Funny you mentioned CNC machines; I'm currently working with an Emco CNC lathe that can accept programs and save them from and to paper tape. It's mind boggling! And it was manufactured in 1988 so not really that old!
I worked in the Olivetti repair lab in the 80s and these things came in for repair. Essentially we just blew the dust out of them. I think i plugged it into a Olvetti M10 and sent an alphabet out from basic and then read it back in again. In fact now I think about it, I made a loop of tape with the alphabet punched into it and I left it running all day and the basic program just checked that it received a to z.
I used to sell these things in the mid-80's to folks who were involved with videotape editing. They would store their edit lists on paper tape. They were not cheap, I think the punch/reader was like $2500. Fortunately at that time, nobody gave a crap about money, it seemed like it was running ankle deep in the streets. They were exceptionally reliable, at least. Truly primitive!
hi, I wonder if you can help me....I'm a photographic artist working on a project to do with the sinking of an iron ore carrier in WW2. The work is commemorative and as part of the installation I would like to find a way of writing the names of the 40 crew in morse code on paper tape. I've not been able to get my hands on an original morse perforator, but wonder if you might be able to help or suggest something? Willing to pay, of course. Thank you so much.
I have an equal machine. I want to punch something but I do not know how. Can you help me? I want to at least test the machine to see if it's okay. Is it possible to drill the tape without connecting to a computer?
I've got 3 Siemens T1600 paper tape punch/readers. Similar to this one that I've recently got working. I've also got an IOMEC paper tape punch that is entirely solenoid operated. I've just built a shield for the Arduino Mega that operates it. You can see a rough demo of it punching 5 hole baudot code here: th-cam.com/video/GVfpuHd1ik8/w-d-xo.html
Funny you mentioned CNC machines; I'm currently working with an Emco CNC lathe that can accept programs and save them from and to paper tape. It's mind boggling! And it was manufactured in 1988 so not really that old!
I worked in the Olivetti repair lab in the 80s and these things came in for repair. Essentially we just blew the dust out of them. I think i plugged it into a Olvetti M10 and sent an alphabet out from basic and then read it back in again. In fact now I think about it, I made a loop of tape with the alphabet punched into it and I left it running all day and the basic program just checked that it received a to z.
I used to sell these things in the mid-80's to folks who were involved with videotape editing. They would store their edit lists on paper tape. They were not cheap, I think the punch/reader was like $2500. Fortunately at that time, nobody gave a crap about money, it seemed like it was running ankle deep in the streets. They were exceptionally reliable, at least. Truly primitive!
hi, I wonder if you can help me....I'm a photographic artist working on a project to do with the sinking of an iron ore carrier in WW2. The work is commemorative and as part of the installation I would like to find a way of writing the names of the 40 crew in morse code on paper tape. I've not been able to get my hands on an original morse perforator, but wonder if you might be able to help or suggest something? Willing to pay, of course. Thank you so much.
I have an equal machine. I want to punch something but I do not know how. Can you help me? I want to at least test the machine to see if it's okay. Is it possible to drill the tape without connecting to a computer?
Love these videos!
Thanks :)
Nice!
Has anyone managed to get the software to be able to do this?
Can I get Phil contact?
Please amplify your mic as it is hard to listen on my phone.
We'll see what we can do for the next one. Thanks for letting us know.
The Centre for Computing History Thanks for the response :-)
I've got 3 Siemens T1600 paper tape punch/readers. Similar to this one that I've recently got working. I've also got an IOMEC paper tape punch that is entirely solenoid operated. I've just built a shield for the Arduino Mega that operates it. You can see a rough demo of it punching 5 hole baudot code here: th-cam.com/video/GVfpuHd1ik8/w-d-xo.html
Top work :)
Where can I download this software? :) I have this tape puncher and I want to test it.
How can I get this DOS application?
Is the source code available? I'd like to test my GNT machine.