- published: 02 Jan 2008
- views: 25545
4:48

Siemens teleprinter/teletype 100A - Part 1 of 3
This nice piece, from about 1960, has started printing again. It is amazing that after abo...
published: 15 Apr 2010
Siemens teleprinter/teletype 100A - Part 1 of 3
This nice piece, from about 1960, has started printing again. It is amazing that after about 30 or so years of being dumped, it works flawlessly even before being cleaned!
This first part of the video shows simple type+print operation.
For more info: http://www.albinarrate.com/index.php?option=com_content&view;=article&id;=49&catid;=22:vintage&Itemid;=38
- published: 15 Apr 2010
- views: 3101
1:56

Teleprinter
TeleprinterElectromechanical typewriters called teleprinters were used in the pre computer...
published: 30 Nov 2010
Teleprinter
TeleprinterElectromechanical typewriters called teleprinters were used in the pre computer era and at the beginning of computer era to receive automatic information both in wired and radio frequency lines. In addition teleprinters were used to enter information into early computer systems, and thus they can be considered the first terminal devices The so-called ticker-machines can be regarded as teleprinters predecessors that were used to send texts over the wire in 70s of XIX century. These devices became widely spread because they could be used to transfer stock exchange bulletins. It had more handy than the ticker as it could print on an ordinary sheet, not on telegraph tape, and combined receiving and transmitting functions in one device. In addition teleprinter could work not only in the mode of communication between two subscribers to each other, but also in the mode of a network, email and notification systems, when information is sent to each subscriber from one point. International communication network on the teleprinters base was called Telex and existed from 1920 until mid-90s. It is still used in navigation and military departments. Another function of the teleprinter is the terminal function. It allowed to enter and receive data to computers long before monitors and keyboards were introduced as separate devices. It was the time when the ASCII code appeared and it is used to this day. Until now teleprinters are used to transmit the data through a narrow channel or in the systems of noise immunity, or where the telegraph had not yet made way to digital communications.
- published: 30 Nov 2010
- views: 870
3:05

siemens T1000z teleprinter
telescrivente Siemens T1000z interfacciata con demodulatore fsk hal st-6000 e ricetrasmett...
published: 22 Oct 2010
siemens T1000z teleprinter
telescrivente Siemens T1000z interfacciata con demodulatore fsk hal st-6000 e ricetrasmettitore icom ic-7400
- published: 22 Oct 2010
- views: 1499
0:42

Siemens T100 Teleprinter 'Dalek'
Here's a Czech clone of a Siemens T100 teleprinter running at our local hackerspace (hacke...
published: 29 Oct 2011
Siemens T100 Teleprinter 'Dalek'
Here's a Czech clone of a Siemens T100 teleprinter running at our local hackerspace (hackerspace.pl). After trying to get it to work for around a month or so, I finally had a stroke of genius and realized that we were connecting the current loop to the wrong pins. Here the machine is repeatadely printing out the 'date' command output on GNU/Linux. Unfortunately we've yet to fix mechanical issues prohibiting us from printing letters.
- published: 29 Oct 2011
- views: 1069
0:50

Creed 7B Teleprinter
A 7B Creed Teleprinter. Still working after 70 years. The 'B' model signifies it prints on...
published: 03 May 2012
Creed 7B Teleprinter
A 7B Creed Teleprinter. Still working after 70 years. The 'B' model signifies it prints one letter behind. The operator can print that missing printed letter by pressing the 'letters' key. Great to have one to play with reminiscing about the 'telegraph old days'!
- published: 03 May 2012
- views: 478
13:36

Radio Teletypewriter AN/GRC-46 pt1-2 1963 US Army Training Film
more at http://quickfound.net/links/military_news_and_links.html
"DESIGN, CAPABILITIES AN...
published: 21 May 2012
Radio Teletypewriter AN/GRC-46 pt1-2 1963 US Army Training Film
more at http://quickfound.net/links/military_news_and_links.html
"DESIGN, CAPABILITIES AND OPERATION FOR CW, VOICE AND TELETYPEWRITER COMMUNICATIONS; OPERATOR MAINTENANCE; VARIOUS MODELS OF SET AND RELATED TELETYPEWRITER SETS AND EQUIPMENT."
US Army Training Film TF11-3314
Public domain film from the National Archives, slightly cropped to remove uneven edges, with the aspect ratio corrected, and mild video noise reduction applied.
The soundtrack was also processed with volume normalization, noise reduction, clipping reduction, and equalization (the resulting sound, though not perfect, is far less noisy than the original).
Split with MKVmerge GUI (part of MKVToolNix), the same freeware (or Avidemux) can recombine the downloaded parts (in mp4 format): http://www.bunkus.org/videotools/mkvtoolnix/doc/mkvmerge-gui.html
part 2: http://youtu.be/xVqgOjyg2Uc
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radioteletype
Radioteletype (RTTY) is a telecommunications system consisting originally of two or more electromechanical teleprinters in different locations, later superseded by personal computers (PCs) running software to emulate teleprinters, connected by radio rather than a wired link.
The term radioteletype is used to describe:
- either the entire family of systems connecting two or more teleprinters or PCs using software to emulate teleprinters, over radio, regardless of alphabet, link system or modulation,
- or specifically the original radioteletype system, sometimes described as "Baudot".
In some applications, notably military and government, radioteletype is known by the acronym RATT (Radio Automatic Teletype).
Landline teleprinter operations began in 1849 when a circuit was put in service between Philadelphia and New York City. Émile Baudot designed a system using a five unit code in 1874 that is still in use today. Teleprinter system design was gradually improved until, at the beginning of World War II, it represented the principal distribution method used by the news services.
Radioteletype evolved from these earlier landline teleprinter operations. The US Navy Department successfully tested printing telegraphy between an airplane and ground radio station in August 1922. Later that year, the Radio Corporation of America successfully tested printing telegraphy via their Chatham, MA radio station to the R.M.S. Majestic. An early implementation of the Radioteletype was the Watsongraph, named after Detroit inventor Glenn Watson in March 1931. Commercial RTTY systems were in active service between San Francisco and Honolulu as early as April 1932 and between San Francisco and New York City by 1934. The US Military used radioteletype in the 1930s and expanded this usage during World War II.. The Navy called radioteletype RATT (Radio Automatic Teletype) and the Army Signal Corps called radioteletype SCRT, an abbreviation of Single-Channel Radio Teletype. The Military used frequency shift keying technology and this technology proved very reliable even over long distances.
From the 1980s, teleprinters were replaced by computers running teleprinter emulation software.
Technical description of RTTY
A radioteletype station consists of three distinct parts: The Teletype or teleprinter, the modem and the radio.
The Teletype or teleprinter is an electromechanical or electronic device. The word "Teletype" was a trademark of the Teletype Corporation, so the terms "TTY", "RTTY","RATT" and "teleprinter" are usually used to describe a generic device without reference to a particular manufacturer.
Electromechanical teleprinters were quite heavy, complex and noisy and they have been replaced with electronic units. The teleprinter includes a keyboard, which is the main means of entering text and a printer or visual display unit (VDU). An alternative input device is a perforated tape reader and, more recently, computer storage media (such as floppy disks). Alternative output devices are tape perforators and computer storage media...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Teleprinter
A teleprinter (teletypewriter, Teletype or TTY) is a electromechanical typewriter that can be used to communicate typed message...
Teleprinters are now largely obsolete, though they are still widely used in the aviation industry (AFTN and airline teletype system), and variations called Telecommunications Devices for the Deaf (TDDs) are still used by the hearing impaired for typed communications over ordinary telephone lines. In computing teleprinters have been replaced by fully electronic computer terminals which usually use a display screen instead of a printer, though the term "TTY" is still occasionally used to refer to them, such as in Unix systems.
- published: 21 May 2012
- views: 1025
12:54

Radio Teletypewriter AN/GRC-46 pt2-2 1963 US Army Training Film
more at http://quickfound.net/links/military_news_and_links.html
"DESIGN, CAPABILITIES AN...
published: 21 May 2012
Radio Teletypewriter AN/GRC-46 pt2-2 1963 US Army Training Film
more at http://quickfound.net/links/military_news_and_links.html
"DESIGN, CAPABILITIES AND OPERATION FOR CW, VOICE AND TELETYPEWRITER COMMUNICATIONS; OPERATOR MAINTENANCE; VARIOUS MODELS OF SET AND RELATED TELETYPEWRITER SETS AND EQUIPMENT."
US Army Training Film TF11-3314
Public domain film from the National Archives, slightly cropped to remove uneven edges, with the aspect ratio corrected, and mild video noise reduction applied.
The soundtrack was also processed with volume normalization, noise reduction, clipping reduction, and equalization (the resulting sound, though not perfect, is far less noisy than the original).
Split with MKVmerge GUI (part of MKVToolNix), the same freeware (or Avidemux) can recombine the downloaded parts (in mp4 format): http://www.bunkus.org/videotools/mkvtoolnix/doc/mkvmerge-gui.html
part 1: http://youtu.be/y5FaQfC66dg
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radioteletype
Radioteletype (RTTY) is a telecommunications system consisting originally of two or more electromechanical teleprinters in different locations, later superseded by personal computers (PCs) running software to emulate teleprinters, connected by radio rather than a wired link.
The term radioteletype is used to describe:
- either the entire family of systems connecting two or more teleprinters or PCs using software to emulate teleprinters, over radio, regardless of alphabet, link system or modulation,
- or specifically the original radioteletype system, sometimes described as "Baudot".
In some applications, notably military and government, radioteletype is known by the acronym RATT (Radio Automatic Teletype).
Landline teleprinter operations began in 1849 when a circuit was put in service between Philadelphia and New York City. Émile Baudot designed a system using a five unit code in 1874 that is still in use today. Teleprinter system design was gradually improved until, at the beginning of World War II, it represented the principal distribution method used by the news services.
Radioteletype evolved from these earlier landline teleprinter operations. The US Navy Department successfully tested printing telegraphy between an airplane and ground radio station in August 1922. Later that year, the Radio Corporation of America successfully tested printing telegraphy via their Chatham, MA radio station to the R.M.S. Majestic. An early implementation of the Radioteletype was the Watsongraph, named after Detroit inventor Glenn Watson in March 1931. Commercial RTTY systems were in active service between San Francisco and Honolulu as early as April 1932 and between San Francisco and New York City by 1934. The US Military used radioteletype in the 1930s and expanded this usage during World War II.. The Navy called radioteletype RATT (Radio Automatic Teletype) and the Army Signal Corps called radioteletype SCRT, an abbreviation of Single-Channel Radio Teletype. The Military used frequency shift keying technology and this technology proved very reliable even over long distances.
From the 1980s, teleprinters were replaced by computers running teleprinter emulation software.
Technical description of RTTY
A radioteletype station consists of three distinct parts: The Teletype or teleprinter, the modem and the radio.
The Teletype or teleprinter is an electromechanical or electronic device. The word "Teletype" was a trademark of the Teletype Corporation, so the terms "TTY", "RTTY","RATT" and "teleprinter" are usually used to describe a generic device without reference to a particular manufacturer.
Electromechanical teleprinters were quite heavy, complex and noisy and they have been replaced with electronic units. The teleprinter includes a keyboard, which is the main means of entering text and a printer or visual display unit (VDU). An alternative input device is a perforated tape reader and, more recently, computer storage media (such as floppy disks). Alternative output devices are tape perforators and computer storage media...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Teleprinter
A teleprinter (teletypewriter, Teletype or TTY) is a electromechanical typewriter that can be used to communicate typed message...
Teleprinters are now largely obsolete, though they are still widely used in the aviation industry (AFTN and airline teletype system), and variations called Telecommunications Devices for the Deaf (TDDs) are still used by the hearing impaired for typed communications over ordinary telephone lines. In computing teleprinters have been replaced by fully electronic computer terminals which usually use a display screen instead of a printer, though the term "TTY" is still occasionally used to refer to them, such as in Unix systems.
- published: 21 May 2012
- views: 731
8:22

Creed teleprinter Clayfield P.O.1960.
At Clayfield Post Office in Brisbane in 1960, the model 7 Creed teleprinter was still bein...
published: 26 Aug 2012
Creed teleprinter Clayfield P.O.1960.
At Clayfield Post Office in Brisbane in 1960, the model 7 Creed teleprinter was still being used to send and receive telegrams. The model first appeared in 1931, and production was continued (with minor changes) for 38 years - up until 1969 ! Before the Creed teleprinter arrived, most Australian Post Offices were sending and receiving telegrams by morse code. The received signal was interpreted by the operator into letters and numbers, and written out on a sheet of paper. A telegram, on an official telegram form, would then be typed out (or hand printed), and handed to the telegram boy (Junior Postal Officer), for delivery, using a red PMG bicycle (the same type of red bicycle used by the postmen).
With the introduction of the Creed Teleprinter, the telegram would be received already typed, and it was just a simple matter of tearing the telegram off the machine, putting it in an envelope (with a window showing the name and address of the person it had to be delivered to), and then handed to the telegram boy for delivery.
Back in 1960, not everybody had a telephone, but if they were listed in the local telephone directory, a telegram could (sometimes) be read out to the recipient over the phone, and then stamped with a stamp saying - "Phoned - Post", meaning that the telegram had been phoned through, and could now be put in an envelope and given to the postman to deliver it through the normal mail system.
However, it's important to note that only a very small percentage of telegrams were telephoned through. Over 90% were hand delivered by the telegram boys. Even some "Greetings" telegrams could not be delivered over the phone, and it was strictly prohibited to attempt to use the phone to deliver "Sympathy" telegrams (where somebody had died, etc).
Mr.Carr, the Postmaster at Clayfield in 1960, told me about one incident (at another Post Office), where somebody had phoned through a sympathy telegram to a lady whose husband had died in a plane crash, and all that was heard on the other end of the phone was a loud thud. The lady had collapsed, and an ambulance had to be promptly dispatched to her residence !
The topography around Clayfield was relatively flat in some directions, and very 'hilly' in other directions. For example, it was an easy ride to deliver telegrams to people in the horse-racing community in the suburb of Hendra (where the 'Hendra virus' first appeared in 1994). Anywhere in the direction of Eagle Farm Racecourse was mainly flat, and I remember delivering telegrams to the great jockey Darby McCarthy at Hendra on a number of occassions while I was a Junior Postal Officer at Clayfield.
On the other hand, it was a hard slog delivering telegrams in the direction of St.Ritas College in Enderley Road, Clayfield, because of all the hills. I usually had to get off my bike and push it along, whenever I had to cycle up to St.Ritas (or other houses in that direction). I once had to go as far as Bonney Avenue, where it was extremely hilly, but luckily, that was not normally part of our delivery area.
Roads in Clayfield which were not popular with the telegram boys included Oriel Road, Upper Lancaster Road, Enderley Road, and other roads in that direction (becaude of the steep hills). There were three Junior Postal Officers at Clayfield, and when we weren't delivering telegrams, we would stamp letters and do other office jobs. Whenever we heard the Creed teleprinter start up and print out a telegram, we would all rush to the machine to see where the telegram had to be delivered, and whether there was more than one telegram.
The first telegram to come in, went to the person whose 'turn' it was for the next delivery. (All of us were hoping we wouldn't have to go in the direction of St.Ritas College ! ).
- published: 26 Aug 2012
- views: 354
3:03

T2CN olivetti teleprinter telescrivente
telescrivente olivetti T2CN interfacciata con demodulatore fsk Hal St-6000 e ricevitore se...
published: 12 Oct 2010
T2CN olivetti teleprinter telescrivente
telescrivente olivetti T2CN interfacciata con demodulatore fsk Hal St-6000 e ricevitore selettivo spm-19
- published: 12 Oct 2010
- views: 1026
Youtube results:
2:31

teleprinter T100 only receiver
telescrivente Siemens T100 solo ricevente (mancante della tastiera e del meccanismo di tra...
published: 15 Oct 2010
teleprinter T100 only receiver
telescrivente Siemens T100 solo ricevente (mancante della tastiera e del meccanismo di trasmissione caratteri) accoppiata al solito demodulatore fsk hal st-6000 e voltmetro selettivo spm-19
il video mostra la ricezione di un bollettino meteo della onnipresente DDK2 su 4583 khz
- published: 15 Oct 2010
- views: 389
0:55

Siemens teleprinter/teletype 100A - Part 3 of 3 - Tape reader
The paper tape with its bits punched contains the message. You then place it in the reader...
published: 15 Apr 2010
Siemens teleprinter/teletype 100A - Part 3 of 3 - Tape reader
The paper tape with its bits punched contains the message. You then place it in the reader, press the engage button, and the teleprinter start reading character by character, while at the same time sending it over the telex line, and if configured in a loop, printing it in your own paper and even punching it in the tape puncher, all at the same time.
More info: http://www.albinarrate.com/index.php?option=com_content&view;=article&id;=49&catid;=22:vintage&Itemid;=38telet
- published: 15 Apr 2010
- views: 637
2:11

Teleprinter Room With Telex Machi; Sound Effect
Feel free to use the audio from this video in your own projects licensed under Creative Co...
published: 02 Feb 2013
Teleprinter Room With Telex Machi; Sound Effect
Feel free to use the audio from this video in your own projects licensed under Creative Commons. See more of my videos here http://tinyurl.com/a5mkvrx
- published: 02 Feb 2013
- views: 19
0:22

Teleprinter & Colossus at Bletchley Park
Teleprinter sound with a brief look at Colossus. Want to know more? Visit Bletchley park!
...
published: 11 Oct 2011
Teleprinter & Colossus at Bletchley Park
Teleprinter sound with a brief look at Colossus. Want to know more? Visit Bletchley park!
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colossus_computer
- published: 11 Oct 2011
- views: 77