Thanks for that write up and explanation Peter! It was great to open my
email, sit down with my coffee, and learn something new today :)

--Brad

On Wed, Nov 2, 2022 at 2:52 AM Peter Noeth <[email protected]> wrote:

> If your BCR wand came with the instruction book, then the information in
> it is correct. There was a supplemental BCR driver tape, 26-3828 that added
> drivers for Codeabar, Interleaved 2 of 5, and UPC-EAN, that was available a
> few years after the M100 bar code reader was available. It wasn't
> advertised much though, just showed up one day hanging on the wall at my
> local Radio Shack (with Computer Center) store. I didn't get it at the time
> because I didn't have a use for it, but I should have.
>
> A little history ..... Radio Shack licensed the BCR wand from Hewlett
> Packard. It is the same wand as HP sold for the HP-41 calculator, just says
> Radio Shack on it. The LED is dim, and has to be enabled by pushing the
> button on the wand, because it was originally powered by the "coin cells"
> of the HP-41, so needed to be a low power device.
>
> Since it does not have the "ruby tip" that the industrial wands use, angle
> of the wand to the paper barcode is more critical, so the Radio Shack
> recommendation of 10-20 degrees back from perpendicular to the barcode
> label is important. And without a proper lens, it is important to not press
> the wand onto the barcode too hard while reading. Doing so will wear the
> tip, changing the distance from the LED/Photo Diode module to the barcode
> label causing mis-reads due to being "out of focus". That is why Radio
> Shack sold replacement "tips" to be used when you "flat spotted" the wand
> tip from excessive wear. Just soft ABS plastic.
>
> Also, since HP designed the wand to read paper labels, the dim LED
> prevents using the wand effectively on modern UPC codes of food industry
> items, where the barcode is printed on mylar, like potato chip bags. It
> needs a lot of contrast between the light and dark bars to work correctly.
> Works best with black and white bars on "semi glossy" paper.
>
> How it works ..... The M100 driver measures the times between the high and
> low transitions the wand outputs while scanning the barcode. These are then
> compared with a table of "times" for a match. if one is found, that ASCII
> character is then sent to your BASIC program when reading the "WAND"
> device. The driver allows for about a 5% tolerance in the transition times,
> so scanning speed is important. Once you train yourself in the correct
> scanning speed, it works quite reliably.
>
> I have the Radio Shack BCR wand, but only for the completeness of my
> collection. For actual use I use a Unitech MS120-NTCB00-NG wand. This is an
> industrial type in a metal body with a hard "ruby tip" lens. It has
> the same "locking" 9-pin D connector and is "plug-n-play" with the Radio
> Shack wand. Much brighter LED that is always on. It can reliably read the
> low contrast barcodes used in the food industry, even when the dark bars
> are in some color other than black. I use it often for keeping a "food
> pantry" and "wine bottle" inventory database with my Tandy 102. Only
> drawback with it is that the LED draws more current and is always on, so
> while I am "inventorying" the pantry, I usually use an external battery to
> power the computer.
>
> Regards,
>
> Peter
>


-- 
-- 
Brad Grier

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