Re: Silent 700 thermal paper

2017-04-15 Thread Chuck Guzis via cctalk
My experience with thermal fax paper is that printed copy is best preserved. I discovered a couple of years ago, that manufacturers' faxed copies of data from the early 1990s have faded almost to unreadability. Not black, but faded, as with disappearing ink Storage was in a file folder in a file

Re: Silent 700 thermal paper

2017-04-15 Thread Chris Elmquist via cctalk
On April 15, 2017 8:23:18 PM CDT, Paul Berger via cctalk wrote: >It would not hurt it to try, at worst the printout would be faint, how >well the paper survives depends a lot on how it was stored. Direct >sunlight definitely will degrade the paper that is why it is often in >black bags. If t

Re: Silent 700 thermal paper

2017-04-15 Thread Fred Cisin via cctalk
On Sat, 15 Apr 2017, Paul Berger via cctalk wrote: It would not hurt it to try, at worst the printout would be faint, how well the paper survives depends a lot on how it was stored. Direct sunlight definitely will degrade the paper that is why it is often in black bags. If the paper is 8.5" w

Re: Silent 700 thermal paper

2017-04-15 Thread Paul Berger via cctalk
It would not hurt it to try, at worst the printout would be faint, how well the paper survives depends a lot on how it was stored. Direct sunlight definitely will degrade the paper that is why it is often in black bags. If the paper is 8.5" wide you could use the roll paper for thermal fax ma