Personal Laserwriter NTR and Leopard

I would really like to use my laserwriter with Leopard, but I can't seem to get it going. I have an asantetalk so I would be connecting the printer to the computer via the ethernet port. Is there any place that has step-by-step instructions in how to do this? I know the printer driver came with Leopard, but when I click add printer it shows up in the list but then when I try to print it prints to my Lexmark C510 laser printer. Does anyone have any suggestions? Thank you in advance! Cindy

Craig-
You are correct that Mac OS X does not come with a Postscript Rasterizer. But a Postscript level 2 printer does not need one (older printers like the ImageWriter certainly do). The computer sends postscript level 2 directly to the printer, and as long as the printer is level 2 or better, the printer rasterizes and images the pages itself without issue.
Using the asantetalk, the biggest issue is that the asantetalk does not re-acquire printers that disappear for any reason. I think the Farallon adapter is slightly better at this issue, but it sometimes has the same problem. The solution, described in the asantetalk documentation, is to guarantee that the asantetalk is powered up LAST, when everything else is stable and running.
So turn on the computer, turn on the printer, wait for the printer self-test lights to stop blinking, wait a little longer, then power up the asantetalk.
The phone cord you use must have all four conductors present. Sometimes you find one with only two. Check the plug for four brassy connector pins.
There is one more obscure issue that sometimes comes up with PhoneNet connectors. There should be something plugged into every phone jack. Where there is no cord to connect to the next device, there should be a "phone-jack mounted terminating resistor", a 120 Ohm resistor crimped into the outer pins on a phone plug. Genuine farallon ones had the resistor looped through a nylon washer.
To make a terminating resistor by hand, buy a surface mount wall jack with modular jack, a phone cord, and a 120 Ohm resistor. Connect the 120 Ohm resistor across the outer (Yellow and Black) lugs inside the wall jack. Plug it all together and you should be working great.

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    Message was edited by: Grant Bennet-Alder

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