Printer Sharer

Feb. 10, 2009
The Printer Sharer will allow two PC's to share one parallel (Centronics) printer without manual intervention.

Originally published by Paul Stenning in Everyday Practical Electronics, January 1996

Many households are now likely to have more than one PC-compatible computer. Ideally it would be useful for each to have its own printer, though budgets may not stretch to this. In many cases, though, it may be rare for both computers needing access to the printer at the same time.

Since plugging and unplugging a printer between computers soon becomes tedious, a switch or a multiplexed printer sharing unit can provide a better solution. A switch works fine, of course, but it is not ideal as it requires manual intervention - and inevitably there is a tendancy to forget to operate it. The Printer Sharer described here does not need to be remembered.

What it Does
The Printer Sharer will allow two PC's to share one parallel (Centronics) printer without manual intervention. Users simply print from their software applications as usual, and the printer sharer lets the data through on a first-come first-served basis. The computer that comes second receives a "busy" signal until the first computer has finished. Most software, including Windows 3.1 Print Manager, will happily wait for the printer to become available.

Unlike some commercial printer shaeres, this one allows one of the computers to be turned off, yet still allowing the other to use the printer. The unit is designed to overcome the shortcomings of some commercial printer sharers tried by the author.

The timeout period is individually adjustable for each computer to allow for programs which print slowly and send data infrequently in bursts. Adjustment is by two internal presets, and ranges from ten seconds to one minute approximately. Two LEDs indicate which computer has control - these can probably be ignored once the timeout delays have been set-up.

If one computer is off, the other computer can still access the printer. It is even possible to switch one computer on and off while the other is driving the printer, without effecting the printing.

Some recent printers are "Energy Star Compliant". In practice, this means that if the computer it is connected to is switched off, the printer goes into standby mode. This printer sharer will allow this feature to operate only when both computers are switched off.

In most cases this unit can be powered directly by the printer it is controlling - using the +5V which is normally available on pin 18 of the Centronics connector. A few printers omit this, so a separate power supply will be needed for use with these printers. A voltage regulator is included on the PCB, so the unit can be powered by nothing more fancy than a mains adaptor (battery eliminator) delivering around 9 Volts DC.

This unit is designed for parallel printers only, and will not work with serial (RS232) printers. Also, it has only been tested with IBM PC-compatible computers. Although the Centronics Parallel Interface is supposed to be a standard, it cannot stated for certain that this unit will work with other types of computer.

Parallel Interface
Definitive information on the parallel interface is not easy to come by. The author has examined the manuals for several different printers, and found that different manufacturers interpret the standard in slightly different ways. However, by gleening information from the manuals, it was possible to establish a reasonable understanding of how the Centronics interface works, and its possible variations.

Every pin in the interface has its function detailed in the following table. The first column gives the pin number on the 36-way Centronics connector (printer end) while the second column shows the matching pin number on the 25 way D plug at the PC end. The asterisks shows those functions which vary between different printers. The third column shows the signal name, and the fourth column gives the direction from the printer's point of view.

Printer Pin Computer Pin Signal Name Directn (Ptr) Function
1 1 STROBE- IN Data Ready (0.5uS Pulse)
2 2 DATA1 IN Data Line
3 3 DATA2 IN Data Line
4 4 DATA3 IN Data Line
5 5 DATA4 IN Data Line
6 6 DATA5 IN Data Line
7 7 DATA6 IN Data Line
8 8 DATA7 IN Data Line
9 9 DATA8 IN Data Line
10 10 ACK- OUT Data Received (9uS Pulse)
11 11 BUSY OUT Unable to Receive
12 12 PAPER OUT OUT Paper Empty
13 13 SELECT OUT Printer On-Line
14* 14 AUTO FEED- IN Extra Line Feed at End
15   Unused    
16   GND   Ground
17*   CHASSIS GND   Earth
18*   +5V DC OUT External 5V Supply
19-30 18-25 GND   Ground
31 16 RESET- IN Resets Printer
32 15 ERROR- OUT Printer Error
33   GND   Ground
34   Unused    
35*   Unknown OUT  
36* 17 SELECT IN- IN Turns Printer On-Line

 

Signals marked '*' are not consistant on all equipment

The following description of the operation of the interface is based on information in the Star SG10 printer manual.

Pin 1 (STROBE-). Carries the STROBE- pulse signal from the computer to the printer, this is normally held high by the computer. When the computer has data ready for the printer it sets this signal low for at least 0.5uS. When the printer sees this pulse on the strobe pin, it reads the data that the computer supplies on pins 2 through 9 (DATA1 to DATA8). The computer must maintain this data for a period beginning at least 0.5uS before the strobe pulse starts and finishing at least 0.5uS after the strobe pulse ends. When the printer has successfully received the byte of data from the computer it sets pin 10 (ACK-) low for about 9uS.

Pin 2 to Pin 9 (DATA). See above.

Pin 10 (ACK-). See above.

Pin 11 (BUSY). Reports when the printer is unable to receive data. This signal will be high during data transfer, while the printer is actually printing a line of characters rather than receiving, when the printer is off-line and when an error condition exists.

Pin 12 (PAPER OUT). Reports when the printer is out of paper.

Pin 13 (SELECT). Indicates that the printer is on-line.

Pin 14 (AUTO FEED-). This function is not supported on most printers. When this line is low, the printer does an extra line feed at the end of the data. Since the PC always holds this line high, its function is ignored on the Printer Sharer and the line is held high via a resistor.

Pins 16 and 17. Ground.

Pin 18 (Power Supply Output). Normally connected to the +5V supply inside the printer - the Epson Stylus 400 is the only exception found, the pin being unconnected. The line is normally used to power the printer sharer, providing it can deliver about 100mA.

Pins 19 to 30. Ground.

Pin 31 (RESET-). Can be used to reset the printer. The "Energy Star compliant" printers monitor this pin for the automatic shut-off function - the printer goes into standby mode if the voltage on this pin falls below about 1V for longer than about half a second.

Pin 32 (ERROR-). Used to report an error condition in the printer.

Pin 33. Ground.

Pin 35. One of life's mysteries! Most printer manuals describe it as unused, but one described it as an output and said it was pulled high via a 1K resistor. It is not connected through to the PC so it has been ignored!

Pin 36 (SELECT IN-). Unused on most printers. Only one printer has been found that uses it - the InfoRunner Riteman II, which does not print the data it receives when the line is high! This seemed utterly pointless and so this pin on the Printer Sharer has been held low.

In some cases, the various output lines from the printer are open-collector, so pull-up resistors are included within the printer sharer (R11 to R13, R29 to R32).

Circuit Operation
Having compiled the Centronics information, the next stage was to decide which signals from the printer go to both computers regardless, and which have to be switched.

Signal lines notated ERROR- and PAPER-OUT are connected directly from the printer to both computers since they are relevant all the time.

Signal lines ACK-, BUSY and SELECT are connected to both computers (by IC3) when the circuit is in the idle state (neither computer wanting to print). When one computer starts sending data, these three signals are switched away from the other computer. The pull-up resistors to the left of IC3 control the state of the lines at this time. ACK1- is held high because this is it's normal state and SELECT is held high to tell the computer that the printer is on-line. The BUSY signal is also high to tell the computer that the printer is currently busy.

These levels mimic the signals sent when the printer is actually printing a line of text, rather than receiving data. In this state the computer will not send data - most programs will simply wait for the printer, which is exactly what we want.

All five signals to the computers are buffered by open-collector buffers (IC4 and IC5) with 4K7 pull-up resistors on the outputs. This prevents conflict if the computer they are driving is switched off. Unfortunately the 7407 is only available in standard TTL, there is no LS or HCT versions.

When the Printer Sharer is idle, the control lines to IC3, DIS1 and DIS2 (Disable), are both low thereby allowing the three signals from the printer to reach both computers as described above. When a computer is printing, the DIS line relating to the other computer goes high.

IC3 (74LS244) is a non-inverting buffer with tri-state outputs. When the Output Enable pin is low the data on the D terminals is passed through to the Q terminals, when OE is high the outputs are tri-state.

The device used for IC1 and IC2 (74LS541) are similar to IC3, except the buffers are controlled as one bank of eight instead of two banks of four. The pin-outs are also in a more convenient order, with all the inputs down one side and the outputs down the other side.

IC1 and IC2 are used to buffer the data lines from the computers to the printer. In the idle stare, the control signals EN1- and EN2- (Enable-) are high so IC1 and IC2 are both disabled. The printer data lines will be high due to pull-up resistors within the printer. When a computer is sending data the appropriate line goes low, coupling the data lines to the printer.

Retriggering
IC7 (74LS123) is a dual retriggerable monostable. With a retriggerable monostable, the timing period will begin again if the device is triggered during a timing period. Thus the monostable will time out a fixed period after the last trigger pulse received. With a non-retriggerable monostable (such as the 74LS221 type), additional trigger pulses during the timing period will have no effect.

In the idle state, the Q outputs of IC7a and IC7b will be low and the Q- outputs will be high. These are the DIS signals to IC3 and the EN- signals to IC1 and IC2. Each monostable is triggered by the falling edge of one STROBE- signal, and retriggered on each subsequent strobe signal. The Q- line from each monostable is connected to the CLR- input of the other monostable, so when one is triggered the other is disabled.

The strobe signals are coupled to the monostables via a C6 and C7, so that the monostable input will not be held in an indeterminate state when a computer is switched off. VR1 and VR2 set the timeout period for the monostables. D3 and D4 give a discharge path for C4 and C5 when the power is switched off. The Q outputs from the monostables drive LED's D5 and D6 via TR1 and TR2.

The strobe signals from the two computers are coupled to the strobe input of the printer by an OR/AND selector circuit. The AND gate is formed by the remaining two open collector drivers IC4f and IC5f with R22. When EN1- is low STROBE1- is coupled through, and when EN2- is low STROBE2- is coupled through. The R-C timing circuits (D1, R20, C3 and D2, R21, C2) between sections of IC6 are intended to slightly delay the start of the first strobe pulse to allow the data to settle. These may not be necessary, arbitrary values were fitted in the first prototype which worked so I left well alone!

The RESET- signals from the two computers are coupled to the printer reset by a simple diode OR gate (D7, D8 and R33), followed by an emitter follower buffer stage (TR3). A proper logic gate was not used because the low level caused by an output from a switched off computer is not low enough impedance to give a definite logic 0. When both computers are off, the printer reset pin will be held low, switching the printer into standby if it is Energy Star Compliant.

Power Supply
In the majority of cases the circuit can be powered by the printer, in which case SK4 must be linked to SK5, and IC8 omitted. If the printer does not have a 5V output this link should be omitted, and the circuit powered by a 5V supply regulated by IC8. The power input to SK6 should be between 7.5V and 10V DC at about 150mA max. This does not need to be regulated, so a simple mains adaptor is adequate. The DC input is not protected against reverse polarity.

Note that SK3 is a 40 way IDC connector on the PCB. This is connected to a 36 way centronics plug with IDC ribbon cable. The inside numbers on the circuit diagram relate to the 40 way IDC connector, and the outside numbers to the 36 way centronics plug.

Construction
All the components except the LED's mount on a single sided PCB. The component overlay is shown in figure 2 and track layout in figure 3. The board is fairly tightly packed with many close tracks, so take due care when constructing it. It may be worth checking your work with a magnifying glass when you've finished.

Before starting, drill out the four mounting holes to 3mm (1/8"). There are a large number of wire links, and these should be fitted first since many of them pass underneath other components. Thin tinned copper wire (about 28 SWG) is ideal. With thicker wire it may be more difficult to avoid short circuits unless it is sleeved.

The remaining components may now be fitted, in any convenient order. Sockets may be used for the IC's if desired, although LS TTL is unlikely to be damaged by soldering. On the prototype, the LED's (D5 and D6) were mounted on the case. If you wish to do the same, fit terminal pins in their positions on the board.

SK1 and SK2 should be fitted facing towards the edge of the PCB. When fitting SK3, be sure to get the 'V' indicator which marks pin 1 in the position shown. If in doubt, the large polarising gap goes towards the centre of the PCB.

You now need to establish whether your printer has a 5V output on pin 18 of the centronics connector. If you have the manual, check the section towards the back that gives the interface connections. Otherwise you will have to get your test meter out!

If you have a 5V output, link pads SK4 to SK5, and omit C8, IC8 and SK6. If you don't have a 5V output fit the above components and omit the link. Terminal pins should be fitted for SK6. IC8 will not need a heatsink if the unregulated supply is below about 10V, otherwise you will need to fit one and you may have to find a rigid method of mounting the pair.

Ribbon Cable
The PCB is connected to the printer with a piece of 40 way ribbon cable, no more than about 1 metre long. Fit the 40 way IDC socket to one end of the cable. The red stripe on the cable indicates pin 1, and should go to the 'V' mark on the connector. Position the cable so it emerges on the side of the connector with the polarising bump. The strain relief clip should now be fitted which reverses the cable direction.

Now separate wires 37 through 40 - these are the four farthest from the red wire. Cut these four off close to the 40 way IDC socket. Now fit the 36 way Centronics plug to the other end of the cable, again with the red wire towards pin 1.

Ribbon cable is best cut with a sharp pair of scissors. Try to cut it square. You will probably need to trim both ends to avoid stray strands causing short circuits. The connectors can be carefully pressed together using a WorkMate or vice. If using a metal vice, use couple of pieces of wood to protect the connector. Make sure the connector is squeezed evenly and the cable is square.

The Case
The PCB is specifically designed to fit an MB3 type plastic case. The cutting and drilling details for the case and lid are shown in figures 4 through 7. All dimensions are in millimeters, although I have given imperial alternatives for the hole sizes.

The lid drilling details are shown in figure 4. The PCB is fitted to the lid with the tracks towards the lid. A single M3 nut gives the correct spacing for the PCB, so that the connectors (SK1 and SK2) just clear the lip at the edge. Once the board is in place, a second nut on each screw holds it and the connectors firmly in place.

The two 6.5mm holes in one end of the case (fig 5) are for the LED's (D5 and D6). The 4mm hole in the other end (fig 6) is for the power cable to the mains adaptor. If your printer has a 5V output you won't need this hole. You may wish to fit a socket to match the plug on your mains adaptor, in which case you may need to mount this lower down to clear the PCB. My unit has a cable emerging from the 4mm hole, which is connected to the mains adaptor by an in-line phono plug and socket.

The rectangular cut-outs shown in fig 4 and fig 6 should be carefully marked out with a steel rule, square and scriber. Drill a line of small holes along the bottom edge (inside the line), then cut down both sides with a junior hacksaw. You should now be able to break out the unwanted section, and file the edges down to the lines. You may need to remove part of the PCB mounting guides on the end of the case where the ribbon cable enters.

The LED's (D5 and D6) are fitted in standard clips, and connected to the board with thin wire. The anode of the LED goes to the pin closest to the corner of the PCB in each case. If the LED wires are not crossed over, the LED's will be nearest the socket they relate to. If you are using an external power supply, this connects to SK6 with positive closest to the corner of the PCB.

First Testing
If you are using an external power supply, check this out first. Do not connect the unit to the printer or computers at this stage. With the power supply connected and switched on, measure the voltage between pins 1 and 2 of SK6 (the power input). This should be between 7.5V and 10V. If the output voltage of your supply is switchable, find a setting that gives a reading within these limits. If the voltage is higher than 10V you will probably need a heatsink for the 7805 regulator (IC8).

If the voltage is a little on the low side, this may be due to excessive ripple on the output from your power supply. The cheaper plug-in power supplies often have a low value smoothing capacitor, typically 470uF, which causes significant ripple when the output is loaded.

If you have a digital multimeter you can measure the ripple by switching the meter to AC volts. This meter will indicate an average value for the ripple, which is about a third of the peak-to-peak value. It is not too precise, but good enough for a rough check. If the reading is over about 0.05V (0.15V pk-pk), connect a 1000uF or 2200uF capacitor of appropriate voltage rating across SK6.

Set presets VR1 and VR2 fully anti-clockwise. Connect the unit to your computers and printer, and switch everything on (printer first). Watch the computer screens as they boot up, if any error messages appear switch off immediately. Now check the voltage on the power pins of one of the logic IC's, eg between pins 7 and 14 of IC6. The reading should be 5V, +/- 0.25V.

Check the printer has some paper loaded and is switched on-line. On one computer, type "COPY C:\CONFIG.SYS LPT1". It is easier to stick to using DOS commands to generate simple print jobs for now, rather than loading up applications. Your CONFIG.SYS file should be printed, and the appropriate LED on the Printer Sharer should light and remain on for about ten seconds after the C:\> DOS prompt reappears. Try this from the other computer too.

Now try switching one computer off and printing from the other. This should work OK too. You should be able to switch one computer off and on while the other is driving the printer, without affecting the printing. If your printer is Energy Star Compliant, switch both computers off - the printer should enter standby mode as usual.

Final Testing
If you can reach both keyboards at the same time (or borrow an assistant), try setting both print jobs off at the same time by hitting both Enter keys simultaneously. One computer will inevitably get the printer first, and the other will have to wait. Both files should be printed correctly, and neither computer should give an error message. There should be a delay of about ten seconds after the first printout finishes. The LED's on the Printer Sharer show the state of progress.

The only job remaining is to set up the timeout delay. In many cases the ten seconds obtained with both presetss fully anti-clockwise will be fine, however if you have a slow computer or a slow application you may need to extend the delay to prevent the other computer getting in partway through a print job.

On the slower computer, load up the application that prints the slowest and start a large print job. If you use Windows, you could try printing in the background while carrying out some disk intensive activity such as loading another application or sorting a large database.

Watch the appropriate LED on the Printer Sharer. If it goes off during the print job, increase the delay for that printer by turning the appropriate preset gradually clockwise until the LED remains on. Once you have found the correct setting, turn it up a fraction more (just to be sure). You can either set the other preset to the same position, or carry out the same test on the other computer.

In Use
There isn't much to it really - fit it and forget it! You won't need to see the LED's in normal use, so the unit can be hidden on the floor behind a desk or wherever.

The Printer Sharer should give years of reliable service, and make your live that little bit easier! Now all we need is some method of changing the paper automatically...

Diagrams

Zip Files

Case Cutouts and Lid Drilling in CorelDraw Format
PCB Gerber Files

Parts List

Resistors (all 0.25W 5% or better)
R1,R2,R3,R4,R5,
R6, R7,R8,R9,R10,
R11, R12,R13,R14,
R15, R16, R17,R18,
R19,R22,R29, R30,
R31,R32,R33,R34,
R35,R36,R37
4K7 (29 off)
R20,R21,R27,R28 470R (4 off)
R23,R24 220K (2 off)
R25,R26 22K (2 off)
     
VR1,VR2 1M0 Horizontal Preset (2 off)
     
Capacitors
C1 47uF16V Radial Elect
C2,C3 100p 0.2" pitch (2 off)
C4,C5 100u 16V Radial Elect (2 off)
C6,C7 470p 0.2" pitch (2 off)
C8*,C9* 100n 0.2" pitch (2 off)
     
Semiconductors
IC1,IC2 74LS541 8-bit tri-state buffer (2 off)
IC3 74LS244 Dual 4-bit tri-state buffer  
IC4,IC5 7407 Hex open-collector buffer (2 off)
IC6 74LS32 Quad OR gate  
IC7 74LS123 Dual retriggerable monostable  
IC8* 7805 5V positive voltage regulator  
TR1,TR2 BC548 NPN transistor (2 off)
TR3 BC558 PNP transistor  

D1,D2,D3,D4,
D7, D8,D9,D10

1N4148 Signal Diode (8 off)
D5,D6 RED 5mm LED (2 off)
     
Miscellaneous
SK1,SK2 36 way R/A PCB Centronics socket (2 off)
SK3 40 way IDC box header  

40 way IDC ribbon cable socket, 40 way ribbon cable (1 metre), 36 way IDC centronics plug, DC PSU (7.5V to 10V @150mA, unregulated)*, socket to suit plug on PSU*, Box type MB3, PCB, LED clips for D5 & D6 (2 off), M3 x 20mm countersunk screws (4 off), M3 nuts (8 off), 28 SWG tinned copper wire, thin two core figure 8 wire.

Note - components marked * are only required for external power supply arrangement.

This project, including all text, images and diagrams, is copyright 1991 - 2003 Paul Stenning. No part of this article may be reproduced in any form without prior written permission from Paul Stenning and WallyWare, inc. All details are believed to be accurate, but no liability can be accepted for any errors.

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