What is the Gocco printer?
Gocco Printer is a device for printing a color table. In Japan, Hayama was created in 1977 and produced a company called Riso. The ease with which it allowed personal printing was very popular in its home country. In his early years, the Gocco printer was in a tight third of all Japanese houses.
The printer body consists mainly of two small rectangular pieces of plastic connected by curtain. The lower part has a soft rectangular print bed on which an item is to be printed. The upper part can be moved up and down and has a plastic window in the middle directly over the bed.
Open plastic box, into which flashbulby is screwed exactly through the plastic window. In order to burn the image to be printed, these fields are placed on the open side down to the top of the printer. Disposable screen covered with emulsion slots into the slot at the top of the inner part of the Gocco printer. Then a picture based on a carbon like a ko imageThe feathers or laser printers are placed on a print bed.
To print the image on the screen, the upper part of the bulb field is located on the top of the plastic window in the Gocco printer. The right part of the top of the lid contains batteries that send power to the Flash Bulb field. When the lid is pressed down, it sets out flashbulby and burns the image on the print bed on the screen.
After the image is burned to the screen, it is removed from the printer and covered with a special Gocco ink. Then the ink -covered screen returns to the slots at the top of the printer. The item to be printed is located on the bed at the bottom of the printer.
In order to print the image, the upper half of the printer is firmly depressed to the print surface and works as a stamp to attach the image to the item. The printed item is then removed from the Gocco printer Apolozeno to dry. Until the ink is on the screen, the PR can bemake further copies of the same item. The screen can also be cleaned and reinforced with different ink colors.
Sise Screuning Gocco sales, Riso announced in 2005 that it would no longer produce a printer. Computers and affordable color printers created on the market for personal printing of screen. Riso supplied the last of its GOCCO printers in 2008 and officially interrupted all ties with the printer.
In the years since the printer was out of production, the movement between the Gocco Aficionados has occurred to convince Riso to make it available again. Crafters in the United States are particularly loud in their desire to buy a printer. In response to GOCCO users, RISO now creates basic supplies for the printer, including screens and ink.