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Hole punch

A hole punch, also known as hole puncher, or paper puncher, is an office tool that is used to create holes in sheets of paper, often for the purpose of collecting the sheets in a binder or folder (such collected sheets are called loose leaves). A hole punch can also refer to similar tools for other materials, such as leather, cloth, or plastic or metal sheets.

Three different international-standard two-hole punches

Mechanism edit

 
Mechanism of a typical hole punch

The essential parts of a hole punch are the handle, the punch head, and the die. The punch head is typically a cylinder, with a flat end called the face. The die is a flat plate, with a hole matching the head. The head can move, while the die is fixed in place. Both head and die are usually made of a hard metal, with precise tolerances. One or more sheets of paper are inserted between the head and the die, with the flat face of the head parallel to the surface of the sheets. Moving the handle pushes the head straight through the sheets of paper. The hard edge of the punch vs the die cuts a hole in the paper, pushing the cut piece out the bottom of the die. The cut-out bit of paper scrap is called a chad.

The handle functions as a lever, decreasing the amount of force the operator needs to apply. The travel distance of the cylinder is generally very short—the thickness of the paper sheets—so the cylinder can be positioned close to the lever fulcrum. For low-volume hole punches, the resulting lever handle need not be more than 8 centimetres (3.1 in) long for sufficient force. Hole punches for larger volumes of paper (hundreds of sheets) feature longer lever arms, but function similarly.

There are hole punches which punch patterns of multiple holes at once, typically for binding multiple sheets together (see § Applications). Such punches generally feature two paper guides for alignment. One guide will be along the side of the paper to be punched, and sets the distance of the holes from the edge of the paper (the margin or gutter). The other guide will be on a perpendicular side, and aligns the holes between the top and bottom of the sheet. One or both guides may be adjustable.

On multiple-hole punches, the positions of individual punch heads may also be adjustable. Commonly, one or more punch heads are mounted in independent fittings, which can slide along a rail. A set screw holds each fitting in position. There may be marks on the device to identify standard hole positions. There may be positions where a punch head will not make contact with the activating handle, allowing holes to be "turned off".

Some punch designs use hollow punch heads (a thin-walled tube), with the edge a sharpened blade. This allows the chads to be pushed up and out the top, as the paper is being cut, making it more suitable for thicker volumes of paper. For very large amounts of paper, a paper drill may be used instead of a punch.

Applications edit

Single-hole punches edit

 
Common handheld single-hole punch

A single-hole punch makes a single hole per activation, usually at an arbitrary position (i.e., without alignment guides).

Single-hole punches are often used to punch an admission ticket or other document to indicate it has been used or processed. A specialized ticket punch may be used for this purpose. Some ticket punches have a longer reach/depth (allowing for a particular spot on the ticket to be punched), or punch a particular shape instead of a round hole.

Single-hole punches are often used to punch holes through old playing cards at casinos, marking them as "used" or "canceled". This helps cut down on cheating by eliminating any cards that may have been tainted by players.

Single-hole punches are widely used in the British Civil Service where papers are punched with a single hole in the upper left, and secured using a treasury tag.

Single-hole punches can also be used for binding, with a single loose binding ring, although this is much less common than with ring binders.

Single-hole punches can also be used to make confetti for scrapbooks and other crafting.

Eyelet punch edit

 
Eyelet punch press

A related office tool is the eyelet punch. This is a single-hole punch which also crimps a metal fastening loop around the hole, similar to a rivet. It is used to permanently secure a few sheets of paper together.

A similar tool, generally known as a holing pincer, is used in animal husbandry. A common application is to attach an ear tag to a livestock animal.

Paper tape repair punch edit

Specialized hand-operated tape punches were used to perform small edits and repairs on punched paper tapes used for data entry into teletypes or early computers. Torn or damaged tapes were sometimes aligned with specialized jigs, spliced with special adhesive tape, and the holes encoding data were manually restored using such punches. The ASCII character code included a special DELETE or DEL character defined as all holes punched out (code 7F), allowing an erroneous character to be canceled by punching extra holes.

As punched tape technology became obsolescent in the 1980s, the manual tape repair tools became rare.

Multiple-hole punches edit

Multiple-hole punches typically place a pattern of holes along one edge of sheets of paper, allowing the pages to be bound together.

The most common use for multi-hole punched paper is with a ring binder. A book-like cover is fitted with retaining rings matching the pattern of the punched holes. The rings may be split open, paper sheets threaded onto them, and then the rings closed again.

A variety of hole patterns are in use for ring bindings. In much of the world, two-hole and four-hole punches consistent with ISO 838 are the norm. In the US, the three-hole punch is most common. See § Standards.

There are other binding techniques which use hole punching. Coil binding uses a spring-like coil, threaded into the punched holes. Comb binding uses a plastic strip with "fingers" that clip into the punched holes. Both use their own types of specialized hole punches. Comb binding typically punches 19 or 23 rectangular holes (for letter and A4 paper sizes, respectively).

Hole punch for discbound notebooks edit

A hole punch does not necessarily make round or square holes in a sheet of paper; instead, it may create certain shapes along the edge of the sheet. This is seen in discbound notebook systems, where loose leaves are bound together using plastic discs. For more information on loose leaf systems, see Loose leaf.

History edit

The origins of the hole punch date back to Germany; Friedrich Soennecken filed his patent on 14 November 1886, for his Papierlocher für Sammelmappen, a multiple-hole punch and office supply product.[1][2] A Google Doodle was used on 14 November 2017 to celebrate the 131st anniversary of the hole punch.[3]

The first record for a single-hole puncher—a ticket punch—was published in 1885, when Benjamin Smith helped create a spring-loaded hole puncher that had a receptacle to collect the chads. Smith dubbed it the "conductor's punch". A later paper punch was refined in 1893 by Charles Brooks, and it was referred to as a ticket punch due to its early role in punching train tickets as trains became increasingly popular and common between 1850 and 1900.[4]

Concerns have risen about the lifespan of the hole punch as most paper documents are now online, making the use of it irrelevant.

Standards edit

Multiple standards exist for the number and position of holes on multi-punched sheets.

International edit

ISO 838 edit

 
ISO 838 template

International Standard ISO 838 specifies two holes, with centers 80±0.5 mm apart, and located 12±1 mm from the nearest edge of the paper, and with the pair of holes positioned symmetrically along that edge. Each hole is to have a diameter of 6±0.5 mm. Any paper format that is at least 100 mm high can be filed using this system (e.g., ISO A7 and larger). A printed document with a margin of 20–25 mm will accommodate ISO 838 filing holes.

4-hole or 888 edit

A four-hole extension to ISO 838 is also in common use. Two holes are punched in accordance with the standard, plus two additional holes located 80 mm to the outside of the standard holes. The two additional holes provide more stability in 4-ring binders, while still allowing 4-hole paper to fit 2-ring binders. This extension is sometimes referred to as the "888" system, because of the three 8-cm gaps between the holes. (NB: Referring to this de-facto standard as "ISO 888" is inaccurate, since the actual ISO 888 standard concerns fasteners, not holes in paper.) Some 2-hole punches have an "888" marking on their paper guide, to assist punching all four holes into A4 paper.[5]

Konica Minolta specifies that for European 4-hole arrangements, all holes should be 11±1 mm from the nearest (i.e. long/spine) edge of the paper[6], which is slightly at variance with ISO 838's specification of 12±1 mm.

ANSI paper sizes edit

The United States and a few other countries use non-ISO paper standards, defined in ANSI/ASME Y14.1 and other intra-nation standards. Unlike ISO 838, there appears to be no well-established official specification for ANSI paper hole patterns, and instead they are de facto standards, established by custom and tradition.

The diameter of the holes varies between manufacturers, with typical values being 14 to 516 inch (6 to 8 mm). The 516 value is most commonly used, as it allows for looser tolerances in both ring binder and paper punching. The distance to the paper edge also varies, with 12 inch (13 mm) hole-center-to-edge being typical. Konica-Minolta specifies 9.5±1 mm[6] for both two and three-hole variants in North America.

US letter 3-hole system edit

For the US letter paper size (8+12 by 11 inches, 220 by 280 mm), a three-hole standard is widely used. The holes are positioned symmetrically, with the centers 4+14 inches (108 mm) apart. It requires paper formats that are at least 9+12 inches (241 mm) high. There is a variant for half-letter size pages (8+12 by 5+12 inches or 220 mm × 140 mm), whose three holes are 2+34 inches (70 mm) apart.

US legal 4-hole system edit

For US legal paper size (8+12 by 14 inches, 220 by 360 mm), a 4-hole system exists. It is still in use today, but is not as common as the 3-hole standard. The four holes are positioned symmetrically with centers 3+12 inches (89 mm) apart. The four binding positions provide more support for the longer 14-inch side of legal paper.

2-hole filebinder edit

 
Two-hole filebinder hole punch

Another standard also occasionally used in the US is a "filebinder" system. Its two holes are positioned symmetrically, each 2+34 inches (70 mm) apart from the center, i.e. 5+12 inches (140 mm) apart from each other. This matches the half-letter 3-hole system, except that the middle hole is omitted.

Swedish triohålning edit

 
Triohålning punch and punched paper

In Sweden, a four-hole national standard[7] is almost exclusively used. The centers of the holes are 21 mm, 70 mm and 21 mm apart, 10.5±0.5 mm from the edge of the paper. The guides help keep the paper in a straight line.

The official name of this four-hole system is triohålning, since it was adapted to the "Trio binder" which was awarded Swedish patent in 1890. The binder's inventor, Andreas Tengwall, supposedly named it after a consortium consisting of himself and two companions, i.e. a trio.[citation needed] The binder can be opened at any place while holding the papers in place, as the inner holes have guide pins from one side, the outer holes have pins from the other side.[clarification needed]

Others edit

  • The Filofax system uses six holes in two groups of three

Hole spacing chart edit

 
Commonly used hole patterns for hole punches and ring binders[8]

Gallery edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Xaver Frühbeis (14 November 2000), Renate von Walter (ed.), [Birthday of the Punch] (RTF) (in German), Bayerischer Rundfunk, archived from the original (RTF) on 2004-09-02
  2. ^ , Poppelsdorfer Heimatsammlung Stöcker, Photographs by Helmut Uessem, 2001-04-23, archived from the original on 2011-07-19, retrieved 2008-02-14{{citation}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  3. ^ 131st Anniversary of the Hole Puncher, Drawing by Gerben Steenks, 14 November 2017, from the original on 2021-08-20, retrieved 14 November 2017{{citation}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  4. ^ Clark Mindock (13 November 2017), "Hole punch history: How the world became more organised in a single thadumph", The Independent, from the original on 2020-04-21, retrieved 2021-12-22
  5. ^ Markus Kuhn (2018-07-13), International standard paper sizes, from the original on 2021-12-05, retrieved 2019-08-08, Not specified in ISO 838, but also widely used, is an upwards compatible 4-hole system. Its two middle holes correspond to ISO 838, plus there are two additional holes located 80 mm above and below these to provide for more stability. This way, sheets with four punched holes can also be filed in ISO 838 2-hole binders. This system is also known under the nickname "888", presumably because the three gaps between the holes are all 8 cm wide.
  6. ^ a b "PK-520 Punch Kit Installation Manual". Konica Minolta. p. E-4. A3ET-9550-01. Retrieved 2021-12-22.
  7. ^ SS 62 81 02: Dokumentförvaring – Fästhål för dokument [SS 62 81 02: Document Retention – Holes for Filing Purposes] (in Swedish), Svenska institutet för standarder [Swedish Institute for Standards], 2006-06-06, retrieved 2020-08-07
  8. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2013-11-26. Retrieved 2013-02-12.
  • US 313027 

External links edit

  •   Media related to hole punchers at Wikimedia Commons

hole, punch, this, article, about, tool, making, holes, paper, computer, networking, technique, networking, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, materi. This article is about the tool for making holes in paper For the computer networking technique see Hole punching networking This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Hole punch news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2007 Learn how and when to remove this message A hole punch also known as hole puncher or paper puncher is an office tool that is used to create holes in sheets of paper often for the purpose of collecting the sheets in a binder or folder such collected sheets are called loose leaves A hole punch can also refer to similar tools for other materials such as leather cloth or plastic or metal sheets Three different international standard two hole punches Contents 1 Mechanism 2 Applications 2 1 Single hole punches 2 1 1 Eyelet punch 2 1 2 Paper tape repair punch 2 2 Multiple hole punches 2 2 1 Hole punch for discbound notebooks 3 History 4 Standards 4 1 International 4 1 1 ISO 838 4 1 2 4 hole or 888 4 2 ANSI paper sizes 4 2 1 US letter 3 hole system 4 2 2 US legal 4 hole system 4 2 3 2 hole filebinder 4 3 Swedish triohalning 4 4 Others 4 5 Hole spacing chart 5 Gallery 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksMechanism edit nbsp Mechanism of a typical hole punch The essential parts of a hole punch are the handle the punch head and the die The punch head is typically a cylinder with a flat end called the face The die is a flat plate with a hole matching the head The head can move while the die is fixed in place Both head and die are usually made of a hard metal with precise tolerances One or more sheets of paper are inserted between the head and the die with the flat face of the head parallel to the surface of the sheets Moving the handle pushes the head straight through the sheets of paper The hard edge of the punch vs the die cuts a hole in the paper pushing the cut piece out the bottom of the die The cut out bit of paper scrap is called a chad The handle functions as a lever decreasing the amount of force the operator needs to apply The travel distance of the cylinder is generally very short the thickness of the paper sheets so the cylinder can be positioned close to the lever fulcrum For low volume hole punches the resulting lever handle need not be more than 8 centimetres 3 1 in long for sufficient force Hole punches for larger volumes of paper hundreds of sheets feature longer lever arms but function similarly There are hole punches which punch patterns of multiple holes at once typically for binding multiple sheets together see Applications Such punches generally feature two paper guides for alignment One guide will be along the side of the paper to be punched and sets the distance of the holes from the edge of the paper the margin or gutter The other guide will be on a perpendicular side and aligns the holes between the top and bottom of the sheet One or both guides may be adjustable On multiple hole punches the positions of individual punch heads may also be adjustable Commonly one or more punch heads are mounted in independent fittings which can slide along a rail A set screw holds each fitting in position There may be marks on the device to identify standard hole positions There may be positions where a punch head will not make contact with the activating handle allowing holes to be turned off Some punch designs use hollow punch heads a thin walled tube with the edge a sharpened blade This allows the chads to be pushed up and out the top as the paper is being cut making it more suitable for thicker volumes of paper For very large amounts of paper a paper drill may be used instead of a punch Applications editSingle hole punches edit nbsp Common handheld single hole punch A single hole punch makes a single hole per activation usually at an arbitrary position i e without alignment guides Single hole punches are often used to punch an admission ticket or other document to indicate it has been used or processed A specialized ticket punch may be used for this purpose Some ticket punches have a longer reach depth allowing for a particular spot on the ticket to be punched or punch a particular shape instead of a round hole Single hole punches are often used to punch holes through old playing cards at casinos marking them as used or canceled This helps cut down on cheating by eliminating any cards that may have been tainted by players Single hole punches are widely used in the British Civil Service where papers are punched with a single hole in the upper left and secured using a treasury tag Single hole punches can also be used for binding with a single loose binding ring although this is much less common than with ring binders Single hole punches can also be used to make confetti for scrapbooks and other crafting Eyelet punch edit nbsp Eyelet punch press A related office tool is the eyelet punch This is a single hole punch which also crimps a metal fastening loop around the hole similar to a rivet It is used to permanently secure a few sheets of paper together A similar tool generally known as a holing pincer is used in animal husbandry A common application is to attach an ear tag to a livestock animal Paper tape repair punch edit Specialized hand operated tape punches were used to perform small edits and repairs on punched paper tapes used for data entry into teletypes or early computers Torn or damaged tapes were sometimes aligned with specialized jigs spliced with special adhesive tape and the holes encoding data were manually restored using such punches The ASCII character code included a special DELETE or DEL character defined as all holes punched out code 7F allowing an erroneous character to be canceled by punching extra holes As punched tape technology became obsolescent in the 1980s the manual tape repair tools became rare Multiple hole punches edit Multiple hole punches typically place a pattern of holes along one edge of sheets of paper allowing the pages to be bound together The most common use for multi hole punched paper is with a ring binder A book like cover is fitted with retaining rings matching the pattern of the punched holes The rings may be split open paper sheets threaded onto them and then the rings closed again A variety of hole patterns are in use for ring bindings In much of the world two hole and four hole punches consistent with ISO 838 are the norm In the US the three hole punch is most common See Standards There are other binding techniques which use hole punching Coil binding uses a spring like coil threaded into the punched holes Comb binding uses a plastic strip with fingers that clip into the punched holes Both use their own types of specialized hole punches Comb binding typically punches 19 or 23 rectangular holes for letter and A4 paper sizes respectively nbsp German four hole punch nbsp 23 hole punch Hole punch for discbound notebooks editA hole punch does not necessarily make round or square holes in a sheet of paper instead it may create certain shapes along the edge of the sheet This is seen in discbound notebook systems where loose leaves are bound together using plastic discs For more information on loose leaf systems see Loose leaf nbsp ARC hole punch for ARC discbound notebook system nbsp Binder based and discbound loose leaf systemsHistory editThe origins of the hole punch date back to Germany Friedrich Soennecken filed his patent on 14 November 1886 for his Papierlocher fur Sammelmappen a multiple hole punch and office supply product 1 2 A Google Doodle was used on 14 November 2017 to celebrate the 131st anniversary of the hole punch 3 The first record for a single hole puncher a ticket punch was published in 1885 when Benjamin Smith helped create a spring loaded hole puncher that had a receptacle to collect the chads Smith dubbed it the conductor s punch A later paper punch was refined in 1893 by Charles Brooks and it was referred to as a ticket punch due to its early role in punching train tickets as trains became increasingly popular and common between 1850 and 1900 4 Concerns have risen about the lifespan of the hole punch as most paper documents are now online making the use of it irrelevant Standards editMultiple standards exist for the number and position of holes on multi punched sheets International edit ISO 838 edit nbsp ISO 838 template International Standard ISO 838 specifies two holes with centers 80 0 5 mm apart and located 12 1 mm from the nearest edge of the paper and with the pair of holes positioned symmetrically along that edge Each hole is to have a diameter of 6 0 5 mm Any paper format that is at least 100 mm high can be filed using this system e g ISO A7 and larger A printed document with a margin of 20 25 mm will accommodate ISO 838 filing holes 4 hole or 888 edit A four hole extension to ISO 838 is also in common use Two holes are punched in accordance with the standard plus two additional holes located 80 mm to the outside of the standard holes The two additional holes provide more stability in 4 ring binders while still allowing 4 hole paper to fit 2 ring binders This extension is sometimes referred to as the 888 system because of the three 8 cm gaps between the holes NB Referring to this de facto standard as ISO 888 is inaccurate since the actual ISO 888 standard concerns fasteners not holes in paper Some 2 hole punches have an 888 marking on their paper guide to assist punching all four holes into A4 paper 5 Konica Minolta specifies that for European 4 hole arrangements all holes should be 11 1 mm from the nearest i e long spine edge of the paper 6 which is slightly at variance with ISO 838 s specification of 12 1 mm ANSI paper sizes edit The United States and a few other countries use non ISO paper standards defined in ANSI ASME Y14 1 and other intra nation standards Unlike ISO 838 there appears to be no well established official specification for ANSI paper hole patterns and instead they are de facto standards established by custom and tradition The diameter of the holes varies between manufacturers with typical values being 1 4 to 5 16 inch 6 to 8 mm The 5 16 value is most commonly used as it allows for looser tolerances in both ring binder and paper punching The distance to the paper edge also varies with 1 2 inch 13 mm hole center to edge being typical Konica Minolta specifies 9 5 1 mm 6 for both two and three hole variants in North America US letter 3 hole system edit For the US letter paper size 8 1 2 by 11 inches 220 by 280 mm a three hole standard is widely used The holes are positioned symmetrically with the centers 4 1 4 inches 108 mm apart It requires paper formats that are at least 9 1 2 inches 241 mm high There is a variant for half letter size pages 8 1 2 by 5 1 2 inches or 220 mm 140 mm whose three holes are 2 3 4 inches 70 mm apart US legal 4 hole system edit For US legal paper size 8 1 2 by 14 inches 220 by 360 mm a 4 hole system exists It is still in use today but is not as common as the 3 hole standard The four holes are positioned symmetrically with centers 3 1 2 inches 89 mm apart The four binding positions provide more support for the longer 14 inch side of legal paper 2 hole filebinder edit nbsp Two hole filebinder hole punch Another standard also occasionally used in the US is a filebinder system Its two holes are positioned symmetrically each 2 3 4 inches 70 mm apart from the center i e 5 1 2 inches 140 mm apart from each other This matches the half letter 3 hole system except that the middle hole is omitted Swedish triohalning edit nbsp Triohalning punch and punched paper In Sweden a four hole national standard 7 is almost exclusively used The centers of the holes are 21 mm 70 mm and 21 mm apart 10 5 0 5 mm from the edge of the paper The guides help keep the paper in a straight line The official name of this four hole system is triohalning since it was adapted to the Trio binder which was awarded Swedish patent in 1890 The binder s inventor Andreas Tengwall supposedly named it after a consortium consisting of himself and two companions i e a trio citation needed The binder can be opened at any place while holding the papers in place as the inner holes have guide pins from one side the outer holes have pins from the other side clarification needed Others edit The Filofax system uses six holes in two groups of three Hole spacing chart edit nbsp Commonly used hole patterns for hole punches and ring binders 8 Gallery edit nbsp Antique Soennecken hole punch nbsp Antique heavy duty Soennecken hole punch nbsp Swedish hole punch nbsp German Leitz hole punch nbsp Japanese single hole punch nbsp Closeup of punch with blue plastic chad collector nbsp Single hole punch for paper nbsp Paper punched with 7 holes in a 4 ring binder nbsp A hole punch in useSee also editTicket punch Needle punch Chad paper Paper drilling Ring binder Loose leaf Punched card Punched tape PunchingReferences edit Xaver Fruhbeis 14 November 2000 Renate von Walter ed Geburtstag des Lochers Birthday of the Punch RTF in German Bayerischer Rundfunk archived from the original RTF on 2004 09 02 Soennecken Poppelsdorfer Heimatsammlung Stocker Photographs by Helmut Uessem 2001 04 23 archived from the original on 2011 07 19 retrieved 2008 02 14 a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint others link 131st Anniversary of the Hole Puncher Drawing by Gerben Steenks 14 November 2017 archived from the original on 2021 08 20 retrieved 14 November 2017 a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint others link Clark Mindock 13 November 2017 Hole punch history How the world became more organised in a single thadumph The Independent archived from the original on 2020 04 21 retrieved 2021 12 22 Markus Kuhn 2018 07 13 International standard paper sizes archived from the original on 2021 12 05 retrieved 2019 08 08 Not specified in ISO 838 but also widely used is an upwards compatible 4 hole system Its two middle holes correspond to ISO 838 plus there are two additional holes located 80 mm above and below these to provide for more stability This way sheets with four punched holes can also be filed in ISO 838 2 hole binders This system is also known under the nickname 888 presumably because the three gaps between the holes are all 8 cm wide a b PK 520 Punch Kit Installation Manual Konica Minolta p E 4 A3ET 9550 01 Retrieved 2021 12 22 SS 62 81 02 Dokumentforvaring Fasthal for dokument SS 62 81 02 Document Retention Holes for Filing Purposes in Swedish Svenska institutet for standarder Swedish Institute for Standards 2006 06 06 retrieved 2020 08 07 Appleton Standard Layout PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2013 11 26 Retrieved 2013 02 12 US 313027 External links edit nbsp Media related to hole punchers at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hole punch amp oldid 1222018361, 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