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Appendix e. interfaces, The parallel interface, Signals description – Compuprint 4247-Z03 Programmer Manual User Manual

Page 349: Operating phases, Signals description operating phases

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Appendix E. Interfaces

This section provides technical information for the parallel and serial interfaces.

The Parallel Interface

The parallel interface of this printer fully supports the Centronics protocol plus the specific features
requested by the EPSON and IBM printer connection in monodirectional mode and the Compatibility and
Nibbles modes in bidirectional mode, plus the negotiation phases and the device identifier (as IEEE
P1284).

The parallel interface is available on a specific 36 contact connector type AMPHENOL 57-40360- 12-D56
or equivalent connector for 1284 Type B.

v

Drive Capability

Up to 15 feet (5 m) on AWG26 min. wire size of twisted conductors on TTL receiver. The max.
reachable distance is conditioned by the host drive capability and by the noise level along the interface
cable path.

v

Printer Connector Type

36 pins, 1284 Type B

v

Cable Connector

25 pin, 1284 A Type

Signals Description

According to the IEEE - P1284 Standard, the pins assume different meanings and are identified by
different names depending on the actual handshaking mode as follows:

v

Compatibility mode (Centronics)

This is the lower level mode provides an asynchronous, byte-wide forward (host-to-peripheral) channel
with data and status lines used according to their original definitions. The interfaces power up in the
compatibility Mode Idle phase.

v

Nibble Mode

This mode provides an asynchronous, reverse (peripheral-to-host) channel, under control of the host. In
this mode, peripheral device to host data bytes are sent as two sequential, four-bit nibbles using the
four peripheral-to-host status lines. These two modes cannot be active simultaneously.

v

Byte Mode

This mode provides an asynchronous, byte-wide reverse (peripheral-to host) channel based on eight
data lines of the interface for data and the control/status lines for handshaking. Byte mode is under host
control and it cannot be simultaneously active with compatibility mode.

Operating Phases

The link protocol is mainly based on the following three phases:

v

Negotiation Phase

This phase is activated always by the host, only when in compatibility mode, and defines:

– whether a bidirectional link protocol can be established.

– the handshaking mode as well as the communications mode to be used.

– the device identification, if supported.

v

Communication Phase

This phase is based on well defined handshaking rules which depend upon the selected link mode.

v

Termination Phase

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