Insert, scanning drum

Use this image

Can I reuse this image without permission? Yes

Object images on the Ingenium Collection’s portal have the following Creative Commons license:

Copyright Ingenium / CC BY-NC-ND (Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International (CC BY-NC 4.0)

ATTRIBUTE THIS IMAGE

Ingenium, 2005.0060.002
Permalink:

Ingenium is releasing this image under the Creative Commons licensing framework, and encourages downloading and reuse for non-commercial purposes. Please acknowledge Ingenium and cite the artifact number.

DOWNLOAD IMAGE

PURCHASE THIS IMAGE

This image is free for non-commercial use.

For commercial use, please consult our Reproduction Fees and contact us to purchase the image.

OBJECT TYPE
N/A
DATE
1982
ARTIFACT NUMBER
2005.0060.002
MANUFACTURER
Hell, Rudolph Gmbh
MODEL
Unknown
LOCATION
Kiel, Federal Republic of Germany

More Information


General Information

Serial #
N/A
Part Number
2
Total Parts
17
AKA
N/A
Patents
N/A
General Description
synthetic and metal components

Dimensions

Note: These reflect the general size for storage and are not necessarily representative of the object's true dimensions.

Length
51.0 cm
Width
N/A
Height
N/A
Thickness
N/A
Weight
N/A
Diameter
16.5 cm
Volume
N/A

Lexicon

Group
Printing
Category
Platemaking
Sub-Category
N/A

Manufacturer

AKA
Hell
Country
Federal Republic of Germany
State/Province
Unknown
City
Kiel

Context

Country
Canada
State/Province
Ontario
Period
Used. c. 1982 until June 2004.
Canada
Example of type of equipment once widely used in the Canadian graphic arts industry. By reducing the time and skilled hand labour required to produce corrected colour separations, digital, electronic scanners like the DC 350 helped the graphic arts industry meet the increasing demand for colour images from advertisers and publishers in the 1970s and 1980s. This example of a DC 350 was originally owned by a company called Colour Images. In 1995 the firm and the scanner were acquired by Maracle Press, which used the scanner until June 2004. Maracle Press was incorporated in 1920 and had a long association with the Seventh Day Adventist Church. Today it is a privately owned company specializing in book manufacturing and commercial printing. It employs more than 75 workers at its Oshawa plant, which provides integrated pre-press, press and bindery services to clients across North America. (Ref. 1)
Function
Element of scanning drum.
Technical
Scanner includes an operator panel, a colour and scale computer and three rotating drums: the first scans the original image, the second scans masks superimposed on the original, and the third records the finished output on photographic film. The Hell Chromagraph DC 350 represents a critical technology introduced to the production of images for the graphic arts industry in the middle of the 20th century. In its use of digital stored program control and a laser, it was an important element in the shift of pre-press operations from a photographic, mechanical and manual activity to a fully automated, digital process. The 1st colour scanners were introduced in the 1950s. Due to their high price and to effective cost competition from colour correction by masking, colour scanners spread very slowly. In the 1970s scanner builders greatly increased the speed and capability of their machines. Digital processing and data storage began to supplant analog devices, greatly increasing the flexibility of the systems by making it easier to manipulate data collected by the scanner. The most advanced of the new generations of scanner were the Crosfield Magnascan 550 and the Hell DC 300 and DC 3000. The first of these machines began appearing in Canadian plants in early 1973. These machines were generally too expensive for medium-sized plants. But manufacturers also introduced smaller scanners with more basic features geared to these firms. By the early 1980s sales of colour scanners were booming. The Chromagraph DC 350 was introduced to the N. American printing trade in 1981, as the successor to the DC 300. It boasted many of the features of advanced scanners of the time, including the ability to produce film positives or negatives in a variety of sizes from a variety of reflection or transparency copy. In addition, it could produce screened film for half-tone reproduction by electronically generated dots controlled by the digital computer. These were exposed on film by a laser, producing half-tones superior in fine detail to the best photographic screened negatives. Finally, the DC 350 offered unparalleled power to alter and create images. In addition to colour and tonal correction and a wide range of scaling operations, the operator could achieve a number of effects using the mask drum. These included the addition of background tones, logotypes and headings and the adjustment of small portions of the image. The DC 350 could also be integrated into a complete "Chromacom" page-makeup system in which, prior to recording on film, the operator stored individual colour scans and placed them on a page display in the size and position they would appear on the printed page. The DC 350 was a hybrid of analogue and digital components. The scanning unit, which could produce the colour separations simultaneously, consisted of an optical subsystem of lenses, mirrors and prisms whose light output was converted to analogue electrical voltages. The operator adjusted these electrical signals by programming the computer using a variety of knobs, switches and controls in order for it to carry out colour and tonal correction and other adjustments. The analogue signal was then converted to digital for scaling of the image before being converted back to analogue prior to recording on the output film. Instead of manually adjusting the controls, the operator could invoke pre-set values stored in digital form on a floppy disc. One of the DC 350's most notable enhancements, this allowed the operator to store up to 13 pre-programmed jobs. A later modification allowed the operator to program the machine using emulation software on a Macintosh computer. (Ref. 1)
Area Notes
Unknown

Details

Markings
"03791" crudely incised on closed endpiece of cylinder.
Missing
Appears complete.
Finish
Clear synthetic cylinder has silver metal and synthetic endpieces. Fine line incised on cylinder extends from end to end.
Decoration
N/A

CITE THIS OBJECT

If you choose to share our information about this collection object, please cite:

Hell, Rudolph Gmbh, Insert, scanning drum, circa 1982, Artifact no. 2005.0060, Ingenium – Canada’s Museums of Science and Innovation, http://collection.ingeniumcanada.org/en/id/2005.0060.002/

FEEDBACK

Submit a question or comment about this artifact.

More Like This


...
Insert, scann…

2005.0060.004

Object

...
Insert, scann…

2005.0060.003

Object

...
Drive, disk

2005.0060.016

Object

...
Scanner part …

2005.0060.017

Object

...
Scanner

2005.0060.001

Object

...
Laser unit

2005.0060.012

Object

...
Eyepiece

2005.0060.008

Object

...
Eyepiece

2005.0060.009

Object

...
Eyepiece

2005.0060.011

Object

...
Eyepiece

2005.0060.010

Object

...
Insert, illum…

2005.0060.005

Object

...
Insert, illum…

2005.0060.006

Object

...
Insert, illum…

2005.0060.007

Object

...
Cleaning kit,…

2005.0060.014

Object

...
Recorder, tape

2005.0062.001

Object

...
Scanner

1986.0821.001

Object

...
Maintenance k…

2005.0060.013

Object

...
Scanner

1999.0042.001

Object

...
Scanner

1999.0109.001

Object

...
Scanner

2002.0165.001

Object

...
Plate, cover

2004.1361.064

Object

...
Plate, cover

2004.1361.065

Object

...
Memory, drum

2004.0155.001

Object

...
Unidentified …

2005.0060.015

Object

...
Cassette, tape

1987.0950.005

Object

...
Carrier, image

2004.1375.001

Object

...
Carrier, image

2004.1375.002

Object

...
Memory, drum

1983.0024.001

Object

...
Computer

2005.0117.001

Object

...
Memory, drum

2003.0652.001

Object

...
Tool, adjustm…

2004.1361.063

Object

...
Film

2004.1364.001

Object

...
Thermostat

1992.1488.001

Object

No image available.
Memory device

1979.0912.002

Object

...
Electronic dr…

2005.0099.001

Object

...
Scanner

2019.0008.001

Object

...
Projector, mi…

2005.0061.001

Object

...
Plotter

1993.0187.001

Object

...
Pedal, control

2004.1361.002

Object

...
Programmer, E…

2005.0099.004

Object

...
Tape, data pr…

1993.0187.006

Object

No image available.
Software

1994.0210.002

Object

No image available.
Software

1994.0210.003

Object

No image available.
Software

1994.0210.004

Object

No image available.
Software

1994.0210.005

Object

No image available.
Software

1994.0210.006

Object

No image available.
Software

1994.0210.007

Object

No image available.
Software

1994.0210.008

Object

No image available.
Software

1994.0210.009

Object

No image available.
Software

1994.0210.010

Object

No image available.
Software

1994.0210.011

Object

No image available.
Software

1994.0210.012

Object

No image available.
Software

1994.0210.013

Object

No image available.
Software

1994.0210.014

Object

No image available.
Software

1994.0210.015

Object

No image available.
Software

1994.0210.016

Object

No image available.
Software

1994.0210.017

Object

No image available.
Software

1994.0210.019

Object

...
Filter

1997.0434.001

Object

...
Scanner part …

2019.0008.002

Object

...
Scanner part …

2019.0008.003

Object

...
Reel, film

2010.0204.002

Object

...
Reel, film

2010.0205.002

Object

...
Computer

1999.0123.001

Object

...
Drum kit

2005.0115.001

Object

...
Drum, electro…

2005.0115.002

Object

...
Drum, electro…

2005.0115.004

Object

...
Drum, electro…

2005.0115.003

Object

...
Drum, electro…

2005.0115.005

Object

...
Computer

2003.0389.001

Object

...
Case, storage…

2015.0122.006

Object

...
Chart, print

1986.0911.001

Object

...
Memory, drum

1983.0013.001

Object

...
Cable, audio-…

2000.0006.003

Object

...
Cable

2000.0006.004

Object

...
Cord

2000.0006.005

Object

...
Software

1994.0210.001

Object

No image available.
Software

1994.0210.018

Object

...
Computer

2004.0154.001

Object

...
Computer

1990.0235.001

Object

...
Cursor

1993.0186.005

Object

...
Software

1995.0756.001

Object

No image available.
Software

1995.0756.002

Object

...
Software

1994.0209.001

Object

...
Synchronizer

2005.0109.001

Object

...
Reader, tape

1987.0950.003

Object

No image available.
Software

1995.0822.013

Object

...
Screwdriver

2004.1361.061

Object

...
Tool, cleaning

2004.1361.062

Object

...
Circuit, inte…

1966.0592.001

Object

...
Memory unit, …

1966.0532.002

Object

...
Hose

2000.0101.003

Object

No image available.
Hose

2000.0101.004

Object

...
Cord, power s…

1993.0205.004

Object

...
Computer

2004.1330.001

Object

...
Pin

2010.0204.003

Object

...
Board, circuit

2002.0165.002

Object

...
Radiotelephone

2003.0044.001

Object

...
Keyboard, com…

1993.0205.002

Object

...
Terminal, com…

1987.0108.001

Object