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| projects:thermal-printer [2026/02/01 03:37] – kit-ty-kate | projects:thermal-printer [2026/02/02 17:48] (current) – ava |
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| # eposnow 80mm Thermal Printer | # eposnow 80mm Thermal Printer |
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| {{ :projects:thermy.jpeg?direct&400|}} | This is a general purpose thermal printer. A web interface is available from the hackerspace network at: [http://paperjam](http://paperjam). |
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| This is a general purpose thermal printer with no specific project in mind yet. | |
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| You can communicate with it via USB, using [ESC/POS](https://download4.epson.biz/sec_pubs/pos/reference_en/escpos/index.html). There's a good guide for setting it up [here](https://mike42.me/blog/2015-03-getting-a-usb-receipt-printer-working-on-linux) and a handy cheatsheet [here](https://www.datona.cz/sites/default/files/support/TM-T20II_escape_sekvence.pdf). | You can communicate with it via USB, using [ESC/POS](https://download4.epson.biz/sec_pubs/pos/reference_en/escpos/index.html). There's a good guide for setting it up [here](https://mike42.me/blog/2015-03-getting-a-usb-receipt-printer-working-on-linux) and a handy cheatsheet [here](https://www.datona.cz/sites/default/files/support/TM-T20II_escape_sekvence.pdf). |
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| A web interface is available from the hackerspace network at: [http://paperjam](http://paperjam) | {{ :projects:thermy.jpeg?direct&400|}} |
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| ## Printing images | ## Printing images |
| ## TODO: UTF-8 support | ## TODO: UTF-8 support |
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| By default ESC/POS only supports the limited number of characters from [PC437](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Code_page_437). Someone who would like to print non-Latin characters will need to switch the character set each time it is needed using [ESC t](https://download4.epson.biz/sec_pubs/pos/reference_en/escpos/esc_lt.html) (aka. `\x1B\x74`). Python libraries such as [python-escpos](https://github.com/python-escpos/python-escpos) or [py-xml-escpos](https://github.com/fvdsn/py-xml-escpos) could help do the conversion easily (if at all possible as some unicode characters might be outside the capabilities of ESC/POS, in which case, creating an image instead could be a solution). | By default ESC/POS only supports the limited number of characters from [PC437](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Code_page_437). Someone who would like to print non-PC437 (latin++) characters will need to switch the character set each time it is needed using [ESC t](https://download4.epson.biz/sec_pubs/pos/reference_en/escpos/esc_lt.html) (aka. `\x1B\x74`). |
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| | Python libraries such as [python-escpos](https://github.com/python-escpos/python-escpos) or [py-xml-escpos](https://github.com/fvdsn/py-xml-escpos) could help do the conversion easily – if at all possible as some unicode characters might be outside the capabilities of ESC/POS, in which case, creating an image instead could be a solution. |
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| | One added difficulty is that the exact ESC/POS capabilities of our printer is unknown (kit-ty-kate: to my knowledge, no official datasheet for this machine exists), so the exact number of character set that it support will have to be detected manually by trial an error. |