So I recently acquired a Gerber GS-15 (NOT plus) plotter, and a 486 terminal with a full GSP suite from 1993. The rubber is in fact completely turned to gum and I did a vacuum line replacement on the bail arm. But that's aside from the point.
My main reason for posting, is that I'm having trouble with importing files, and getting them to cut correctly. I've been converting some images in Adobe Illustrator to vector files and exporting as Illustrator 8. This seems to import into GSP Composer 4.1.12 just fine, but for some reason, it insists on double-cutting all the lines one way, then in reverse. Is the software just treating the vectors as zero-thickness shapes and cutting around them? Do I need to just import a flat unconverted image?
I haven't set up networking on this terminal yet, so I'm restricted to transferring files via burned CD, and of course, it's not exactly practical to use an entire CD to keep trying out a <1mB file.
Any other tips or advice with this setup would be great. Perhaps is there some more modern software that I can use to generate plot files for the GS-15, or am I restricted to Composer and GSPlot 4.18?
My main reason for posting, is that I'm having trouble with importing files, and getting them to cut correctly. I've been converting some images in Adobe Illustrator to vector files and exporting as Illustrator 8. This seems to import into GSP Composer 4.1.12 just fine, but for some reason, it insists on double-cutting all the lines one way, then in reverse. Is the software just treating the vectors as zero-thickness shapes and cutting around them? Do I need to just import a flat unconverted image?
I haven't set up networking on this terminal yet, so I'm restricted to transferring files via burned CD, and of course, it's not exactly practical to use an entire CD to keep trying out a <1mB file.
Any other tips or advice with this setup would be great. Perhaps is there some more modern software that I can use to generate plot files for the GS-15, or am I restricted to Composer and GSPlot 4.18?