Plotting to Restore a r0tring CS-50

Plotting to Restore a r0tring CS-50

If you’re of a certain vintage and have ever done any technical drawing, chances are good that you used a r0tring of some kind, be it pencil or pen. Well, r0tring makes more than writing implements.  They also made electronic scribers — a small plotter that pens ISO lettering on technical drawings based on typed input. This was a huge time saver over doing it freehand or stenciling each letter. The CS-50 is designed to hold the top-of-the-line r0tring drawing pen, which turned out to be the most expensive part of this restoration aside from the time spent sniffing out issues.


[Atkelar] likes to open things up and give them a visual inspection before powering them on. We think this is good practice, even if the suspense kills you. But really, [Atkelar] did so much more than that. He started by replacing the likely late-80s-era coin cell even though it registered north of 3 V. Then he swapped out all the electrolytic caps and one tantalum, cleaned the rubber dome keyboard parts with a cheap electric toothbrush, (another great idea), and completely disassembled the x-y mechanism to clean and re-oil it.



Glue boss!

Then came the moment of truth. The input works and shows up on the screen, but the steppers don’t move. The waveform from the motors looked good, but seemed to be over voltage by about 3 V. Although [Atkelar] couldn’t find a manual online, he did find a blog post about this machine that confirmed 15 V on the steppers is right.


As it turns out, there was a ground issue. Th ..

Support the originator by clicking the read the rest link below.