been using print servers for many years now for POS printers. Seen them come and go. If I can offer one piece of advice, go with dlink. They have been the most reliable units I have used, and trust me I have seen many thousands go out the door over theyears.

Reply to
The Real Andy

Thousands? Want to exaggerate a bit more for us?

Reply to
ChairmanOfTheBored

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