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Wikipedia

Teleprinter

A teleprinter (teletypewriter, teletype or TTY) is an electromechanical device that can be used to send and receive typed messages through various communications channels, in both point-to-point and point-to-multipoint configurations.

Teletype teleprinters in use in England during World War II
Example of teleprinter art: a portrait of Dag Hammarskjöld, 1962

Initially, from 1887 at the earliest, teleprinters were used in telegraphy.[1] Electrical telegraphy had been developed decades earlier in the late 1830s and 1840s,[2] then using simpler Morse key equipment and telegraph operators. The introduction of teleprinters automated much of this work and eventually largely replaced skilled operators versed in Morse code with typists and machines communicating faster via Baudot code.

With the development of early computers in the 1950s,[3] teleprinters were adapted to allow typed data to be sent to a computer, and responses printed. Some teleprinter models could also be used to create punched tape for data storage (either from typed input or from data received from a remote source) and to read back such tape for local printing or transmission. A teleprinter attached to a modem could also communicate through telephone lines. This latter configuration was often used to connect teleprinters to remote computers, particularly in time-sharing environments.

Teleprinters have largely been replaced by fully electronic computer terminals which typically have a computer monitor instead of a printer (though the term "TTY" is still occasionally used to refer to them, such as in Unix systems). Teleprinters are still widely used in the aviation industry (see AFTN and airline teletype system),[4] and variants called Telecommunications Devices for the Deaf (TDDs) are used by the hearing impaired for typed communications over ordinary telephone lines.

History edit

The teleprinter evolved through a series of inventions by a number of engineers, including Samuel Morse, Alexander Bain, Royal Earl House, David Edward Hughes, Emile Baudot, Donald Murray, Charles L. Krum, Edward Kleinschmidt and Frederick G. Creed. Teleprinters were invented in order to send and receive messages without the need for operators trained in the use of Morse code. A system of two teleprinters, with one operator trained to use a keyboard, replaced two trained Morse code operators. The teleprinter system improved message speed and delivery time, making it possible for messages to be flashed across a country with little manual intervention.[5]

There were a number of parallel developments on both sides of the Atlantic Ocean. In 1835 Samuel Morse devised a recording telegraph, and Morse code was born.[6] Morse's instrument used a current to displace the armature of an electromagnet, which moved a marker, therefore recording the breaks in the current. Cooke & Wheatstone received a British patent covering telegraphy in 1837 and a second one in 1840 which described a type-printing telegraph with steel type fixed at the tips of petals of a rotating brass daisy-wheel, struck by an "electric hammer" to print Roman letters through carbon paper onto a moving paper tape.[7] In 1841 Alexander Bain devised an electromagnetic printing telegraph machine. It used pulses of electricity created by rotating a dial over contact points to release and stop a type-wheel turned by weight-driven clockwork; a second clockwork mechanism rotated a drum covered with a sheet of paper and moved it slowly upwards so that the type-wheel printed its signals in a spiral. The critical issue was to have the sending and receiving elements working synchronously. Bain attempted to achieve this using centrifugal governors to closely regulate the speed of the clockwork. It was patented, along with other devices, on April 21, 1841.[8]

By 1846, the Morse telegraph service was operational between Washington, D.C., and New York. Royal Earl House patented his printing telegraph that same year. He linked two 28-key piano-style keyboards by wire. Each piano key represented a letter of the alphabet and when pressed caused the corresponding letter to print at the receiving end. A "shift" key gave each main key two optional values. A 56-character typewheel at the sending end was synchronised to coincide with a similar wheel at the receiving end. If the key corresponding to a particular character was pressed at the home station, it actuated the typewheel at the distant station just as the same character moved into the printing position, in a way similar to the (much later) daisy wheel printer. It was thus an example of a synchronous data transmission system. House's equipment could transmit around 40 instantly readable words per minute, but was difficult to manufacture in bulk. The printer could copy and print out up to 2,000 words per hour. This invention was first put in operation and exhibited at the Mechanics Institute in New York in 1844.

Landline teleprinter operations began in 1849, when a circuit was put in service between Philadelphia and New York City.[9]

 
Hughes telegraph, an early (1855) teleprinter built by Siemens and Halske. The centrifugal governor to achieve synchronicity with the other end can be seen.

In 1855, David Edward Hughes introduced an improved machine built on the work of Royal Earl House. In less than two years, a number of small telegraph companies, including Western Union in early stages of development, united to form one large corporation – Western Union Telegraph Co. – to carry on the business of telegraphy on the Hughes system.[10]

In France, Émile Baudot designed in 1874 a system using a five-unit code, which began to be used extensively in that country from 1877. The British Post Office adopted the Baudot system for use on a simplex circuit between London and Paris in 1897, and subsequently made considerable use of duplex Baudot systems on their Inland Telegraph Services.[11]

During 1901, Baudot's code was modified by Donald Murray (1865–1945, originally from New Zealand), prompted by his development of a typewriter-like keyboard. The Murray system employed an intermediate step, a keyboard perforator, which allowed an operator to punch a paper tape, and a tape transmitter for sending the message from the punched tape. At the receiving end of the line, a printing mechanism would print on a paper tape, and/or a reperforator could be used to make a perforated copy of the message.[12] As there was no longer a direct correlation between the operator's hand movement and the bits transmitted, there was no concern about arranging the code to minimize operator fatigue, and instead Murray designed the code to minimize wear on the machinery, assigning the code combinations with the fewest punched holes to the most frequently used characters. The Murray code also introduced what became known as "format effectors" or "control characters" – the CR (Carriage Return) and LF (Line Feed) codes. A few of Baudot's codes moved to the positions where they have stayed ever since: the NULL or BLANK and the DEL code. NULL/BLANK was used as an idle code for when no messages were being sent.[5]

In the United States in 1902, electrical engineer Frank Pearne approached Joy Morton, head of Morton Salt, seeking a sponsor for research into the practicalities of developing a printing telegraph system. Joy Morton needed to determine whether this was worthwhile and so consulted mechanical engineer Charles L. Krum, who was vice president of the Western Cold Storage Company. Krum was interested in helping Pearne, so space was set up in a laboratory in the attic of Western Cold Storage. Frank Pearne lost interest in the project after a year and left to get involved in teaching. Krum was prepared to continue Pearne’s work, and in August, 1903 a patent was filed for a 'typebar page printer'.[13] In 1904, Krum filed a patent for a 'type wheel printing telegraph machine'[14] which was issued in August, 1907. In 1906 Charles Krum's son, Howard Krum, joined his father in this work. It was Howard who developed and patented the start-stop synchronizing method for code telegraph systems, which made possible the practical teleprinter.[15]

In 1908, a working teleprinter was produced by the Morkrum Company (formed between Joy Morton and Charles Krum), called the Morkrum Printing Telegraph, which was field tested with the Alton Railroad. In 1910, the Morkrum Company designed and installed the first commercial teletypewriter system on Postal Telegraph Company lines between Boston and New York City using the "Blue Code Version" of the Morkrum Printing Telegraph.[16][17]

In 1916, Edward Kleinschmidt filed a patent application for a typebar page printer.[18] In 1919, shortly after the Morkrum company obtained their patent for a start-stop synchronizing method for code telegraph systems, which made possible the practical teleprinter, Kleinschmidt filed an application titled "Method of and Apparatus for Operating Printing Telegraphs"[19] which included an improved start-stop method.[20] The basic start-stop procedure, however, is much older than the Kleinschmidt and Morkrum inventions. It was already proposed by D'Arlincourt in 1870.[21]

 
Siemens t37h (1933) without cover

Instead of wasting time and money in patent disputes on the start-stop method, Kleinschmidt and the Morkrum Company decided to merge and form the Morkrum-Kleinschmidt Company in 1924. The new company combined the best features of both their machines into a new typewheel printer for which Kleinschmidt, Howard Krum, and Sterling Morton jointly obtained a patent.[20]

In 1924 Britain's Creed & Company, founded by Frederick G. Creed, entered the teleprinter field with their Model 1P, a page printer, which was soon superseded by the improved Model 2P. In 1925 Creed acquired the patents for Donald Murray's Murray code, a rationalised Baudot code. The Model 3 tape printer, Creed’s first combined start-stop machine, was introduced in 1927 for the Post Office telegram service. This machine printed received messages directly on to gummed paper tape at a rate of 65 words per minute. Creed created his first keyboard perforator, which used compressed air to punch the holes. He also created a reperforator (receiving perforator) and a printer. The reperforator punched incoming Morse signals on to paper tape and the printer decoded this tape to produce alphanumeric characters on plain paper. This was the origin of the Creed High Speed Automatic Printing System, which could run at an unprecedented 200 words per minute. His system was adopted by the Daily Mail for daily transmission of the newspaper's contents. The Creed Model 7 page printing teleprinter was introduced in 1931 and was used for the inland Telex service. It worked at a speed of 50 baud, about 66 words a minute, using a code based on the Murray code.[citation needed]

A teleprinter system was installed in the Bureau of Lighthouses, Airways Division, Flight Service Station Airway Radio Stations system in 1928, carrying administrative messages, flight information and weather reports.[22] By 1938, the teleprinter network, handling weather traffic, extended over 20,000 miles, covering all 48 states except Maine, New Hampshire, and South Dakota.[23]

Ways in which teleprinters were used edit

Teleprinters could use a variety of different communication channels. These included a simple pair of wires, public switched telephone networks, dedicated non-switched telephone circuits (leased lines), switched networks that operated similarly to the public telephone network (telex), and radio and microwave links (telex-on-radio, or TOR).

There were at least five major types of teleprinter networks:

  • Exchange systems such as Telex and TWX created a real-time circuit between two machines, so that anything typed on one machine appeared at the other end immediately. US and UK systems had telephone dials, and prior to 1981 five North American Numbering Plan (NANPA) area codes were reserved for teleprinter use. German systems did "dialing" via the keyboard. Typed "chat" was possible, but because billing was by connect time, it was common to prepare messages in advance on paper tape and transmit them without pauses for typing.
  • Leased line and radioteletype networks arranged in point-to-point and / or multipoint configurations supported data processing applications for government and industry, such as integrating the accounting, billing, management, production, purchasing, sales, shipping and receiving departments within an organization to speed internal communications.
  • Message switching systems were an early form of E-mail, using electromechanical equipment. See Telegram, Western Union, Plan 55-A. Military organizations had similar but separate systems, such as Autodin.
  • Broadcast systems such as weather information distribution and "news wires", which were received on "wire machines".[24] Examples were operated by Associated Press, National Weather Service, Reuters, and United Press (later UPI). Information was printed on receive-only teleprinters, without keyboards or dials.
  • "Loop" systems, where anything typed on any machine on the loop printed on all the machines. American police departments used such systems to interconnect precincts.[25]

Before the computer revolution (and information processing performance improvements thanks to Moore's law) made it possible to securely encrypt voice and video calls, teleprinters were long used in combination with electromechanical or electronic cryptographic devices to provide secure communication channels. Being limited to text only was an acceptable trade-off for security.

Teleprinter operation edit

 
Keyboard of a Baudot teleprinter, with 32 keys, including the space bar
 
International Telegraph Alphabet No. 2 development of the Baudot–Murray code

Most teleprinters used the 5-bit International Telegraph Alphabet No. 2 (ITA2). This was limited to 32 codes (25 = 32). One had to use "FIGS" (for "figures") and "LTRS" (for "letters") keys to shift state, for a combined character set sufficient to type both letters and numbers, as well as some special characters. (The letters were uppercase only.) Special versions of teleprinters had FIGS characters for specific applications, such as weather symbols for weather reports. Print quality was poor by modern standards. The ITA2 code was used asynchronously with start and stop bits: the asynchronous code design was intimately linked with the start-stop electro-mechanical design of teleprinters. (Early systems had used synchronous codes, but were hard to synchronize mechanically). Other codes, such as FIELDATA and Flexowriter, were introduced but never became as popular as ITA2.

Mark and space are terms describing logic levels in teleprinter circuits. The native mode of communication for a teleprinter is a simple series DC circuit that is interrupted, much as a rotary dial interrupts a telephone signal. The marking condition is when the circuit is closed (current is flowing), the spacing condition is when the circuit is open (no current is flowing). The "idle" condition of the circuit is a continuous marking state, with the start of a character signalled by a "start bit", which is always a space. Following the start bit, the character is represented by a fixed number of bits, such as 5 bits in the ITA2 code, each either a mark or a space to denote the specific character or machine function. After the character's bits, the sending machine sends one or more stop bits. The stop bits are marking, so as to be distinct from the subsequent start bit. If the sender has nothing more to send, the line simply remains in the marking state (as if a continuing series of stop bits) until a later space denotes the start of the next character. The time between characters need not be an integral multiple of a bit time, but it must be at least the minimum number of stop bits required by the receiving machine.

When the line is broken, the continuous spacing (open circuit, no current flowing) causes a receiving teleprinter to cycle continuously, even in the absence of stop bits. It prints nothing because the characters received are all zeros, the ITA2 blank (or ASCII) null character.

Teleprinter circuits were generally leased from a communications common carrier and consisted of ordinary telephone cables that extended from the teleprinter located at the customer location to the common carrier central office. These teleprinter circuits were connected to switching equipment at the central office for Telex and TWX service. Private line teleprinter circuits were not directly connected to switching equipment. Instead, these private line circuits were connected to network hubs and repeaters configured to provide point to point or point to multipoint service. More than two teleprinters could be connected to the same wire circuit by means of a current loop.

Earlier teleprinters had three rows of keys and only supported upper case letters. They used the 5 bit ITA2 code and generally worked at 60 to 100 words per minute. Later teleprinters, specifically the Teletype Model 33, used ASCII code, an innovation that came into widespread use in the 1960s as computers became more widely available.

"Speed", intended to be roughly comparable to words per minute, is the standard term introduced by Western Union for a mechanical teleprinter data transmission rate using the 5-bit ITA2 code that was popular in the 1940s and for several decades thereafter. Such a machine would send 1 start bit, 5 data bits, and 1.42 stop bits. This unusual stop bit time is actually a rest period to allow the mechanical printing mechanism to synchronize in the event that a garbled signal is received.[26] This is true especially on high frequency radio circuits where selective fading is present. Selective fading causes the mark signal amplitude to be randomly different from the space signal amplitude. Selective fading, or Rayleigh fading can cause two carriers to randomly and independently fade to different depths.[27] Since modern computer equipment cannot easily generate 1.42 bits for the stop period, common practice is to either approximate this with 1.5 bits, or to send 2.0 bits while accepting 1.0 bits receiving.

For example, a "60 speed" machine is geared at 45.5 baud (22.0 ms per bit), a "66 speed" machine is geared at 50.0 baud (20.0 ms per bit), a "75 speed" machine is geared at 56.9 baud (17.5 ms per bit), a "100 speed" machine is geared at 74.2 baud (13.5 ms per bit), and a "133 speed" machine is geared at 100.0 baud (10.0 ms per bit). 60 speed became the de facto standard for amateur radio RTTY operation because of the widespread availability of equipment at that speed and the U.S. Federal Communications Commission (FCC) restrictions to only 60 speed from 1953 to 1972. Telex, news agency wires and similar services commonly used 66 speed services. There was some migration to 75 and 100 speed as more reliable devices were introduced. However, the limitations of HF transmission such as excessive error rates due to multipath distortion and the nature of ionospheric propagation kept many users at 60 and 66 speed. Most audio recordings in existence today are of teleprinters operating at 60 words per minute, and mostly of the Teletype Model 15.

Another measure of the speed of a teletypewriter was in total "operations per minute (OPM)". For example, 60 speed was usually 368 OPM, 66 speed was 404 OPM, 75 speed was 460 OPM, and 100 speed was 600 OPM. Western Union Telexes were usually set at 390 OPM, with 7.0 total bits instead of the customary 7.42 bits.

Both wire-service and private teleprinters had bells to signal important incoming messages and could ring 24/7 while the power was turned on. For example, ringing 4 bells on UPI wire-service machines meant an "Urgent" message; 5 bells was a "Bulletin"; and 10 bells was a FLASH, used only for very important news.

The teleprinter circuit was often linked to a 5-bit paper tape punch (or "reperforator") and reader, allowing messages received to be resent on another circuit. Complex military and commercial communications networks were built using this technology. Message centers had rows of teleprinters and large racks for paper tapes awaiting transmission. Skilled operators could read the priority code from the hole pattern and might even feed a "FLASH PRIORITY" tape into a reader while it was still coming out of the punch. Routine traffic often had to wait hours for relay. Many teleprinters had built-in paper tape readers and punches, allowing messages to be saved in machine-readable form and edited off-line.

Communication by radio, known as radioteletype or RTTY (pronounced ritty), was also common, especially among military users. Ships, command posts (mobile, stationary, and even airborne) and logistics units took advantage of the ability of operators to send reliable and accurate information with a minimum of training. Amateur radio operators continue to use this mode of communication today, though most use computer-interface sound generators, rather than legacy hardware teleprinter equipment. Numerous modes are in use within the "ham radio" community, from the original ITA2 format to more modern, faster modes, which include error-checking of characters.

Control characters edit

A typewriter or electromechanical printer can print characters on paper, and execute operations such as move the carriage back to the left margin of the same line (carriage return), advance to the same column of the next line (line feed), and so on. Commands to control non-printing operations were transmitted in exactly the same way as printable characters by sending control characters with defined functions (e.g., the line feed character forced the carriage to move to the same position on the next line) to teleprinters. In modern computing and communications a few control characters, such as carriage return and line feed, have retained their original functions (although they are often implemented in software rather than activating electromechanical mechanisms to move a physical printer carriage) but many others are no longer required and are used for other purposes.

Answer back mechanism edit

Some teleprinters had a "Here is" key, which transmitted a fixed sequence of 20 or 22 characters, programmable by breaking tabs off a drum. This sequence could also be transmitted automatically upon receipt of an ENQ (control E) signal, if enabled.[28][29] This was commonly used to identify a station; the operator could press the key to send the station identifier to the other end, or the remote station could trigger its transmission by sending the ENQ character, essentially asking "who are you?"

Manufacturers edit

Creed & Company edit

 
A Creed & Company Teleprinter No. 7 in 1930

British Creed & Company built teleprinters for the GPO's teleprinter service.[30]

  • Creed model 7 (page printing teleprinter introduced in 1931)
  • Creed model 7B (50 baud page printing teleprinter)
  • Creed model 7E (page printing teleprinter with overlap cam and range finder)
  • Creed model 7/TR (non-printing teleprinter reperforator)
  • Creed model 54 (page printing teleprinter introduced in 1954)
  • Creed model 75 (page printing teleprinter introduced in 1958)
  • Creed model 85 (printing reperforator introduced in 1948)
  • Creed model 86 (printing reperforator using 7/8" wide tape)
  • Creed model 444 (page printing teleprinter introduced in 1966, GPO type 15)

Gretag edit

The Gretag ETK-47 teleprinter developed in Switzerland by Edgar Gretener in 1947 uses a 14-bit start-stop transmission method similar to the 5-bit code used by other teleprinters. However, instead of a more-or-less arbitrary mapping between 5-bit codes and letters in the Latin alphabet, all characters (letters, digits, and punctuation) printed by the ETK are built from 14 basic elements on a print head, very similar to the 14 elements on a modern fourteen-segment display, each one selected independently by one of the 14 bits during transmission. Because it does not use a fixed character set, but instead builds up characters from smaller elements, the ETK printing element does not require modification to switch between Latin, Cyrillic, and Greek characters.[31][32][33][34]

Kleinschmidt Labs edit

In 1931, American inventor Edward Kleinschmidt formed Kleinschmidt Labs to pursue a different design of teleprinter. In 1944 Kleinschmidt demonstrated their lightweight unit to the Signal Corps and in 1949 their design was adopted for the Army's portable needs. In 1956, Kleinschmidt Labs merged with Smith-Corona, which then merged with the Marchant Calculating Machine Co., forming the SCM Corporation. By 1979, the Kleinschmidt division was turning to Electronic Data Interchange and away from mechanical products.

Kleinschmidt machines, with the military as their primary customer, used standard military designations for their machines. The teleprinter was identified with designations such as a TT-4/FG, while communication "sets" to which a teleprinter might be a part generally used the standard Army/Navy designation system such as AN/FGC-25. This includes Kleinschmidt teleprinter TT-117/FG and tape reperforator TT-179/FG.

Morkrum edit

Morkrum made their first commercial installation of a printing telegraph with the Postal Telegraph Company in Boston and New York in 1910.[35] It became popular with railroads, and the Associated Press adopted it in 1914 for their wire service.[16][36] Morkrum merged with their competitor Kleinschmidt Electric Company to become Morkrum-Kleinschmidt Corporation shortly before being renamed the Teletype Corporation.[37][38]

Olivetti edit

 
Olivetti Teleprinter

Italian office equipment maker Olivetti (est. 1908) started to manufacture teleprinters in order to provide Italian post offices with modern equipment to send and receive telegrams. The first models typed on a paper ribbon, which was then cut and glued into telegram forms.

  • Olivetti T1 (1938–1948)
  • Olivetti T2 (1948–1968)
  • Olivetti Te300 (1968–1975)
  • Olivetti Te400 (1975–1991)

Siemens & Halske edit

 
Siemens Fernschreiber 100 teleprinter

Siemens & Halske, later Siemens AG, a German company, founded in 1847.

  • Teleprinter Model 100 Ser 1 (end of the 1950s) – Used for Telex service[37]
  • Teleprinter Model 100 Ser. 11 – Later version with minor changes
  • Teleprinter Model T100 ND (single current) NDL (double current) models
  • Teleprinter Model T 150 (electromechanical)
  • Offline tape punch for creating messages
  • Teleprinter T 1000 electronic teleprinter (processor based) 50-75-100 Bd. Tape punch and reader attachments ND/NDL/SEU V21modem model
  • Teleprinter T 1000 Receive only units as used by newsrooms for unedited SAPA/Reuters/AP feeds etc.
  • Teleprinter T 1200 electronic teleprinter (processor based) 50-75-100-200 Bd.Green LED text display, 1.44M 3.5" floppy disk ("stiffy") attachment
  • PC-Telex Teleprinter with dedicated dot matrix printer Connected to IBM compatible PC (as used by Telkom South Africa)
  • T4200 Teletex Teleprinter With two floppy disc drives and black and white monitor/daisy wheel typewriter (DOS2)

Teletype Corporation edit

 
A Teletype Model 33 ASR teleprinter, with punched tape reader and punch, usable as a computer terminal

The Teletype Corporation, a part of American Telephone and Telegraph Company's Western Electric manufacturing arm since 1930, was founded in 1906 as the Morkrum Company. In 1925, a merger between Morkrum and Kleinschmidt Electric Company created the Morkrum-Kleinschmidt Company. The name was changed in December 1928 to Teletype Corporation. In 1930, Teletype Corporation was purchased by the American Telephone and Telegraph Company and became a subsidiary of Western Electric. In 1984, the divestiture of the Bell System resulted in the Teletype name and logo being replaced by the AT&T name and logo, eventually resulting in the brand being extinguished.[39] The last vestiges of what had been the Teletype Corporation ceased in 1990, bringing to a close the dedicated teleprinter business. Despite its long-lasting trademark status, the word Teletype went into common generic usage in the news and telecommunications industries. Records of the United States Patent and Trademark Office indicate the trademark has expired and is considered dead.[40]

Teletype machines tended to be large, heavy, and extremely robust, capable of running non-stop for months at a time if properly lubricated.[41] The Model 15 stands out as one of a few machines that remained in production for many years. It was introduced in 1930 and remained in production until 1963, a total of 33 years of continuous production. Very few complex machines can match that record. The production run was stretched somewhat by World War II—the Model 28 was scheduled to replace the Model 15 in the mid-1940s, but Teletype built so many factories to produce the Model 15 during World War II, it was more economical to continue mass production of the Model 15. The Model 15, in its receive only, no keyboard, version was the classic "news Teletype" for decades.

  • Model 15 = Baudot version, 45 Baud, optional tape punch and reader
  • Model 28 = Baudot version, 45-50-56-75 Baud, optional tape punch and reader
  • Model 32 = small lightweight machine (cheap production) 45-50-56-75 Baud, optional tape punch and reader
  • Model 33 = same as Model 32 but for 8 level ASCII-plus-parity-bit, used as computer terminal, optional tape punch and reader, 72 char./line.[42]
  • Model 35 = same as Model 28 but for 8 level ASCII-plus-parity-bit, used as heavy-duty computer terminal, optional tape punch and reader
  • Model 37 = improved version of the Model 35, higher speeds up to 150 Baud, optional tape punch and reader
  • Model 38 = similar to Model 33, but for 132 char./line paper (14 inches wide), optional tape punch and reader
  • Model 40 = new system processor based, w/ monitor screen, but mechanical "chain printer"
  • Model 42 = new cheap production Baudot machine to replace Model 28 and Model 32, paper tape acc.
  • Model 43 = same but for 8 level ASCII-plus-parity-bit, to replace Model 33 and Model 35, paper tape acc.

Several different high-speed printers like the "Ink-tronic" etc.

Texas Instruments edit

Texas Instruments developed its own line of teletypes in 1971, the Silent 700. Their name came from the use of a thermal printer head to emit copy, making them substantially quieter than contemporary teletypes using impact printing, and some such as the 1975 Model 745 and 1983 Model 707 were even small enough to be sold as portable units. Certain models came with acoustic couplers and some had internal storage, initially cassette tape in the 1973 Models 732/733 ASR and later bubble memory in the 1977 Models 763/765, the first and one of the few commercial products to use the technology.[43] In these units their storage capability essentially acted as a form of punched tape. The last Silent 700 was the 1987 700/1200 BPS, which was sold into the early 1990s.

Telex edit

 
A Teletype Model 32 ASR used for Telex service

A global teleprinter network called Telex was developed in the late 1920s, and was used through most of the 20th century for business communications. The main difference from a standard teleprinter is that Telex includes a switched routing network, originally based on pulse-telephone dialing, which in the United States was provided by Western Union. AT&T developed a competing network called "TWX" which initially also used rotary dialing and Baudot code, carried to the customer premises as pulses of DC on a metallic copper pair. TWX later added a second ASCII-based service using Bell 103 type modems served over lines whose physical interface was identical to regular telephone lines. In many cases, the TWX service was provided by the same telephone central office that handled voice calls, using class of service to prevent POTS customers from connecting to TWX customers. Telex is still in use in some countries for certain applications such as shipping, news, weather reporting and military command. Many business applications have moved to the Internet as most countries have discontinued telex/TWX services.

Teletypesetter edit

In addition to the 5-bit Baudot code and the much later seven-bit ASCII code, there was a six-bit code known as the Teletypesetter code (TTS) used by news wire services. It was first demonstrated in 1928 and began to see widespread use in the 1950s.[44] Through the use of "shift in" and "shift out" codes, this six-bit code could represent a full set of upper and lower case characters, digits, symbols commonly used in newspapers, and typesetting instructions such as "flush left" or "center", and even "auxiliary font", to switch to italics or bold type, and back to roman ("upper rail").[45]

The TTS produces aligned text, taking into consideration character widths and column width, or line length.

A Model 20 Teletype machine with a paper tape punch ("reperforator") was installed at subscriber newspaper sites. Originally these machines would simply punch paper tapes and these tapes could be read by a tape reader attached to a "Teletypesetter operating unit" installed on a Linotype machine. The "operating unit" was essentially a tape reader which actuated a mechanical box, which in turn operated the Linotype's keyboard and other controls, in response to the codes read from the tape, thus creating type for printing in newspapers and magazines.[46]

This allowed higher production rates for the Linotype, and was used both locally, where the tape was first punched and then fed to the machine, as well as remotely, using tape transmitters and receivers.

Remote use played an essential role for distributing identical content, such as syndicated columns, news agency news, classified advertising, and more, to different publications across wide geographical areas.

In later years the incoming 6-bit current loop signal carrying the TTS code was connected to a minicomputer or mainframe for storage, editing, and eventual feed to a phototypesetting machine.

Teleprinters in computing edit

 
A Teletype Model 33 ASR with paper tape reader and punch, as used for early modem-based computing

Computers used teleprinters for input and output from the early days of computing. Punched card readers and fast printers replaced teleprinters for most purposes, but teleprinters continued to be used as interactive time-sharing terminals until video displays became widely available in the late 1970s.

Users typed commands after a prompt character was printed. Printing was unidirectional; if the user wanted to delete what had been typed, further characters were printed to indicate that previous text had been cancelled. When video displays first became available the user interface was initially exactly the same as for an electromechanical printer; expensive and scarce video terminals could be used interchangeably with teleprinters. This was the origin of the text terminal and the command-line interface.

Paper tape was sometimes used to prepare input for the computer session off line and to capture computer output. The popular Teletype Model 33 used 7-bit ASCII code (with an eighth parity bit) instead of Baudot. The common modem communications settings, Start/Stop Bits and Parity, stem from the Teletype era.

In early operating systems such as Digital's RT-11, serial communication lines were often connected to teleprinters and were given device names starting with tt. This and similar conventions were adopted by many other operating systems. Unix and Unix-like operating systems use the prefix tty, for example /dev/tty13, or pty (for pseudo-tty), such as /dev/ptya0, but some of them (e.g. Solaris & recent Linux) have replaced pty files by a pts folder (where "pt" stands for "pseudoterminal" instead). In many computing contexts, "TTY" has become the name for any text terminal, such as an external console device, a user dialing into the system on a modem on a serial port device, a printing or graphical computer terminal on a computer's serial port or the RS-232 port on a USB-to-RS-232 converter attached to a computer's USB port, or even a terminal emulator application in the window system using a pseudoterminal device.

Teleprinters were also used to record fault printout and other information in some TXE telephone exchanges.

Obsolescence of teleprinters edit

Although printing news, messages, and other text at a distance is still universal, the dedicated teleprinter tied to a pair of leased copper wires was made functionally obsolete by the fax, personal computer, inkjet printer, email, and the Internet.

In the 1980s, packet radio became the most common form of digital communications used in amateur radio. Soon, advanced multimode electronic interfaces such as the AEA PK-232 were developed, which could send and receive not only packet, but various other modulation types including Baudot. This made it possible for a home or laptop computer to replace teleprinters, saving money, complexity, space and the massive amount of paper which mechanical machines used.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Nelson, R.A., , archived from the original on November 5, 2020
  2. ^ Roberts, Steven, Distant Writing
  3. ^ [better source needed] . January 4, 2021. Archived from the original on March 2, 2021. Retrieved May 23, 2021. In 1954 at MIT, researchers [began] experimenting with direct keyboard input to computers. Until then, computer users fed their programs into a computer using punched cards or paper tape. Douglas Ross… believed… a Flexowriter [teletypewriter]… could function as a keyboard input device… Thus in 1955 MIT's Whirlwind [became] the first computer in the world to allow its users to enter commands through a keyboard…
  4. ^ Latifiyan, Pouya (Winter 2021). "Aeronautical Fixed Telecommunication network and surrounding technologies". Take off. 2. Civil Aviation Technology College.
  5. ^ a b "Typewriter May Soon Be Transmitter of Telegrams" (PDF), The New York Times, January 25, 1914
  6. ^ "Type used for original morse telegraph, 1835". Science Museum. Retrieved December 5, 2017. Samuel Morse was one of the pioneers of electric telegraphy. Prompted by receiving news of his wife's death too late to attend her funeral, Morse was determined to improve the speed of long distance communications (which at that point relied on horse messengers).
  7. ^ Roberts, Steven. "3. Cooke and Wheatstone". Distant Writing: A History of the Telegraph Companies in Britain between 1838 and 1868.
  8. ^ Steven Roberts. "Distant Writing – Bain".
  9. ^ "Silent Key – Edward Kleinschmidt". RTTY Journal. 25 (9): 2. October 1977.
  10. ^ . Clarkson University. April 14, 2007. Archived from the original on April 22, 2008. Retrieved September 29, 2010.
  11. ^ Hobbs, Alan G. "Five-unit codes". Retrieved May 1, 2012.
  12. ^ Foster, Maximilian (August 1901). "A Successful Printing Telegraph". The World's Work: A History of Our Time. Vol. II. pp. 1195–1199. Retrieved July 9, 2009.
  13. ^ US Patent 888335, issued May 1908 
  14. ^ US Patent 862402 
  15. ^ US Patent 1286351, issued December 1918 
  16. ^ a b Colin Hempstead, William E. Worthington (2005). Encyclopedia of 20th Century Technology. Routledge. p. 605. ISBN 9781579584641.
  17. ^ "Morkum Printing Telegraph Page Printer". Retrieved August 15, 2011.
  18. ^ US Patent 1448750, KLEINSCHMIDT, E., "TELEGRAPH PRINTER", issued Apr 14, 1916 
  19. ^ US Patent 1463136, KLEINSCHMIDT, E., "METHOD OF AND APPARATUS FOR OPERATING PRINTING TELEGRAPHS", issued May 1, 1919 
  20. ^ a b Huurdeman, Anton A. (2003). The Worldwide History of Telecommunications. Wiley-IEEE. p. 302. ISBN 0-471-20505-2.
  21. ^ Deckert, Jürgen; Kösling, Heinz (1987). Fernschreibtechnik [Teletype Technology] (in German). Berlin: Militärverlag der Deutschen Demokratischen Republik (VEB). ISBN 3-327-00307-6.
  22. ^ Schamel, John (October 19, 2016). "Flight Service History 1920-1998". Air Traffic Control History.
  23. ^ (PDF). faa.gov. December 17, 2005. Archived from the original (PDF) on November 5, 2013.
  24. ^ "AP teletype machine". CBC History. Retrieved March 5, 2022.
  25. ^ US Patent 2364357, "Signaling system", issued 29 March 1944 
  26. ^ "Introduction to RTTY" (PDF). Sam's Telecomms Documents Repository.
  27. ^ "RTTY Demodulators".
  28. ^ "ASR 33 Teletype Rear View of Main Assembly". www.pdp8online.com.
  29. ^ "TELETYPE MODEL 32ASR". www.k7tty.com.
  30. ^ Baudot.net: Creed & Company, Ltd.
  31. ^ "Gretag ETK-47 14-bit teleprinter system". Crypto Museum. July 4, 2016.
  32. ^ "ETK teletype equipment series".
  33. ^ F. Dörenberg. "Other manufacturers of teleprinter machines that use the Hellschreiber principle". Dr. Edgar Gretener AG (Gretag).
  34. ^ "The Hagelin - Gretener Cipher Teleprinter" (PDF).
  35. ^ Colin Hempstead, William E. Worthington (2005). Encyclopedia of 20th-century technology. Routledge. p. 605. ISBN 9781579584641.
  36. ^ "Morkum Printing Telegraph Page Printer". Retrieved August 22, 2011.
  37. ^ a b "Queensland Telecommunications Museum – Teleprinters". Queensland Telecommunications Museum.
  38. ^ Earle, Ralph H. (1917). The Morkrum System of Printing Telegraphy. Chicago: Armour Institute of Technology (thesis).
  39. ^ . June 24, 2003. Archived from the original on June 3, 2008. Retrieved March 3, 2010.
  40. ^ "US trademark database". uspto.gov.
  41. ^ (PDF). Chicago: Teletype Corporation. 1941. Archived from the original (PDF) on January 11, 2011.
  42. ^ "ASR 33 Teletype Information". www.pdp8online.com.
  43. ^ "Old Vintage Computing Research: Refurb weekend: Texas Instruments Silent 700 Model 745 teletype". February 17, 2022.
  44. ^ W. David Sloan, Lisa Mullikin Parcell, ed. (April 10, 2002). American Journalism: History, Principles, Practices. McFarland. p. 365. ISBN 978-0-7864-1371-3.
  45. ^ Mergenthaler Linotype Company (1951). The Linotype Handbook for Teletypesetter Operation. Dr. David M. MacMillan. digital reprint by www.CircuitousRoot.com.
  46. ^ Doug Kerr. "Teletypes in Typesetting". Glendale, Arizona, USA: Southwest Museum of Engineering, Communications and Computation. Retrieved April 25, 2017.

Further reading edit

  • Foster, Maximilian (September 1901). "A Successful Printing Telegraph". The World's Work. Vol. II, no. 5. New York: Doubleday, Page & Co. pp. 1195–1200. Retrieved April 29, 2012.
  • Gannon, Paul (2006). Colossus: Bletchley Park's Greatest Secret. London: Atlantic Books. ISBN 978-1843543312. On the role of the teleprinter code in WWII
  • A. G. Hobbs, G8GOJ; E. W. Yeomanson, G3IIR; A.C. Gee, G2UK (1983). Teleprinter handbook (2nd ed.). RSGB. ISBN 0-900612-59-2.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  • "Teletype Messages Sent Through Switch Board". Popular Mechanics. Hearst Magazines. April 1932. p. 577. ISSN 0032-4558. AT&T offering two way service through switchboards

External links edit

  • A first-hand report of Teletype Corporation's early years March 12, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
  • A Gallery of Teletype Images
  • History of Teletypewriter Development by R.A. Nelson
  • "Some Notes on Teletype Corporation"

Patents edit

  • US Patent 1665594, "Telegraph printer (Type 12 Teletype)", issued April 1928 
  • US Patent 1745633, "Telegraph receiver (Type 14 Teletype)", issued February 1930 
  • US Patent 1904164, "Signalling system and apparatus therefor (Type 15 Teletype)", issued April 1933 
  • US Patent 3507997, "Frequency-Shift Teletypewriter", issued April 1970 

teleprinter, teletype, redirects, here, other, uses, teletype, disambiguation, telecommunications, system, consisting, teleprinters, connected, radio, radioteletype, teleprinter, teletypewriter, teletype, electromechanical, device, that, used, send, receive, t. Teletype redirects here For other uses see Teletype disambiguation For the telecommunications system consisting of teleprinters connected by radio see Radioteletype A teleprinter teletypewriter teletype or TTY is an electromechanical device that can be used to send and receive typed messages through various communications channels in both point to point and point to multipoint configurations Teletype teleprinters in use in England during World War II Example of teleprinter art a portrait of Dag Hammarskjold 1962 Initially from 1887 at the earliest teleprinters were used in telegraphy 1 Electrical telegraphy had been developed decades earlier in the late 1830s and 1840s 2 then using simpler Morse key equipment and telegraph operators The introduction of teleprinters automated much of this work and eventually largely replaced skilled operators versed in Morse code with typists and machines communicating faster via Baudot code With the development of early computers in the 1950s 3 teleprinters were adapted to allow typed data to be sent to a computer and responses printed Some teleprinter models could also be used to create punched tape for data storage either from typed input or from data received from a remote source and to read back such tape for local printing or transmission A teleprinter attached to a modem could also communicate through telephone lines This latter configuration was often used to connect teleprinters to remote computers particularly in time sharing environments Teleprinters have largely been replaced by fully electronic computer terminals which typically have a computer monitor instead of a printer though the term TTY is still occasionally used to refer to them such as in Unix systems Teleprinters are still widely used in the aviation industry see AFTN and airline teletype system 4 and variants called Telecommunications Devices for the Deaf TDDs are used by the hearing impaired for typed communications over ordinary telephone lines Contents 1 History 2 Ways in which teleprinters were used 3 Teleprinter operation 3 1 Control characters 3 2 Answer back mechanism 4 Manufacturers 4 1 Creed amp Company 4 2 Gretag 4 3 Kleinschmidt Labs 4 4 Morkrum 4 5 Olivetti 4 6 Siemens amp Halske 4 7 Teletype Corporation 4 8 Texas Instruments 5 Telex 6 Teletypesetter 7 Teleprinters in computing 8 Obsolescence of teleprinters 9 See also 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External links 12 1 PatentsHistory editThis section may be in need of reorganization to comply with Wikipedia s layout guidelines The reason given is it could be more easily read if subdivided by principle of operation Please help by editing the article to make improvements to the overall structure March 2024 Learn how and when to remove this message The teleprinter evolved through a series of inventions by a number of engineers including Samuel Morse Alexander Bain Royal Earl House David Edward Hughes Emile Baudot Donald Murray Charles L Krum Edward Kleinschmidt and Frederick G Creed Teleprinters were invented in order to send and receive messages without the need for operators trained in the use of Morse code A system of two teleprinters with one operator trained to use a keyboard replaced two trained Morse code operators The teleprinter system improved message speed and delivery time making it possible for messages to be flashed across a country with little manual intervention 5 There were a number of parallel developments on both sides of the Atlantic Ocean In 1835 Samuel Morse devised a recording telegraph and Morse code was born 6 Morse s instrument used a current to displace the armature of an electromagnet which moved a marker therefore recording the breaks in the current Cooke amp Wheatstone received a British patent covering telegraphy in 1837 and a second one in 1840 which described a type printing telegraph with steel type fixed at the tips of petals of a rotating brass daisy wheel struck by an electric hammer to print Roman letters through carbon paper onto a moving paper tape 7 In 1841 Alexander Bain devised an electromagnetic printing telegraph machine It used pulses of electricity created by rotating a dial over contact points to release and stop a type wheel turned by weight driven clockwork a second clockwork mechanism rotated a drum covered with a sheet of paper and moved it slowly upwards so that the type wheel printed its signals in a spiral The critical issue was to have the sending and receiving elements working synchronously Bain attempted to achieve this using centrifugal governors to closely regulate the speed of the clockwork It was patented along with other devices on April 21 1841 8 By 1846 the Morse telegraph service was operational between Washington D C and New York Royal Earl House patented his printing telegraph that same year He linked two 28 key piano style keyboards by wire Each piano key represented a letter of the alphabet and when pressed caused the corresponding letter to print at the receiving end A shift key gave each main key two optional values A 56 character typewheel at the sending end was synchronised to coincide with a similar wheel at the receiving end If the key corresponding to a particular character was pressed at the home station it actuated the typewheel at the distant station just as the same character moved into the printing position in a way similar to the much later daisy wheel printer It was thus an example of a synchronous data transmission system House s equipment could transmit around 40 instantly readable words per minute but was difficult to manufacture in bulk The printer could copy and print out up to 2 000 words per hour This invention was first put in operation and exhibited at the Mechanics Institute in New York in 1844 Landline teleprinter operations began in 1849 when a circuit was put in service between Philadelphia and New York City 9 nbsp Hughes telegraph an early 1855 teleprinter built by Siemens and Halske The centrifugal governor to achieve synchronicity with the other end can be seen In 1855 David Edward Hughes introduced an improved machine built on the work of Royal Earl House In less than two years a number of small telegraph companies including Western Union in early stages of development united to form one large corporation Western Union Telegraph Co to carry on the business of telegraphy on the Hughes system 10 In France Emile Baudot designed in 1874 a system using a five unit code which began to be used extensively in that country from 1877 The British Post Office adopted the Baudot system for use on a simplex circuit between London and Paris in 1897 and subsequently made considerable use of duplex Baudot systems on their Inland Telegraph Services 11 During 1901 Baudot s code was modified by Donald Murray 1865 1945 originally from New Zealand prompted by his development of a typewriter like keyboard The Murray system employed an intermediate step a keyboard perforator which allowed an operator to punch a paper tape and a tape transmitter for sending the message from the punched tape At the receiving end of the line a printing mechanism would print on a paper tape and or a reperforator could be used to make a perforated copy of the message 12 As there was no longer a direct correlation between the operator s hand movement and the bits transmitted there was no concern about arranging the code to minimize operator fatigue and instead Murray designed the code to minimize wear on the machinery assigning the code combinations with the fewest punched holes to the most frequently used characters The Murray code also introduced what became known as format effectors or control characters the CR Carriage Return and LF Line Feed codes A few of Baudot s codes moved to the positions where they have stayed ever since the NULL or BLANK and the DEL code NULL BLANK was used as an idle code for when no messages were being sent 5 In the United States in 1902 electrical engineer Frank Pearne approached Joy Morton head of Morton Salt seeking a sponsor for research into the practicalities of developing a printing telegraph system Joy Morton needed to determine whether this was worthwhile and so consulted mechanical engineer Charles L Krum who was vice president of the Western Cold Storage Company Krum was interested in helping Pearne so space was set up in a laboratory in the attic of Western Cold Storage Frank Pearne lost interest in the project after a year and left to get involved in teaching Krum was prepared to continue Pearne s work and in August 1903 a patent was filed for a typebar page printer 13 In 1904 Krum filed a patent for a type wheel printing telegraph machine 14 which was issued in August 1907 In 1906 Charles Krum s son Howard Krum joined his father in this work It was Howard who developed and patented the start stop synchronizing method for code telegraph systems which made possible the practical teleprinter 15 In 1908 a working teleprinter was produced by the Morkrum Company formed between Joy Morton and Charles Krum called the Morkrum Printing Telegraph which was field tested with the Alton Railroad In 1910 the Morkrum Company designed and installed the first commercial teletypewriter system on Postal Telegraph Company lines between Boston and New York City using the Blue Code Version of the Morkrum Printing Telegraph 16 17 In 1916 Edward Kleinschmidt filed a patent application for a typebar page printer 18 In 1919 shortly after the Morkrum company obtained their patent for a start stop synchronizing method for code telegraph systems which made possible the practical teleprinter Kleinschmidt filed an application titled Method of and Apparatus for Operating Printing Telegraphs 19 which included an improved start stop method 20 The basic start stop procedure however is much older than the Kleinschmidt and Morkrum inventions It was already proposed by D Arlincourt in 1870 21 nbsp Siemens t37h 1933 without cover Instead of wasting time and money in patent disputes on the start stop method Kleinschmidt and the Morkrum Company decided to merge and form the Morkrum Kleinschmidt Company in 1924 The new company combined the best features of both their machines into a new typewheel printer for which Kleinschmidt Howard Krum and Sterling Morton jointly obtained a patent 20 In 1924 Britain s Creed amp Company founded by Frederick G Creed entered the teleprinter field with their Model 1P a page printer which was soon superseded by the improved Model 2P In 1925 Creed acquired the patents for Donald Murray s Murray code a rationalised Baudot code The Model 3 tape printer Creed s first combined start stop machine was introduced in 1927 for the Post Office telegram service This machine printed received messages directly on to gummed paper tape at a rate of 65 words per minute Creed created his first keyboard perforator which used compressed air to punch the holes He also created a reperforator receiving perforator and a printer The reperforator punched incoming Morse signals on to paper tape and the printer decoded this tape to produce alphanumeric characters on plain paper This was the origin of the Creed High Speed Automatic Printing System which could run at an unprecedented 200 words per minute His system was adopted by the Daily Mail for daily transmission of the newspaper s contents The Creed Model 7 page printing teleprinter was introduced in 1931 and was used for the inland Telex service It worked at a speed of 50 baud about 66 words a minute using a code based on the Murray code citation needed A teleprinter system was installed in the Bureau of Lighthouses Airways Division Flight Service Station Airway Radio Stations system in 1928 carrying administrative messages flight information and weather reports 22 By 1938 the teleprinter network handling weather traffic extended over 20 000 miles covering all 48 states except Maine New Hampshire and South Dakota 23 Ways in which teleprinters were used editTeleprinters could use a variety of different communication channels These included a simple pair of wires public switched telephone networks dedicated non switched telephone circuits leased lines switched networks that operated similarly to the public telephone network telex and radio and microwave links telex on radio or TOR There were at least five major types of teleprinter networks Exchange systems such as Telex and TWX created a real time circuit between two machines so that anything typed on one machine appeared at the other end immediately US and UK systems had telephone dials and prior to 1981 five North American Numbering Plan NANPA area codes were reserved for teleprinter use German systems did dialing via the keyboard Typed chat was possible but because billing was by connect time it was common to prepare messages in advance on paper tape and transmit them without pauses for typing Leased line and radioteletype networks arranged in point to point and or multipoint configurations supported data processing applications for government and industry such as integrating the accounting billing management production purchasing sales shipping and receiving departments within an organization to speed internal communications Message switching systems were an early form of E mail using electromechanical equipment See Telegram Western Union Plan 55 A Military organizations had similar but separate systems such as Autodin Broadcast systems such as weather information distribution and news wires which were received on wire machines 24 Examples were operated by Associated Press National Weather Service Reuters and United Press later UPI Information was printed on receive only teleprinters without keyboards or dials Loop systems where anything typed on any machine on the loop printed on all the machines American police departments used such systems to interconnect precincts 25 Before the computer revolution and information processing performance improvements thanks to Moore s law made it possible to securely encrypt voice and video calls teleprinters were long used in combination with electromechanical or electronic cryptographic devices to provide secure communication channels Being limited to text only was an acceptable trade off for security Teleprinter operation edit nbsp Keyboard of a Baudot teleprinter with 32 keys including the space bar nbsp International Telegraph Alphabet No 2 development of the Baudot Murray code Most teleprinters used the 5 bit International Telegraph Alphabet No 2 ITA2 This was limited to 32 codes 25 32 One had to use FIGS for figures and LTRS for letters keys to shift state for a combined character set sufficient to type both letters and numbers as well as some special characters The letters were uppercase only Special versions of teleprinters had FIGS characters for specific applications such as weather symbols for weather reports Print quality was poor by modern standards The ITA2 code was used asynchronously with start and stop bits the asynchronous code design was intimately linked with the start stop electro mechanical design of teleprinters Early systems had used synchronous codes but were hard to synchronize mechanically Other codes such as FIELDATA and Flexowriter were introduced but never became as popular as ITA2 Mark and space are terms describing logic levels in teleprinter circuits The native mode of communication for a teleprinter is a simple series DC circuit that is interrupted much as a rotary dial interrupts a telephone signal The marking condition is when the circuit is closed current is flowing the spacing condition is when the circuit is open no current is flowing The idle condition of the circuit is a continuous marking state with the start of a character signalled by a start bit which is always a space Following the start bit the character is represented by a fixed number of bits such as 5 bits in the ITA2 code each either a mark or a space to denote the specific character or machine function After the character s bits the sending machine sends one or more stop bits The stop bits are marking so as to be distinct from the subsequent start bit If the sender has nothing more to send the line simply remains in the marking state as if a continuing series of stop bits until a later space denotes the start of the next character The time between characters need not be an integral multiple of a bit time but it must be at least the minimum number of stop bits required by the receiving machine When the line is broken the continuous spacing open circuit no current flowing causes a receiving teleprinter to cycle continuously even in the absence of stop bits It prints nothing because the characters received are all zeros the ITA2 blank or ASCII null character Teleprinter circuits were generally leased from a communications common carrier and consisted of ordinary telephone cables that extended from the teleprinter located at the customer location to the common carrier central office These teleprinter circuits were connected to switching equipment at the central office for Telex and TWX service Private line teleprinter circuits were not directly connected to switching equipment Instead these private line circuits were connected to network hubs and repeaters configured to provide point to point or point to multipoint service More than two teleprinters could be connected to the same wire circuit by means of a current loop Earlier teleprinters had three rows of keys and only supported upper case letters They used the 5 bit ITA2 code and generally worked at 60 to 100 words per minute Later teleprinters specifically the Teletype Model 33 used ASCII code an innovation that came into widespread use in the 1960s as computers became more widely available Speed intended to be roughly comparable to words per minute is the standard term introduced by Western Union for a mechanical teleprinter data transmission rate using the 5 bit ITA2 code that was popular in the 1940s and for several decades thereafter Such a machine would send 1 start bit 5 data bits and 1 42 stop bits This unusual stop bit time is actually a rest period to allow the mechanical printing mechanism to synchronize in the event that a garbled signal is received 26 This is true especially on high frequency radio circuits where selective fading is present Selective fading causes the mark signal amplitude to be randomly different from the space signal amplitude Selective fading or Rayleigh fading can cause two carriers to randomly and independently fade to different depths 27 Since modern computer equipment cannot easily generate 1 42 bits for the stop period common practice is to either approximate this with 1 5 bits or to send 2 0 bits while accepting 1 0 bits receiving For example a 60 speed machine is geared at 45 5 baud 22 0 ms per bit a 66 speed machine is geared at 50 0 baud 20 0 ms per bit a 75 speed machine is geared at 56 9 baud 17 5 ms per bit a 100 speed machine is geared at 74 2 baud 13 5 ms per bit and a 133 speed machine is geared at 100 0 baud 10 0 ms per bit 60 speed became the de facto standard for amateur radio RTTY operation because of the widespread availability of equipment at that speed and the U S Federal Communications Commission FCC restrictions to only 60 speed from 1953 to 1972 Telex news agency wires and similar services commonly used 66 speed services There was some migration to 75 and 100 speed as more reliable devices were introduced However the limitations of HF transmission such as excessive error rates due to multipath distortion and the nature of ionospheric propagation kept many users at 60 and 66 speed Most audio recordings in existence today are of teleprinters operating at 60 words per minute and mostly of the Teletype Model 15 Another measure of the speed of a teletypewriter was in total operations per minute OPM For example 60 speed was usually 368 OPM 66 speed was 404 OPM 75 speed was 460 OPM and 100 speed was 600 OPM Western Union Telexes were usually set at 390 OPM with 7 0 total bits instead of the customary 7 42 bits Both wire service and private teleprinters had bells to signal important incoming messages and could ring 24 7 while the power was turned on For example ringing 4 bells on UPI wire service machines meant an Urgent message 5 bells was a Bulletin and 10 bells was a FLASH used only for very important news The teleprinter circuit was often linked to a 5 bit paper tape punch or reperforator and reader allowing messages received to be resent on another circuit Complex military and commercial communications networks were built using this technology Message centers had rows of teleprinters and large racks for paper tapes awaiting transmission Skilled operators could read the priority code from the hole pattern and might even feed a FLASH PRIORITY tape into a reader while it was still coming out of the punch Routine traffic often had to wait hours for relay Many teleprinters had built in paper tape readers and punches allowing messages to be saved in machine readable form and edited off line Communication by radio known as radioteletype or RTTY pronounced ritty was also common especially among military users Ships command posts mobile stationary and even airborne and logistics units took advantage of the ability of operators to send reliable and accurate information with a minimum of training Amateur radio operators continue to use this mode of communication today though most use computer interface sound generators rather than legacy hardware teleprinter equipment Numerous modes are in use within the ham radio community from the original ITA2 format to more modern faster modes which include error checking of characters Control characters edit Main article Control character A typewriter or electromechanical printer can print characters on paper and execute operations such as move the carriage back to the left margin of the same line carriage return advance to the same column of the next line line feed and so on Commands to control non printing operations were transmitted in exactly the same way as printable characters by sending control characters with defined functions e g the line feed character forced the carriage to move to the same position on the next line to teleprinters In modern computing and communications a few control characters such as carriage return and line feed have retained their original functions although they are often implemented in software rather than activating electromechanical mechanisms to move a physical printer carriage but many others are no longer required and are used for other purposes Answer back mechanism edit Some teleprinters had a Here is key which transmitted a fixed sequence of 20 or 22 characters programmable by breaking tabs off a drum This sequence could also be transmitted automatically upon receipt of an ENQ control E signal if enabled 28 29 This was commonly used to identify a station the operator could press the key to send the station identifier to the other end or the remote station could trigger its transmission by sending the ENQ character essentially asking who are you Manufacturers editCreed amp Company edit nbsp A Creed amp Company Teleprinter No 7 in 1930 British Creed amp Company built teleprinters for the GPO s teleprinter service 30 Creed model 7 page printing teleprinter introduced in 1931 Creed model 7B 50 baud page printing teleprinter Creed model 7E page printing teleprinter with overlap cam and range finder Creed model 7 TR non printing teleprinter reperforator Creed model 54 page printing teleprinter introduced in 1954 Creed model 75 page printing teleprinter introduced in 1958 Creed model 85 printing reperforator introduced in 1948 Creed model 86 printing reperforator using 7 8 wide tape Creed model 444 page printing teleprinter introduced in 1966 GPO type 15 Gretag edit The Gretag ETK 47 teleprinter developed in Switzerland by Edgar Gretener in 1947 uses a 14 bit start stop transmission method similar to the 5 bit code used by other teleprinters However instead of a more or less arbitrary mapping between 5 bit codes and letters in the Latin alphabet all characters letters digits and punctuation printed by the ETK are built from 14 basic elements on a print head very similar to the 14 elements on a modern fourteen segment display each one selected independently by one of the 14 bits during transmission Because it does not use a fixed character set but instead builds up characters from smaller elements the ETK printing element does not require modification to switch between Latin Cyrillic and Greek characters 31 32 33 34 Kleinschmidt Labs edit In 1931 American inventor Edward Kleinschmidt formed Kleinschmidt Labs to pursue a different design of teleprinter In 1944 Kleinschmidt demonstrated their lightweight unit to the Signal Corps and in 1949 their design was adopted for the Army s portable needs In 1956 Kleinschmidt Labs merged with Smith Corona which then merged with the Marchant Calculating Machine Co forming the SCM Corporation By 1979 the Kleinschmidt division was turning to Electronic Data Interchange and away from mechanical products Kleinschmidt machines with the military as their primary customer used standard military designations for their machines The teleprinter was identified with designations such as a TT 4 FG while communication sets to which a teleprinter might be a part generally used the standard Army Navy designation system such as AN FGC 25 This includes Kleinschmidt teleprinter TT 117 FG and tape reperforator TT 179 FG Morkrum edit Morkrum made their first commercial installation of a printing telegraph with the Postal Telegraph Company in Boston and New York in 1910 35 It became popular with railroads and the Associated Press adopted it in 1914 for their wire service 16 36 Morkrum merged with their competitor Kleinschmidt Electric Company to become Morkrum Kleinschmidt Corporation shortly before being renamed the Teletype Corporation 37 38 Olivetti edit nbsp Olivetti Teleprinter Italian office equipment maker Olivetti est 1908 started to manufacture teleprinters in order to provide Italian post offices with modern equipment to send and receive telegrams The first models typed on a paper ribbon which was then cut and glued into telegram forms Olivetti T1 1938 1948 Olivetti T2 1948 1968 Olivetti Te300 1968 1975 Olivetti Te400 1975 1991 Siemens amp Halske edit nbsp Siemens Fernschreiber 100 teleprinter Siemens amp Halske later Siemens AG a German company founded in 1847 Teleprinter Model 100 Ser 1 end of the 1950s Used for Telex service 37 Teleprinter Model 100 Ser 11 Later version with minor changes Teleprinter Model T100 ND single current NDL double current models Teleprinter Model T 150 electromechanical Offline tape punch for creating messages Teleprinter T 1000 electronic teleprinter processor based 50 75 100 Bd Tape punch and reader attachments ND NDL SEU V21modem model Teleprinter T 1000 Receive only units as used by newsrooms for unedited SAPA Reuters AP feeds etc Teleprinter T 1200 electronic teleprinter processor based 50 75 100 200 Bd Green LED text display 1 44M 3 5 floppy disk stiffy attachment PC Telex Teleprinter with dedicated dot matrix printer Connected to IBM compatible PC as used by Telkom South Africa T4200 Teletex Teleprinter With two floppy disc drives and black and white monitor daisy wheel typewriter DOS2 Teletype Corporation edit Main article Teletype Corporation nbsp A Teletype Model 33 ASR teleprinter with punched tape reader and punch usable as a computer terminal The Teletype Corporation a part of American Telephone and Telegraph Company s Western Electric manufacturing arm since 1930 was founded in 1906 as the Morkrum Company In 1925 a merger between Morkrum and Kleinschmidt Electric Company created the Morkrum Kleinschmidt Company The name was changed in December 1928 to Teletype Corporation In 1930 Teletype Corporation was purchased by the American Telephone and Telegraph Company and became a subsidiary of Western Electric In 1984 the divestiture of the Bell System resulted in the Teletype name and logo being replaced by the AT amp T name and logo eventually resulting in the brand being extinguished 39 The last vestiges of what had been the Teletype Corporation ceased in 1990 bringing to a close the dedicated teleprinter business Despite its long lasting trademark status the word Teletype went into common generic usage in the news and telecommunications industries Records of the United States Patent and Trademark Office indicate the trademark has expired and is considered dead 40 Teletype machines tended to be large heavy and extremely robust capable of running non stop for months at a time if properly lubricated 41 The Model 15 stands out as one of a few machines that remained in production for many years It was introduced in 1930 and remained in production until 1963 a total of 33 years of continuous production Very few complex machines can match that record The production run was stretched somewhat by World War II the Model 28 was scheduled to replace the Model 15 in the mid 1940s but Teletype built so many factories to produce the Model 15 during World War II it was more economical to continue mass production of the Model 15 The Model 15 in its receive only no keyboard version was the classic news Teletype for decades Model 15 Baudot version 45 Baud optional tape punch and reader Model 28 Baudot version 45 50 56 75 Baud optional tape punch and reader Model 32 small lightweight machine cheap production 45 50 56 75 Baud optional tape punch and reader Model 33 same as Model 32 but for 8 level ASCII plus parity bit used as computer terminal optional tape punch and reader 72 char line 42 Model 35 same as Model 28 but for 8 level ASCII plus parity bit used as heavy duty computer terminal optional tape punch and reader Model 37 improved version of the Model 35 higher speeds up to 150 Baud optional tape punch and reader Model 38 similar to Model 33 but for 132 char line paper 14 inches wide optional tape punch and reader Model 40 new system processor based w monitor screen but mechanical chain printer Model 42 new cheap production Baudot machine to replace Model 28 and Model 32 paper tape acc Model 43 same but for 8 level ASCII plus parity bit to replace Model 33 and Model 35 paper tape acc Several different high speed printers like the Ink tronic etc Texas Instruments edit Main article Silent 700 Texas Instruments developed its own line of teletypes in 1971 the Silent 700 Their name came from the use of a thermal printer head to emit copy making them substantially quieter than contemporary teletypes using impact printing and some such as the 1975 Model 745 and 1983 Model 707 were even small enough to be sold as portable units Certain models came with acoustic couplers and some had internal storage initially cassette tape in the 1973 Models 732 733 ASR and later bubble memory in the 1977 Models 763 765 the first and one of the few commercial products to use the technology 43 In these units their storage capability essentially acted as a form of punched tape The last Silent 700 was the 1987 700 1200 BPS which was sold into the early 1990s Telex edit nbsp A Teletype Model 32 ASR used for Telex service Main articles Telex and Telegraphy Telex A global teleprinter network called Telex was developed in the late 1920s and was used through most of the 20th century for business communications The main difference from a standard teleprinter is that Telex includes a switched routing network originally based on pulse telephone dialing which in the United States was provided by Western Union AT amp T developed a competing network called TWX which initially also used rotary dialing and Baudot code carried to the customer premises as pulses of DC on a metallic copper pair TWX later added a second ASCII based service using Bell 103 type modems served over lines whose physical interface was identical to regular telephone lines In many cases the TWX service was provided by the same telephone central office that handled voice calls using class of service to prevent POTS customers from connecting to TWX customers Telex is still in use in some countries for certain applications such as shipping news weather reporting and military command Many business applications have moved to the Internet as most countries have discontinued telex TWX services Teletypesetter editIn addition to the 5 bit Baudot code and the much later seven bit ASCII code there was a six bit code known as the Teletypesetter code TTS used by news wire services It was first demonstrated in 1928 and began to see widespread use in the 1950s 44 Through the use of shift in and shift out codes this six bit code could represent a full set of upper and lower case characters digits symbols commonly used in newspapers and typesetting instructions such as flush left or center and even auxiliary font to switch to italics or bold type and back to roman upper rail 45 The TTS produces aligned text taking into consideration character widths and column width or line length A Model 20 Teletype machine with a paper tape punch reperforator was installed at subscriber newspaper sites Originally these machines would simply punch paper tapes and these tapes could be read by a tape reader attached to a Teletypesetter operating unit installed on a Linotype machine The operating unit was essentially a tape reader which actuated a mechanical box which in turn operated the Linotype s keyboard and other controls in response to the codes read from the tape thus creating type for printing in newspapers and magazines 46 This allowed higher production rates for the Linotype and was used both locally where the tape was first punched and then fed to the machine as well as remotely using tape transmitters and receivers Remote use played an essential role for distributing identical content such as syndicated columns news agency news classified advertising and more to different publications across wide geographical areas In later years the incoming 6 bit current loop signal carrying the TTS code was connected to a minicomputer or mainframe for storage editing and eventual feed to a phototypesetting machine Teleprinters in computing edit nbsp A Teletype Model 33 ASR with paper tape reader and punch as used for early modem based computing Computers used teleprinters for input and output from the early days of computing Punched card readers and fast printers replaced teleprinters for most purposes but teleprinters continued to be used as interactive time sharing terminals until video displays became widely available in the late 1970s Users typed commands after a prompt character was printed Printing was unidirectional if the user wanted to delete what had been typed further characters were printed to indicate that previous text had been cancelled When video displays first became available the user interface was initially exactly the same as for an electromechanical printer expensive and scarce video terminals could be used interchangeably with teleprinters This was the origin of the text terminal and the command line interface Paper tape was sometimes used to prepare input for the computer session off line and to capture computer output The popular Teletype Model 33 used 7 bit ASCII code with an eighth parity bit instead of Baudot The common modem communications settings Start Stop Bits and Parity stem from the Teletype era In early operating systems such as Digital s RT 11 serial communication lines were often connected to teleprinters and were given device names starting with tt This and similar conventions were adopted by many other operating systems Unix and Unix like operating systems use the prefix tty for example dev tty13 or pty for pseudo tty such as dev ptya0 but some of them e g Solaris amp recent Linux have replaced pty files by a pts folder where pt stands for pseudoterminal instead In many computing contexts TTY has become the name for any text terminal such as an external console device a user dialing into the system on a modem on a serial port device a printing or graphical computer terminal on a computer s serial port or the RS 232 port on a USB to RS 232 converter attached to a computer s USB port or even a terminal emulator application in the window system using a pseudoterminal device Teleprinters were also used to record fault printout and other information in some TXE telephone exchanges Obsolescence of teleprinters editAlthough printing news messages and other text at a distance is still universal the dedicated teleprinter tied to a pair of leased copper wires was made functionally obsolete by the fax personal computer inkjet printer email and the Internet In the 1980s packet radio became the most common form of digital communications used in amateur radio Soon advanced multimode electronic interfaces such as the AEA PK 232 were developed which could send and receive not only packet but various other modulation types including Baudot This made it possible for a home or laptop computer to replace teleprinters saving money complexity space and the massive amount of paper which mechanical machines used See also editLetter quality printer Plan 55 A a message switching system for telegrams Radioteletype Siemens and Halske T52 the Geheimfernschreiber secrets teleprinter References edit Nelson R A History Of Teletype Development archived from the original on November 5 2020 Roberts Steven Distant Writing better source needed History of the Modern Computer Keyboard January 4 2021 Archived from the original on March 2 2021 Retrieved May 23 2021 In 1954 at MIT researchers began experimenting with direct keyboard input to computers Until then computer users fed their programs into a computer using punched cards or paper tape Douglas Ross believed a Flexowriter teletypewriter could function as a keyboard input device Thus in 1955 MIT s Whirlwind became the first computer in the world to allow its users to enter commands through a keyboard Latifiyan Pouya Winter 2021 Aeronautical Fixed Telecommunication network and surrounding technologies Take off 2 Civil Aviation Technology College a b Typewriter May Soon Be Transmitter of Telegrams PDF The New York Times January 25 1914 Type used for original morse telegraph 1835 Science Museum Retrieved December 5 2017 Samuel Morse was one of the pioneers of electric telegraphy Prompted by receiving news of his wife s death too late to attend her funeral Morse was determined to improve the speed of long distance communications which at that point relied on horse messengers Roberts Steven 3 Cooke and Wheatstone Distant Writing A History of the Telegraph Companies in Britain between 1838 and 1868 Steven Roberts Distant Writing Bain Silent Key Edward Kleinschmidt RTTY Journal 25 9 2 October 1977 David Edward Hughes Clarkson University April 14 2007 Archived from the original on April 22 2008 Retrieved September 29 2010 Hobbs Alan G Five unit codes Retrieved May 1 2012 Foster Maximilian August 1901 A Successful Printing Telegraph The World s Work A History of Our Time Vol II pp 1195 1199 Retrieved July 9 2009 US Patent 888335 issued May 1908 US Patent 862402 US Patent 1286351 issued December 1918 a b Colin Hempstead William E Worthington 2005 Encyclopedia of 20th Century Technology Routledge p 605 ISBN 9781579584641 Morkum Printing Telegraph Page Printer Retrieved August 15 2011 US Patent 1448750 KLEINSCHMIDT E TELEGRAPH PRINTER issued Apr 14 1916 US Patent 1463136 KLEINSCHMIDT E METHOD OF AND APPARATUS FOR OPERATING PRINTING TELEGRAPHS issued May 1 1919 a b Huurdeman Anton A 2003 The Worldwide History of Telecommunications Wiley IEEE p 302 ISBN 0 471 20505 2 Deckert Jurgen Kosling Heinz 1987 Fernschreibtechnik Teletype Technology in German Berlin Militarverlag der Deutschen Demokratischen Republik VEB ISBN 3 327 00307 6 Schamel John October 19 2016 Flight Service History 1920 1998 Air Traffic Control History FAA HISTORICAL CHRONOLOGY 1926 1996 PDF faa gov December 17 2005 Archived from the original PDF on November 5 2013 AP teletype machine CBC History Retrieved March 5 2022 US Patent 2364357 Signaling system issued 29 March 1944 Introduction to RTTY PDF Sam s Telecomms Documents Repository RTTY Demodulators ASR 33 Teletype Rear View of Main Assembly www pdp8online com TELETYPE MODEL 32ASR www k7tty com Baudot net Creed amp Company Ltd Gretag ETK 47 14 bit teleprinter system Crypto Museum July 4 2016 ETK teletype equipment series F Dorenberg Other manufacturers of teleprinter machines that use the Hellschreiber principle Dr Edgar Gretener AG Gretag The Hagelin Gretener Cipher Teleprinter PDF Colin Hempstead William E Worthington 2005 Encyclopedia of 20th century technology Routledge p 605 ISBN 9781579584641 Morkum Printing Telegraph Page Printer Retrieved August 22 2011 a b Queensland Telecommunications Museum Teleprinters Queensland Telecommunications Museum Earle Ralph H 1917 The Morkrum System of Printing Telegraphy Chicago Armour Institute of Technology thesis History of The Teletype Corporation June 24 2003 Archived from the original on June 3 2008 Retrieved March 3 2010 US trademark database uspto gov Adjustments Type Bar Page Printer Model 15 PDF Chicago Teletype Corporation 1941 Archived from the original PDF on January 11 2011 ASR 33 Teletype Information www pdp8online com Old Vintage Computing Research Refurb weekend Texas Instruments Silent 700 Model 745 teletype February 17 2022 W David Sloan Lisa Mullikin Parcell ed April 10 2002 American Journalism History Principles Practices McFarland p 365 ISBN 978 0 7864 1371 3 Mergenthaler Linotype Company 1951 The Linotype Handbook for Teletypesetter Operation Dr David M MacMillan digital reprint by www CircuitousRoot com Doug Kerr Teletypes in Typesetting Glendale Arizona USA Southwest Museum of Engineering Communications and Computation Retrieved April 25 2017 Further reading editFoster Maximilian September 1901 A Successful Printing Telegraph The World s Work Vol II no 5 New York Doubleday Page amp Co pp 1195 1200 Retrieved April 29 2012 Gannon Paul 2006 Colossus Bletchley Park s Greatest Secret London Atlantic Books ISBN 978 1843543312 On the role of the teleprinter code in WWII A G Hobbs G8GOJ E W Yeomanson G3IIR A C Gee G2UK 1983 Teleprinter handbook 2nd ed RSGB ISBN 0 900612 59 2 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Teletype Messages Sent Through Switch Board Popular Mechanics Hearst Magazines April 1932 p 577 ISSN 0032 4558 AT amp T offering two way service through switchboardsExternal links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Teleprinter A first hand report of Teletype Corporation s early years Archived March 12 2009 at the Wayback Machine A Gallery of Teletype Images History of Teletypewriter Development by R A Nelson Some Notes on Teletype Corporation Mass gov TTY explanation and government best practices for TTY use Patents edit US Patent 1665594 Telegraph printer Type 12 Teletype issued April 1928 US Patent 1745633 Telegraph receiver Type 14 Teletype issued February 1930 US Patent 1904164 Signalling system and apparatus therefor Type 15 Teletype issued April 1933 US Patent 3507997 Frequency Shift Teletypewriter issued April 1970 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Teleprinter amp oldid 1222867712, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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