EEVblog 1587 - Dumpster FAX Teardown

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  • Опубликовано: 21 окт 2024

Комментарии • 233

  • @MelodicMurder
    @MelodicMurder 10 месяцев назад +93

    In the healthcare industry faxing is alive and thriving as it’s a hipaa compliant way of communicating. Most offices use e-fax but some still have an old school analog fax like this one.

    • @BeatlesCuber
      @BeatlesCuber 10 месяцев назад +4

      I use a close relative to this fax machine at work (at the local hospital)

    • @DadofScience
      @DadofScience 10 месяцев назад +7

      Yup, many medical professionals still rely on the fax to get info around. Does my head in.

    • @mattklx
      @mattklx 10 месяцев назад +3

      Lawyers too.... they both need to get with the program and join everyone else in this century. Did IT support for both of those fields for a while, faxing was a nightmare with all the POTS to SIP translations here and there.

    • @ratdude747
      @ratdude747 10 месяцев назад +4

      @@mattklx And real estate. For the same reason: Fax, being a "hard" standard, carries legal authority of signatures on par with paper. PDF, TIFF, and JPG, not so much...

    • @Wormetti
      @Wormetti 10 месяцев назад +4

      when it was purely FAX machines, it kinda made sense since you are far less likely to get malware/ransomware on a FAX machine than a PC but since it's now mixed with PCs and FAX to PDF/email software, it seems rather pointless.

  • @ТарасКорж-г4т
    @ТарасКорж-г4т 9 месяцев назад +2

    OH NO! You forgot to take out the heater-fuser lamp AGAIN! ;) Those are thin long glass lamps that are pretty fun to look at. Even playing with them is fun: although they are 240 or 120V rated, connect to a standard 30V lab power supply and get a nice warm glow.

  • @fonkbadonk5370
    @fonkbadonk5370 10 месяцев назад +17

    Many public offices, doctors and lawyers still make regular use of fax machines here in Germany. Not as common as in the 2000s, but still enough that it doesn't stand out to most people.

  • @gregreynolds5686
    @gregreynolds5686 10 месяцев назад +4

    I used to do a lot of work with a metal bashing firm in Birmingham - they used to sketch a drawing on paper and fax it to the bloke up the road with the CNC punching machine - this process was really rapid and efficient - for a shop floor environment, I can't imagine how you'd achieve the same thing as easily today (phones don't produce a conve nient disposable paper copy like fax did).

  • @samrogers8778
    @samrogers8778 10 месяцев назад +4

    The fax machine predates the telephone! They're a wonderful episode of The Secret Life of Machines by Tim Hunkin.

  • @shubus
    @shubus 10 месяцев назад +26

    Unbelievably FAX machines are still alive and well in Japan. A good bit of the IT industry in Japan is equally archaic.

    • @Rob2
      @Rob2 10 месяцев назад +1

      I think FAX machines became popular in Japan first. At least I remember that in the early eighties here in Europe they were not common, most business communication was via TELEX, but when we started doing business with Japan we had to get a FAX machine.
      In those days most business communication in Japan was handwritten, as technology had not developed well enough for a word processor for Japanese writing to become very practical.

    • @LemmingGoBoom
      @LemmingGoBoom 10 месяцев назад +5

      Japan announced they were going to phase out floppy disks in government departments.... last year.

    • @kg790
      @kg790 10 месяцев назад +2

      I think Japan has got it right; there will *always* be new tech, just keep using what works, and if it's more fun than modern networking (what isn't?) then that's a bonus.
      My old iPhones can't even open modern webpages anymore - tragic - but I bet they could still view 99% of Japanese pages.

  • @markgunnison
    @markgunnison 10 месяцев назад +15

    We still use a FAX machine. I have a CPA office and we still receive FAXs almost every day. They are a secure way to easily send payroll and tax information.

    • @richardred15
      @richardred15 10 месяцев назад +6

      I'm curious about the security... Seems MIM attacks would be trivial

  • @retrozmachine1189
    @retrozmachine1189 10 месяцев назад +6

    33.6 is pretty quick once you've put up with 9600 or less. The slow tick of the thermal paper creeping it's way out of the machine must be familiar to quite a lot of us.

  • @vjk889
    @vjk889 9 месяцев назад +1

    Funny story - I work in the CT department of a hospital. The booking office receives imaging requests electronically. They print the request, fax it to us down the hall. Then they stamp "faxed" on it, make a photocopy, keep one for their file, give the other to the radiologist. So we use the full print/fax/copy capability of the machine to accomplish something that should not require any paper at all

  • @mendaliv
    @mendaliv 10 месяцев назад +15

    I use a fax as a backup means of serving papers on other attorneys, since many still have them. I had another lawyer claim he didn't receive certain papers served via email. I'm allowed to do "backup" service via fax. I could also mail them, but he gets an extra 5 days if it's served by mail. Fax is treated the same as email (but email is still required).

    • @AndyGraceMedia
      @AndyGraceMedia 10 месяцев назад

      Yes - the last bastion of the fax machine is the law firm :)

    • @jfwfreo
      @jfwfreo 10 месяцев назад

      @@AndyGraceMedia I suspect the healthcare industry will probably be the last one to ditch the fax machine.

  • @galileo_rs
    @galileo_rs 10 месяцев назад +13

    Keep the linear rails (rods). Comes in handy when you need something really flat to judge the flatness of surfaces etc.

  • @PeterMcKeon
    @PeterMcKeon 10 месяцев назад +5

    Those neon bulbs are gas arrestors, they protect the line in from lightning strikes. The centronics port can be used for printing, sending a fax from PC or updating the firmware.
    Faxes are still heavily used in doctors and lawyers offices.

  • @sandy1653
    @sandy1653 10 месяцев назад +10

    Still come across faxes in the healthcare/insurance industry here in the US. Hate the damn things but make a decent amount of money thanks to the damn things. I'd bet the USB port would let you hook it up to a computer to use it as a fax modem, remember that being a thing for a long while too.

  • @WolfmanDude
    @WolfmanDude 10 месяцев назад

    Really enjoy those types of videos! I could watch this all day!

  • @hermannschaefer4777
    @hermannschaefer4777 10 месяцев назад +2

    Old big printers usually have good cables (Canon, IBM, Xerox). So ripping all the wires is a good idea, they are useful for many projects and repairs.

  • @v8vrooooom
    @v8vrooooom 10 месяцев назад +10

    Hey this particular model is still found in may mailbox/ship places that you pay to send and receive faxes at least here in the U.S....pretty good machine as long as the pickup rollers/separator pads are good...good unit...I still know there is faxing going on...the Brother version here though does have a USB port for laser printing also.

  • @aussiemr2
    @aussiemr2 10 месяцев назад +2

    I spent years working as a Brother tech repairing these machines.
    Certainly didn’t dismantle it the way you did 😂
    Most common issues where the power supply triac would fail stuck on and burn out the rollers on the fusing unit.
    And the bearings inside the laser scanner would dry out causing noise and eventual failure

  • @markm3901
    @markm3901 10 месяцев назад +2

    I used one of these for many years for mostly printing using the centronix port. The DIN is for another paper tray connection.

  • @PaoloMarcelli
    @PaoloMarcelli 2 месяца назад

    In those printers, there were a lot of problems with fusers, now you can imagine the life of brother technicians back then XD

  • @DerekWitt
    @DerekWitt 10 месяцев назад +1

    Many restaurants (e.g. Chinese takeout) still use fax machines.
    Also, a lot of weather bureaus/stations actually broadcast weather reports via radio fax.
    I can receive weather forecasts from New Orleans via shortwave radio (4316.1, 8503.1, 12789, or 17246 kHz) for example.
    I have yet to receive weather faxes from Australia (signal is very weak).

  • @kalsvtg5169
    @kalsvtg5169 10 месяцев назад +7

    I like having both options, fax and email. Sometimes emails just don't arrive or get filtered to whatever the email provider deems fit.

  • @StuartM0TTQAmateurRadio
    @StuartM0TTQAmateurRadio 10 месяцев назад +2

    I can still remember some of the fax numbers I used to dial every day in the 90s even now. Fax is still used in the National Health Service in the UK because there are so many paper-based records still and it is supposedly quicker to fax them than scan and email and print on the other end.

  • @NetworkXIII
    @NetworkXIII 10 месяцев назад +2

    this is the same machine we had in our office, online and working up until a year or two ago when we retired it and deactivated the phone line.

  • @turboman69
    @turboman69 9 месяцев назад

    I work in the printer repair industry and I will say that a surprising amount of companies still use fax. A lot of doctors offices and doctors still use them, as well as a bunch of random businesses.

  • @CliveChamberlain946
    @CliveChamberlain946 10 месяцев назад

    NMB is one of the best fans in the biz.👍

  • @Weissenschenkel
    @Weissenschenkel 10 месяцев назад +3

    In Germany you'll find a lot of fax machines as well as typewriters, still in use.

    • @Rob2
      @Rob2 10 месяцев назад +2

      The main reason why we do not have FAX anymore: we don't have analog phone lines anymore!

  • @mgm5457
    @mgm5457 10 месяцев назад +1

    I've worked on these for years, as well as other brands, Brother is one of the most well known and used small fax machines and longest lived, it was easy to find generic supplies for it and they worked well. Of course I used a different method for disassembly and service, to get to the main machine you had to removed the Auto Document Feed assembly ... these were built up HL-1240's and have been around 20 years or so, many offices still have them because they never seem to wear out. The omly thing that eventually killed then is if the spinning laser motor failed.

    • @Graham_Langley
      @Graham_Langley 10 месяцев назад

      Ah so its based on the HL1240 not the HL1440 in daily use here. Laser motor still fine at 23 years but the fuser bearings can grumble a bit when cold.

  • @NullStaticVoid
    @NullStaticVoid 10 месяцев назад

    back in the late 90s early 2000s I worked for the original eFax company.We did bulk faxing for car dealerships, banks etc.
    It worked great for a while. Then people figured out you can bulk fax from windows with a USB or printer port connected Fax.
    Or if you never need to scan or print the fax, just a modem.
    The company SOLD ITS NAME to some startup to buy it some time, but it was gone by the next year.

  • @OnStageLighting
    @OnStageLighting 10 месяцев назад

    I started my small business after graduating in 1995. I never really needed a fax machine, but did setup some kind of fax facility on my then Windows 95 PC using my standard landline number. It didn't really get used very often and then I bought a little OfficeJet print/scan/fax thing which again rarely did any faxing but was used to scan and email things. So, given all that, I'd say that I didn't really use fax in the latter 90's. Early 90s, I was still using electronic typewriters, photocopying and sending important things via snail mail. The most important thing (invoices) hand written in Biro on WHSmith duplicate invoice pad and posted!

  • @pjakobs
    @pjakobs 10 месяцев назад +1

    So, in the pandemic, many of the local health offices sent their infection counts to the minister of health via fax here in Germany. I think especially in government administration, it's still the highest technology available.

  • @3beltwesty
    @3beltwesty 4 месяца назад

    Many older 36 inch wide engineering drawing scanners had 4 or 5 scan bars from Fax machines. The sensor bars were physically not all in line but but they buffered them so recombined like one linear array. One i used on the early 90s was like that. All Dos based with a window like interface.
    To align it in service mode you electronically input an offset.
    When older one of my early 90s scanner would have one 8.5 inch bar intermittent. Bad caps.
    So replaced caps all the time. Kept it aways on and that halted its decline.

  • @Shrek_Holmes
    @Shrek_Holmes 9 месяцев назад

    crazy how some old electronics had such complicated physical builds.multiple small fixed function processors, fpgas and such wired together on multiple boards. the amount of gearing screws and such. I've seen some machines that use multiple gears and solenoids so they use the same motor for many purposes. that's why electronics was so expensive back in the day, 80s and early 90s electronics was way more expensive than now. now everything just has a small computer chip and an lcd display in a hunk of cheap plastic

  • @David-gr8rh
    @David-gr8rh 10 месяцев назад

    Merry Christmas happy holidays Dave, all the best bro 2024 massive

  • @markburton3306
    @markburton3306 10 месяцев назад

    I worked on the fax software on the Nokia 9210. Amazingly you could send and receive faxes from a phone.

  • @gr4eme1975
    @gr4eme1975 10 месяцев назад +1

    My family business finally retired the fax this year, we were still receiving 30 to 40 faxes a day until we pulled the plug. As already stated the health care industry still uses fax and as a mobility parts supply business it was painful to try and convince the customer base to change to email and online ordering

  • @DataDashy
    @DataDashy 10 месяцев назад

    Finally NOT a pool teardown video

  • @weatherornotnot
    @weatherornotnot 9 месяцев назад

    Faxes are still used in banking. They are considered more secure than standard email. They can be used to instruct all sorts and its not out of the ordinary for a signed fax to be used as authoriisation to make cash payments of millions of $s on a daily basis. Banks have obviously tried to move away from faxes but its still the primary method of instruction for a lot of firms, even for firms that have moved to contemporary authorised electronic instructing will use fax as a back-up method.

  • @TheTallGirl
    @TheTallGirl 10 месяцев назад

    When I used to work for a big telco company a decade ago, there was a fax machine and used a few times a year for some special important/safety/secret messages. And in the beginning of the 2000s Father had one of those fancy memory fax receivers connected to the computer. It did not have a printer, just a memory and you could download and display it in the computer.

  • @NickNorton
    @NickNorton 10 месяцев назад

    The Fax machine and clear schematic diagrams have never been compatible.
    Thank God you ripped it to bits Dave.

  • @miss_lisa
    @miss_lisa 10 месяцев назад

    lol, the freedom of tearing something like that apart with no intention of ever putting it back together.

  • @Krzys_D
    @Krzys_D 9 месяцев назад

    Our best sales person in our company is the fax machine

  • @Karthor.
    @Karthor. 10 месяцев назад +2

    I had a similar toner package in a regular laser printer Brother HL-1030 if i remeber correctly i think that toner you could put a piece of tape over the cartrigde and it worked for over an year more

  • @SouthShoreTrain
    @SouthShoreTrain 10 месяцев назад

    Brother still makes the absolute best monochrome lasers, and they're still available with fax. Anyone that doesn't *need* color for a home printer should absolutely go with a Brother, you can't go wrong.

  • @skuula
    @skuula 10 месяцев назад

    The ultimate classic fax that I know of was the NEC Nefax. Inesctructible.

  • @pete3897
    @pete3897 10 месяцев назад

    Even the old thermal paper fax machines used to have a copy function on them (10-15 years before this modern laser type). They only worked for single pages of paper, not for books (no glass platen; just a roller feed)

  • @TehMG
    @TehMG 10 месяцев назад +1

    This looks VERY similar to my Brother HL-1230 laser printer from the same era, that I still use to this day. I think they just took the same laser printer and added some parts to it to make it a fax machine. Same centronics connector and everything.

    • @Graham_Langley
      @Graham_Langley 10 месяцев назад

      Looks very similar to my HL1440 from 2000 that's still in daily use here.

  • @krbruner
    @krbruner 10 месяцев назад

    The last time I used a fax was when I was doing all the paperwork for starting a job at a large aerospace company in 2011....one that manufactures nuclear weapons just down the road and also making avionics to keep commercial aircraft from crashing into mountains or each other. Would have thought that a company required to meet such high technical specifications would have stepped away from fax machines ages ago. Obviously, I had to go down to the local print/ship shop to send it.

  • @LeighKoven
    @LeighKoven 9 месяцев назад

    I last used a fax machine when we bought our house in 2016. Had to send all of the signed application paperwork to the bank via fax. It was that or mail it. We have a fax in our office because we have the need to use one maybe once a year.

  • @joinanomumous
    @joinanomumous 10 месяцев назад

    When I started my current job at 2008, we still did use a fax machine for receiving schematics and floor level plans from the designers. Many of which were old scans from 80's and 90's paper stuff, or some handwritten drafts etc. Rarely we sent anything back.
    But of course by that time mostly everyone just used email. Project banks and such had not yet made a breakthrough. But mostly what came out from that Canon fax-machine were ads from office supply chains etc.
    Last landline (ISDN) at work was terminated just somewhere around 2018, when our now large worldwide corporation decided that it's too expensive to keep it alive. We still had the original phone line from 1991 when the building was made and our company moved in, to that point. Now it's all fiber optics. The desk phones are still connected to the base station, and you can make internal calls if you wish, but no calls to the outside world anymore. Nice trick to confuse some of the young players, by calling to their desk, where phone is still in place.
    All the alarm & remote use stuff was replaced with GSM-modems and TCP/IP (comserver) where possible.

  • @Petertronic
    @Petertronic 10 месяцев назад

    Fax co-existed with email for a long time, and still does! I had a fax in my office until about 2010 - I had a certain number of customers who loved to fax in their orders, so had to have it.

  • @DgaDM
    @DgaDM 10 месяцев назад

    I'm pretty sure we had a very similar model at work, and we did hook it up on a HP JetDirect to use it as a network printer

  • @davidkane4300
    @davidkane4300 10 месяцев назад +1

    When I was a military meteorologist, we had one for things like when an embassy flight was in the middle of nowhere Africa, and internet was unavailable. I had to fax their weather papers to a random African number. I only had to use the fax machine once, but it's a lifesaver when nothing else is available.

    • @der.Schtefan
      @der.Schtefan 10 месяцев назад +1

      I hope the number was not actually picked at random.

    • @davidkane4300
      @davidkane4300 10 месяцев назад

      @@der.Schtefan lol no, it was just at the airfield they were at.

  • @Krushernl
    @Krushernl 10 месяцев назад +2

    Way back when I remember using a PC to chlog up the fax machine at a radio station way back in the 90' 😁 Who listens to radio nowadays 😂

  • @FoxMccloud42
    @FoxMccloud42 10 месяцев назад +2

    Here in germany they are very common because the internet is for all of us uncharted territory.

    • @kg790
      @kg790 10 месяцев назад

      I heard about that quote the other day in a discussion about download speeds from a certain software retailer. You can taste the sarcasm through the screen.

  • @d.e.v.z.e.r.o
    @d.e.v.z.e.r.o 10 месяцев назад

    Haha that thing looks like my Brother 1230 Printer except the Fax on top. It is already about 20 years old and it is still working fine. So I can use your toner :D

  • @youtubasoarus
    @youtubasoarus 10 месяцев назад

    Legal, Medical and Real Estate still use those here in Canada. Mostly for signatures.

  • @BerndFelsche
    @BerndFelsche 10 месяцев назад

    Earlier this century, and in the precedind decade, there was a strong overlap in technologies with snail mail, fax, email and EDIFACT, etc with direct (business) document data exchange.
    One of the many things that I did was to "bolt on" a document distribution system onto legacy systems. Loiking like a printer to the legacy system, it'd reformat the document according to recipient requirements and queue them for delivery by the appropriate means. Staff would still need to pick up a stack of paper documents for snail delivery but all else, including faxes, happened "by magic".

  • @Sir_Uncle_Ned
    @Sir_Uncle_Ned 10 месяцев назад

    I can tell you that most government departments and public hospitals in Australia do still use fax, and I know because I have to rely on the public systems to live as I am too disabled to work.

  • @tzisorey
    @tzisorey 10 месяцев назад

    "Does anyone still use these?"
    Yes, apparently. I have a fax machine still plugged in, if only because it's got my answering machine built into it - and I still occasionally get fax spam. I don't imagine they'd still do that if there weren't enough people still receiving them.

  • @amckinley
    @amckinley 10 месяцев назад

    My GP used one yesterday to fax a prescription to the chemist

  • @ramosel
    @ramosel 10 месяцев назад +1

    🖐 Yep, I have an attorney that requires some items faxed (both ways). But, my fax runs on a google voice line run through a Polycom ObiHai connected through Starlink internet. I'm rural and don't have land lines. That's NOT a parallel printer port???

  • @frogz
    @frogz 10 месяцев назад

    i had to install 1 a few weeks ago for a dr!

  • @ValleyRC
    @ValleyRC 6 месяцев назад

    Amazingly not a printer but only so they could charge more for the print enabled version. It wasn't long before "all in one" machines became the norm and no company in their right mind would sell a machine at this level with the print function disabled, but for a time, it was presumably more profitable to create artificial segmentation of products.
    I remember the TN6600 well from my days "remanufacturing" toner cartridges, before it was cheaper to buy Chinese generic alternatives.
    Brother mono toner cartridges are quite unusual in that the waste toner is sent directly back into the cartridge with the fresh toner. It's kept separate by means of electrical charge but if you run the toner too low (like if you tape over the toner level sensing window) the waste toner will eventually get back into the system where it will cause grey "backgrounding" all over every page. The waste toner will then contaminate the drum unit, so even if you change the toner to a fresh one, you'll still suffer from backgrounding. In the case this happened, both the cartridge and the drum had to be replaced or cleaned. Only changing one meant the cycle would continue.
    Back in the day, we had to very thoroughly clean out the cartridges before refilling them. If anything more than a gram or two of old toner remained, you ran the risk of having backgrounding when you put the toner back in. We also had to thoroughly clean the transfer roller and "adder roller" inside the cartridge for the same reason.
    It was also a nightmare trying to tell customers to not cover up the toner sensing window and explain to them that the 80g or so of toner left in the cartridge was bad waste toner.
    We even had a customer march in with a jar full of toner he had decanted from the cartridge after the machine said it was empty, absolutely convinced we were ripping him off. We invited him to buy a genuine bother toner and see if he fared any better. He came back with his tail between his legs a few weeks later.

  • @nijhuisrb
    @nijhuisrb 10 месяцев назад

    The lenses are for keeping the laser beam round from left to right.

  • @michaelhess4825
    @michaelhess4825 10 месяцев назад +1

    My first IT job has a ton of hp lazerjet 2 and 3's, all broken. I spent hours rebuilding into functional ones. PC LOAD LETTER! Lol
    I've been a croc repair person, fixed probably every brand printer, fax, in existence.
    My part time employer uses them, health care, the US just can't get off the stupid things.
    As the sysadmin for a higher education school, I helped (with my network engineer) to convince everyone, and did away with all but one fax machine, just in case.
    Brother mfc's are all I'll use anymore.
    And almost all fax machines could be used as really bad copiers. I have late 80's brother, Panasonic, and Epson ones in a hole somewhere around here.

  • @rolvs
    @rolvs 10 месяцев назад

    I sent a fax yesterday!

  • @marcseclecticstuff9497
    @marcseclecticstuff9497 10 месяцев назад

    I don't have the fax machine but I do have the printer that they stuck it on top of. They put a blanking plate on the front where the printer status lights would normally be. Going to have to argue that Brother stuff was really good at that time, the laser printer portion of this machine certainly wasn't particularly good.

  • @RobTaylor-HiTech
    @RobTaylor-HiTech 10 месяцев назад

    It's called an All-in-one printer, fax, copier. Stull used in many industries to send confidential information with a false sense of security. Also that round connector was Apple's older pseudo serial network connection. The Centronix was in fact a printer connection.

  • @robertwilson7045
    @robertwilson7045 10 месяцев назад

    I was just in Sydney and St. Vincents Hospital still do use fax. If you have an appoitment wan wish to change it says send your fax to .......... I am not sure how many households have a fax machine

  • @mickeyfilmer5551
    @mickeyfilmer5551 10 месяцев назад

    My Pensioner mum bought herself a Fax/telephone in the 1990's - I don't think she ever sent a single fax, although she did use the photocopy function- which was abysmal. Cost her around £100 which was a stupid amount for a phone then! (Photovopies were 10p in the Library or Post office on a proper full size A4 sheet) !! Bless her.

  • @martin-that-is-felix
    @martin-that-is-felix 10 месяцев назад

    One place such things hung-on, was Construction sites; the contractor having maybe only a phone line or two as temp works, and before project hosting extranets took off (or, the on-site guys had bandwidth -for).
    I sent my last fax as an Architect supporting the on-site construction team, c. 2005 (UK) - where they were located, utterly-ruled-out higher bandwidth options. Worked well - and there was a certain simple joy to receive a 4pixel potato-print, be able to use a marker to circle things , scribble 'Effing-no-way', and bounce it back ;)
    I even 'issued for Construction' details merely scribbled on Post-It notes, taped to an A4 page, run it through the drum...
    ...something about the daft , low-res interaction that somehow this amade me smile.
    &
    Of course - today - I merely shoved 1GB+ of finely -granulated BIM data out to our partners, because that's the now, business -as usual; which I prefer!!

  • @MrTrain4
    @MrTrain4 10 месяцев назад

    We still have fax at me work, it just combined into the all in one printer which are brother ones

  • @VorpalGun
    @VorpalGun 10 месяцев назад

    Don't think they are used any more here in Sweden. Haven't seen one used in years. I believe there was still one hooked up in the local university just a couple of years ago, but it was ripped out last year.

  • @fahrzeugerklaerbaer
    @fahrzeugerklaerbaer 10 месяцев назад +1

    for stupid legal reasons in Germany they are far from obsolete... look it up its a thing. Greetings from Berlin, Germany

  • @graeme8755
    @graeme8755 10 месяцев назад +3

    When Dave is finished with the tear downs, his 4 rubbish bins are over full 😅

  • @simonhopkins3867
    @simonhopkins3867 10 месяцев назад

    1 man's trash is another man's treasure 😂

  • @jkobain
    @jkobain 10 месяцев назад +1

    For fax's sake, it's heartwarming!

  • @donondre7314
    @donondre7314 10 месяцев назад

    Still in use at my work place. Some oldtimer still thinks, the fax is much more reliable, in case the Internet connection goes down...
    My estimate: Fax machines will still be around in 60 years or so.

  • @Rob2
    @Rob2 10 месяцев назад

    The main reason why we do not have FAX anymore: we don't have analog phone lines anymore!
    Many offices here used to have a PABX with "digital" phones, which already was a problem for FAX. But those PABX often had an "analog line card" to connect such equipment.
    However, when offices still have desktop phones today, they often operate over internet (Voice over IP) and there is no analog line functionality at all anymore.
    Of course there are ATA boxes, but they often have caused problems when used with FAX and telecom companies often do not support them.
    Before we have used FAX-to-email services to solve the problem, but this year that has been terminated as well as it was almost never used...

  • @grabo454
    @grabo454 10 месяцев назад

    Very common use here in America for medical labs. HIPPA compliant communication for offices that don't have some kind of encrypted paid email service.

  • @6581punk
    @6581punk 10 месяцев назад

    I barely ever used one. I used to send timesheets back to the office via fax late 2000-2001 but not that many times. My smartphone had fax (Nokia 9110i).

  • @simonpaul9795
    @simonpaul9795 10 месяцев назад

    It reminds me of the smell of cigarettes. In the 90s when people smoked in the office i used to go from the workshop to the office to fax quotes and the heat of the fax used to make it stink of cigarettes

  • @Ziferten
    @Ziferten 10 месяцев назад

    Hate to break it to you, Dave, but in the feed direction US Letter is actually wider than A4.

  • @Graham_Langley
    @Graham_Langley 10 месяцев назад

    Looks to be based on the HL1440/1450 series printer, of which I have one dating from 2000 in daily use here.

  • @ArthurWilson-Your-IT-Person
    @ArthurWilson-Your-IT-Person 10 месяцев назад

    Still popular in the trucking industry in the United States.

  • @JoelArseneaultYouTube
    @JoelArseneaultYouTube 10 месяцев назад

    I was just in the middle of watching your hyperloop video and it went black screen "video unavailable" . I'm guessing some bogus copyright complaint, haha.

  • @drcyb3r
    @drcyb3r 5 месяцев назад

    Here in Germany all government offices still use them. But they are getting less over time. Some courts and lawyers still use them I think.

  • @KeritechElectronics
    @KeritechElectronics 10 месяцев назад

    Whoa, your tool is so much longer than mine! And I thought 20cm is something... did I call it a screwdriver? THIS is a screwdriver.
    Fax machines were used here well into 2000s, 2010s even. Nowadays it's pretty much obsolete tech. I still remember the FSK (if I'm correct) tones when I called some business on the phone but reached the fax endpoint, haha.

  • @TheEmbeddedHobbyist
    @TheEmbeddedHobbyist 10 месяцев назад +1

    when the fax's used paper rolls, we would send 40 or 50 blank pages. they when very fast and cut the paper roll in to a lot of nice A4 sheets. boy would the end user get upset. 🙂
    Maybe sometimes we would say we were just sending them a few A4 sheets to use as note paper.

    • @kg790
      @kg790 10 месяцев назад

      This is a Dilbert comic

    • @TheEmbeddedHobbyist
      @TheEmbeddedHobbyist 10 месяцев назад

      @@kg790 one of our new state of art fax's was given a wrong number and it retried to send at midnight for weeks until we got a visit from the police. There was no indication in the top level menus that it was doing it. We had to turn it off at night until an engineer came out and found the settings to stop it.

    • @Graham_Langley
      @Graham_Langley 10 месяцев назад

      Did this with the DOS version of WinFax where you could set the page length to a huge figure.

    • @kg790
      @kg790 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@TheEmbeddedHobbyist Your first comment was funny enough for a dinner anecdote, and the second one I just realized was probably not even a fax number but just some poor person's telephone ringing every night for a month 😂

    • @TheEmbeddedHobbyist
      @TheEmbeddedHobbyist 10 месяцев назад

      @@kg790 I should have made that more clear, if it was a fax machine at the other end it would not have kept retrying. Glad you found it amusing.

  • @matthewlewington2470
    @matthewlewington2470 10 месяцев назад

    A Lot of hospitals and doctors i go in you can still hear them in use all the time. Why replace em when they work i guess, Probaly faster than scanning and emailing

  • @Hogdriva
    @Hogdriva 10 месяцев назад

    A lot of businesses do still use fax here in the US, even my small business lol

  • @patrickjean5811
    @patrickjean5811 10 месяцев назад

    Our hospitals in Province of Quebec still uses Faxes

  • @bjarnenilsson80
    @bjarnenilsson80 10 месяцев назад

    Yes legal professionals and pharmacists apparently, at least in the US as far as I've heard, regulations not keeping up with technology....

  • @allenmoyers4458
    @allenmoyers4458 10 месяцев назад

    Still have a fax machine at the hotel i work at. Its how we recieve crewfax reservations. And a crapload of advertising somehow.

  • @pr0engineer873
    @pr0engineer873 10 месяцев назад

    Early 2000s they started to be phased out. With the notable exception of doctors offices and lawyer firms.

  • @powermasters884
    @powermasters884 10 месяцев назад

    обратил внимание на отвертку, она великолепна!😊

  • @zebo-the-fat
    @zebo-the-fat 10 месяцев назад

    Until a couple of years ago I worked for a major copier/printer manufacturer, our machines had copy, print and scan as standard with fax as an option if needed (a lot of healthcare/doctors still use fax! (not uncommon for idiot customers to stick the phone connector into the network port and then complain that the printing didn't work!)

  • @stevenbartlett2057
    @stevenbartlett2057 10 месяцев назад

    Interesting,, im in NZ and of the 1980 mold.... far more familiar to me are printers that also 10:32 send faxes .... I'm sure I sent a fax about 10 years ago

  • @itsGeorgeAgain
    @itsGeorgeAgain 10 месяцев назад

    Even now i do get the random "If you can't email the details,send a fax." for government papers.

  • @der.Schtefan
    @der.Schtefan 10 месяцев назад

    Faxing in Japan is still mandatory for most official communications. I was surprised they never made Internet connected fax machines, where they start calling each other on the phone, exchange ip addresses and encryption keys via phone, and then just dump the data encrypted over the Internet.

    • @Rob2
      @Rob2 10 месяцев назад

      The "via the phone" is probably the weak part. The main reason why we do not have FAX anymore: we don't have analog phone lines anymore!
      But the idea of an "internet connected FAX machine" in itself is interesting, especially when it would work independently from the e-mail system.