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Another option is to create a dual boot system with Boot Camp, but this is not nearly as practical. If you use Mac to design and windows to run laser control software you would need to reboot your computer and switch an operating system every time you have to make modifications to your designs. This will get tedious quite quickly.

Apple LaserWriter II – Never Say Die

As a potential destination for disposing of old, unwanted Apple crap – err, I mean as Curator of the Vintage Mac Museum – I am contacted fairly regularly by folks who are looking for good homes for their old equipment. A few months ago one such query came from a fellow with a few old Mac drives, several piles of software on floppy disks, and one never-say-die behemoth called the Apple LaserWriter IIg.

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Back in the day Apple sold a variety of peripherals along with computers – printers, scanners, cameras, monitors (they still sell these), etc. The original LaserWriter was a groundbreaking piece of equipment, launching the desktop publishing revolution in conjunction with the Mac Plus and a new font format called Adobe PostScript.

The LaserWriter begat the LaserWriter II, which was offered in many different flavors: IISC, IINT, IINTX (with special high speed RAM), IIf and IIg. Using Canon print engines and built like tanks, these workhorses helped many businesses and graphic designers earn their livings.

I’d been looking for a LaserWriter of this vintage for some time to help with the Mac Museum’s file transfer and conversion efforts. While most old formats can be converted, a few are rare or restricted enough that the only options available are taking screen snapshots or printing to hardcopy. Since you can’t print from a Mac Plus to anything modern, a vintage LaserWriter would be the next best thing.

The LaserWriter IIg measures 20.2 inches wide, 18.7 inches deep and 8.7 inches tall – not including space for the paper tray which sticks out one end. This is substantially larger than most modern printers. It also weighs 45 pounds, which makes it a joy to get in and out of your car and up to the second floor. Nevertheless I wrangled this puppy from a suburban Massachusetts garage back to the VMM, blew out the dust, hooked it up via LocalTalk phone connectors, and printed out a few pages. Twenty years after it was manufactured the thing still worked, albeit with a few creaks and groans.

Mac

Fast forward a few months, and a job comes in to Oakbog involving Microsoft Word v3 files with a combination of English and Ukrainian text. The owner sent along a copy of the Cyrillic font he had used with the original files, so I added this to my old Mac’s Font folder and was able to open and convert the data to modern Word .doc format.

A few days after I emailed things back my client contacted me again. Apparently his newer Mac and printer could not render the old fonts properly, so he asked if I could print out copies of the files containing the Cyrillic text.

Piece of cake, I thought – LaserWriter II to the rescue! I installed the Cyrillic font on my PowerBook 540c, selected the LaserWriter via the Chooser, and started to print out a document. The green light started blinking, a piece of paper got pulled from the tray, then BAM – the red paper jam light turns on. Feh. Well, some challenges are to be expected from twenty year old technology.

I opened the printer and pulled out the page – this was no small feat, as I have the printer installed on the floor underneath a small table and the cover can only open a few inches in this location. Close things up, try again, another jam. Frustrating, as it had worked fine just a few weeks before.

After several rounds of paper clearing, a few whacks to the side of the unit, blowing out dust with a can of compressed air and several “choice words” said to its face, I finally got the unit printing again. I think the compressed air was what did the trick, probably some dust on an internal sensor. Slowly and methodically I printed out about 200 pages of Ukrainian text. The room now had that familiar odor of hot plastic and fused toner we all used to know so well, but the job was complete.

I turned off the printer, had a glass of wine (or three), and mailed the pages back to my client. The LaserWriter may now be fine forever, or it may die again tomorrow – hard to tell with these old machines. One thing’s for sure, they don’t make ’em like they used to. Which is a mixed blessing…

Posted by Adam Rosen on November 19th, 2011 in Vintage Mac Museum Blog 21 Comments »

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The Laser Sacrificer Mac Os Download

  1. Greetings,
    I have a Apple LaserWriter ll if you are interested. It has been a few years since I have used it, but it was still working then.
    Thanks
    Lois

  2. I’m looking for an apple laser writer 4/600 ps. If anyone knows of one, please let me know. Thank you.

    • Julie, I’ve been looking to see if I can get anything out of this 4/600 or just throw away or save for posterity. don’t really know if it works but I do have one. Wish I could send a pic.

  3. Hi there to all!

    I have a LaserWriter IINT in (what was when I last turned it off years ago) excellent condition. If someone has interest in purchasing this wonderful (and formerly quite expensive) piece of Apple Magic. let me know?

    Voiceman615 Voiceman615@Commercialtalent.com

  4. I have an LaserWriter II to give away to anyone who will pay the shipping (I am in Indiana). I inherited it when my office upgraded to newer Mac equipment, but I have never used it. I don’t know what letter of the alphabet this model is (it doesn’t say).

  5. Adam, just picked up a LWII!!! Replaced power supply, AC supply board, fuser and pickup roller!!! She’s as good as new!!! I also retrobrited her!!! She’s putty gray new!!!

  6. Any idea how to connect an old Personal LaserWriter (Serial/LocalTalk) to a modern day MacPro (G5/DualCore)?
    Thanks Cleanmymac 1 free download.

  7. I have a LaserWriter llcx which I had upgraded to xante Accel-A-Writet. I’m remembering that it had better quality printing with the upgrade! Lol I bet it still works!!

  8. WANTED – A working Apple Colour Laserwriter 12/600PS. Please call if you can help on 07774 882346

  9. I have a Apple LaserWriter 12/640 PS prints B&W only that I dearly love. https://cooltfile918.weebly.com/cheatsheet-1-3-2-0.html. It has served me with very few problems since I purchased it new. Lately it has been jamming and I was told it was the cassette pickup roller. I removed it. The rubber seemed remarkable flexible and I assumed that it was not picking up because of the “paper dust” from the paper. I cleaned the rubber portion with Goof Off and it seemed ready to go. When I tried to replace the roller one of the little plastic fingers that holds it in place broke. I love this printer. Does anyone have a non working 12/640 that I can have the pickup roller. Any help would be greatly appreciated. Thank you.

  10. i have a IINTX (works) that i would like to find a home for. just pay shipping. i live in SW Virginia. janehamilton@verizon.net

  11. Anyone have a working laserwriter ll they want to get rid of.

    thanks
    Dave

  12. I’m looking for a recipient for my Apple Laserwriter IINT, for which I paid $3,000 in 1988. It is in perfect shape. I live in Newark, DE, and I will donate it (but not pay to ship). It hasn’t been used for 27 years….(but I did replace some major part in it years ago).

    Cathy Middleton Raphael (it was bought from Washington College, Chestertown, MD – a Mac school – shortly after I left working there….)

  13. We are looking for 2 working fax machines from 1984-1988 time period for a movie. Do you have any or know where I may find them that are period correct please. Thank you

    Post note; they need to be in working order and I need to be able to purchase the period correct paper that works with them also. Thank you

  14. Damn. I had a LW Select 360 (the beige beast). Wonderful fast printer, but I was eventually unable to find toner cassettes for it. I could get refurbished ones for awhile, and, then, none. I was offered a kit, where one drilled a hole in the cartridge and filled it with powder from a flask. I declined… Also, I started having trouble with the paper feed. When I got an Epson color jet printer for a pittance, it went to recycling (and that was after I found another going to the scrap heap & extracted its toner cassette…). Too bad my model was the one with only serial. Didn’t these also come with Ethernet?
    I also had an NT before that. It simply died on me one day, after having worked flawlessly for years.
    They all met their sad ends as electronics recycling. As for the Epson, event though it had both serial (for Mac) _and_ USB, it, too, went the way of all electronics. It got weird on me, probably because of dried-up ink. I skimped on printing from it, since carts were a wee bit costly, and the briliant idea of having C/M/Y in _one_ cartridge, so if one color ran out, you had to buy a new cart.
    My present printer is a Brother b/w laser, USB, shared from my Mini.
    Since I havent found a way to print to it from my OS 9.2.2 G3, I make PDFs with Distiller (I mean, I print to file & distill it to a PDF, which I can send to the Mini for print).
    Seems to me I was trying to off the Select(s) to some Swedish collector, but he never answered my e-mails…

  15. I have a working LaserWriter II NT in excellent condition, used for 10 years in my typesetting business before storing it in a home closet with AC. Comes with all cables and trays. This puppy reliably printed anything I threw at it: layouts, graphics, music scores, envelopes, all at 300 dpi laser resolution. Will accept best offer plus shipping costs to give it a useful second life. Contact steve_deyo at that hotmail place. Cheers!

The Laser Sacrificer Mac Os Catalina

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