Old Inkjet Turned Into An SVG Plotter

plotter

What do you do when you have an old printer, a portable CD player, and a handful of other electronics sitting around? Turn it into a plotter, of course.

The frame of the plotter was taken from a ye olde Epson printer, reusing the two stepper motors to move the paper along its length and width. The pen is attached to the laser head of a junked portable CD player. With this, it’s just three stepper motors that allow the Arduino control system to move the pen across the paper and put a few markings down.

The motors on the printer are, in the spirit of reuse, still connected to the printer’s driver board, with a few leads going directly from the Arduino to the parallel port interface. The motor in the CD player is another ordeal, with a single H-bridge controlling the lifting of the pen.

On the software side of things, a Processing sketch reads an SVG file and generates a list of coordinates along a path. The precision of the coordinates is set as a variable, but from the video of the plotter below, this plotter has at least as much resolution as the tip of the pen.

15 thoughts on “Old Inkjet Turned Into An SVG Plotter

  1. (I made this) It’s interesting that you chose to feature this version of the plotter rather than the pcb mill version which is on hackaday projects. I even gave you guys a nice picture of your logo made with it. Well, thanks for featuring this anyway.

    1. You come across as a little ungrateful.

      Both are nice hacks, you should be happy that one made it to the front page. That’s more than a lot of us can say about our projects.

      1. Sorry it came across that way. I am always very happy when my projects are featured here. I just found it odd that this version was chosen. As always, HackaDay has my utmost gratitude. I’m not being sarcastic.

  2. … That looks like a transport used in the Shigaraki CD transport, which are also found in JVC boom-boxes before being removed and turned into ‘Shigaclone’ transports.

    Shigaclone, showing the transport: http://i.imgur.com/EHqP7fE.jpg

    Very good project all the same. I have a few old B&W Canons in the basement for this very project, one day.

  3. Oh, the memories of the then High end roland plotters, and the pens screctching at “high speed” over the paper. And the frustration when a pen got out of ink mid work and you needed to start again. :-)

    This is the same principle, without the pen changing part.

Leave a Reply to TruiCancel reply

Please be kind and respectful to help make the comments section excellent. (Comment Policy)

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.