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![]() Now we have a rig that will permit a person with no typing skills to send perfect RTTY I thought that was the punch tape reader Jeff |
#2
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On Nov 9, 6:57 am, "Jeff" wrote:
I thought that was the punch tape reader BWAAHAAHAAA - good one! -- Another neat RTTY trick involved paper tape. By using certain sequences of letters, the holes in the paper tape could be made to form letters and numbers. What was printed on the page looked like gibberish-with-a-pattern but if you looked at the tape the message was clear. Of course since it took several characters to make one letter, the effective speed on a 60 wpm machine was about 15-20 wpm. And there was no going back if you made a mistake. But the effect could be impressive to the uninitiated. 73 de Jim, N2EY ....remembering the smell of hot machine oil in the W3ABT room... |
#3
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On Nov 9, 11:12 am, wrote:
On Nov 9, 6:57 am, "Jeff" wrote: I thought that was the punch tape reader BWAAHAAHAAA - good one! -- Another neat RTTY trick involved paper tape. By using certain sequences of letters, the holes in the paper tape could be made to form letters and numbers. What was printed on the page looked like gibberish-with-a-pattern but if you looked at the tape the message was clear. Of course since it took several characters to make one letter, the effective speed on a 60 wpm machine was about 15-20 wpm. And there was no going back if you made a mistake. But the effect could be impressive to the uninitiated. 73 de Jim, N2EY ...remembering the smell of hot machine oil in the W3ABT room... I remember back-spacing and nulling out the mistake, then continuing. But I wasn't 10 years old, either. |
#4
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posted on Fri, 9 Nov 2007 10:12:59 EST:
On Nov 9, 6:57 am, "Jeff" wrote: Another neat RTTY trick involved paper tape. "Trick?" TTY p-tape was standard practice among the big guns in communications of the 1940s. Back then it was 60 WPM on a 24/7 basis...just keep them fed with paper, ink, and once in a while, some lubricant. Teletype Corporation made a fine piece of goods. Of course since it took several characters to make one letter, the effective speed on a 60 wpm machine was about 15-20 wpm. And there was no going back if you made a mistake. But the effect could be impressive to the uninitiated. TTY p-tape makes it possible to do an immediate re-send of the SAME message if a wire or radio circuit is blitzed by something. During WWII and afterwards it was the standard way at big hubs of networks that spread around the globe...be they military or commercial, the 'torn tape relay' rooms were big and efficient. ...remembering the smell of hot machine oil in the W3ABT room... I can easily remember an entire second floor at ADA's control center tape relay room of the early 1950s. Over 200 teleprinter machines busy working away 24/7. Impressive all by itself. And that was only the third-largest hub (RUAP) in the Army network then. 73, Len AF6AY |
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