[GreenKeys] Western Union Ticker-5A Stock Quotation Machine
eugene at hertzmail.com
eugene at hertzmail.com
Wed Apr 18 18:14:46 EDT 2007
Hi Brooke, et al.
My guess is that the patent so predated any production models that
perhaps the start-stop was more reliable or more often used? Only reason
I think this is because even the manual from 1928 mentions this using
start-stop.
As for copies of the manuals, I will send them to jhhaynes who has been
scanning teletype manuals for ages. He can then send you a CD with the
manuals.
Here's my only request! Once you get a nice system devised to run the
5A, I'd like the plans for it so I can duplicate it. Other priorities
have kept me away from this project for too many years and I'd love to
get it going!
Eugene
-----Original Message-----
From: Brooke Clarke [mailto:brooke at pacific.net]
Sent: Wednesday, April 18, 2007 5:26 PM
To: eugene at hertzmail.com; greenkeys at mailman.qth.net
Subject: Re: [GreenKeys] Western Union Ticker-5A Stock Quotation Machine
Hi Eugene:
Have you had a chance to read my web page at:
http://www.pacificsites.com/~brooke/MSD.shtml
At the bottom under the Patents heading are links to the USPTO web pages
http://www.pacificsites.com/~brooke/WU5A.shtml#5Apat
You need a .tif viewer add on to your browser to view patents there, or
you can
go to http://www.pat2pdf.org and download a free pdf version.
The first patent goes into great detail about the 6 bit isocynchronous
mode (no
start/stop bits) and all the features needed to make that work (Unison
device,
pipelined printing, 6th bit for Letters/Figures shift, etc).
The second patent talks about how a few parts can be changed to allow
use with
Start Stop type machines. I haven't yet studied those parts enough to
determine if they are on my machine or not.
So far I haven't been able to find patents that are specific to the
model 26 so
that section is now blank. Be sure the next time you go to that page
you force
a browser refresh as it's under construction.
I have a spool of paper tape on order from Claus Studios. He has a very
wide
roll and cuts off 3/4" slices, link on 5-A web page.
Is it possible for me to get a hard or soft copy of all your 5-A
documents for
a fair price?
I'm also studying all the Printing Telegraphs (patent top class number
178)
which mostly are stock tickers. So far I have over 400 patents directly
related to stock tickers. The problem is that T.A. Edison has way too
many and
I can't sort them all out. To help a month ago I ordered through inter
library
loan a copy of "The papers of T.A. Edison, Vol 1" that includes his
stock
ticker work. I'm hoping that will help. I would really like to get
high
resolution photos of your glass dome machine from different angles.
That way
we could see which patented features it does and does not have.
How were you driving the polar coil?
Have Fun,
Brooke Clarke, N6GCE
w/Java http://www.PRC68.com
w/o Java http://www.pacificsites.com/~brooke/PRC68COM.shtml
http://www.precisionclock.com
eugene at hertzmail.com wrote:
> I am certainly no expert on these matters. However, I do have a manual
> and two 5A tickers. WA2HWJ was kind enough several years ago to get
mine
> working again. At the time, the best we were able to decipher, it was
> 6-bit, 50ma polar, 67.5 baud. It did seem to be start-stop. Manual
> concurs with the start-stop. We were able to get RY and some other
text
> printing successfully. We encountered two main problems. 1) we only
had
> 11/16 width paper available (as opposed to 3/4) which the ticker did
not
> like, the paper tended to walk around and not stay put. And 2) I had
no
> ink roller, so manual inking of the print wheel was only useful on a
> temporary basis.
>
> Teletype (non-bell written on cover)
> Bulletin No. 137
> Issue 2
> January, 1934
>
> Description and Adjustments
> Of the
> Typewheel Tape Printer (Ticker)
> (for tickers bearing serial numbers above 1000)
>
> My meager research tells me there were many variations on this ticker.
> One was 5-level, one had a bid-ask delete capability and there were
some
> exterior changes such as the ink roller exposed vs. housed in a small
> covering box. My two tickers have slight differences mechanically.
Such
> as the shape of the typewheel stop pins.
>
> I can quote from the manual under "CODE" page 1---
> The signaling code employed to transmit characters in a six unit
> "start-stop" code which consists of six selecting impulses used in
> various combinations of positive and negative intervals. Each group
of
> six selecting impulses is preceded by a start impulse and followed by
a
> stop impulse to maintain unison between the transmitting apparatus and
> the printers."
>
> On page -31- of this publication it mentions:
> Coil Resistance and Operating Currents
> Color of Leads USE Coils in Series Parallel Resistance
> (per coil)
> Green/White W.U. 50ma 100ma 39 ohms
> Blue/Yellow - - - 15 ohms
> Red/Yellow N.Y.Q. 100ma 200ma 8 ohms
>
> N.Y.Q. is New York Quotation, the service provider of the quotes for
> stock exchanges (I also have a NYQ ticker with glass dome)
>
> Interesting enough, I also have a manual from "Morkrum-Kleinschmidt"
> Bulletin No. 136, December 1928
>
> This is very similar to the one dated 1934 but has some differences.
> Line current is stated only at 50ma when coils are connected in series
> and 100ma in parallel and operating coil resistance as 37 ohms each
>
> Last bit of evidence, I have a sheet "Specification 60,660S" December
> 13, 1963 which has hand written on it "Canadian Ticker 135 Baud, 15.0
> wpm" No idea of that makes any sense.
>
> I had hopes of getting my 5A online but I could never find 3/4 inch
tape
> to continue experimenting.
>
> Hope this has helped in some small way
> Eugene
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: greenkeys-bounces at mailman.qth.net
> [mailto:greenkeys-bounces at mailman.qth.net] On Behalf Of Brooke Clarke
> Sent: Wednesday, April 18, 2007 1:01 PM
> To: Bob Camp
> Cc: GreenKeys List
> Subject: Re: [GreenKeys] Western Union Ticker-5A Stock Quotation
Machine
>
> Hi Bob:
>
> Now we're cooking.
>
> The 5-A coil is 0.15 H, 20 Ohms and let's say 60 ma operation.
> The printing rate is 500 characters per minute with 6 bits per
character
> (no
> start, no stop bits) or 3,000 bits per minute, or 50 bits per second,
or
> 20 ms
> per bit. i.e. half that baud rate you mentioned. So the time
interval
> might
> be T = 1/500 or 0.002 seconds.
>
> Now: V = L * dI / dT = 0.15 * 0.06 / 0.002 = 4.5 volts which is close
> enough
> to a standard 5 volt logic supply.
>
> Thanks for an explanation I could get my teeth into!
>
> How do the coil specs for the 5-A compare to the ASR-33 that I used to
> use with
> my first computer?
>
> Have Fun,
>
> Brooke Clarke, N6GCE
> w/Java http://www.PRC68.com
> w/o Java http://www.pacificsites.com/~brooke/PRC68COM.shtml
> http://www.precisionclock.com
>
>
> Bob Camp wrote:
>
>>Hi
>>
>>Yes, some have done the experiment you describe. In my case it was
>>sometime in the late 1960's (gulp!) . Results:
>>
>>1) With the diode on the coil the system simply does not work at all.
>
>
>>The magnetic field does not collapse fast enough to release the
>>armature in time. It's not a matter of distortion in this case, it's
>
> a
>
>>matter of not having any copy at all.
>>
>>2) The high voltage on "break" allows the energy to be dumped faster.
>
>
>>When the volts X amps is higher the coil dumps it's stored energy in
>
> a
>
>>shorter period of time.
>>
>>3) In order for the mechanical part of the system to work correctly
>
> the
>
>>electrical signals need to be pretty accurate. Any significant
>>distortion in the electronics mucks up the mechanical side pretty
>
> fast.
>
>>Here's some math ....
>>
>>The basic formula for current in a coil is:
>>
>>voltage = inductance X (delta current) / (delta time).
>>
>>At 100 baud and 10% distortion T = 1/1000 of a second.
>>Current is about 60 ma.
>>
>>so:
>>
>>V = L x 0.060 / 0.001
>>V = 60 * L
>>
>>That's for a constant current loop ...
>>
>>If L is in the roughly couple of Henrys range then you get voltages
>
> at
>
>>or above 60 for any reasonable level of distortion.
>>
>>Bob
>>
>>
>>On Apr 18, 2007, at 12:34 AM, Brooke Clarke wrote:
>>
>>
>>>Hi Peter:
>>>
>>>Did you try using a current source instead of a voltage source? Did
>
>
>>>you use a protection diode across the coil?
>>>
>>>I've been studying this for most of today and I've found two key
>>>factors.
>>>
>>>1) the loop time constant is L / R. It may take 3 to 5 time
>>>constants for a signal to settle so the time constant needs to be a
>>>very small part of a bit time or you're going to have problems. But
>
>
>>>using a current source brings the time constant near zero, i.e. R is
>
>
>>>near infinity.
>>>
>>>2) the coil in the electromagnet does not like to change currents.
>>>If there is already current in the coil and you turn it off the coil
>
>
>>>tries to generate a voltage that's high enough to maintain the old
>>>current. This is how the spark coil in a car works. This voltage
>>>pulse can easily destroy the driver transistor. The common way of
>>>fixing that is to put a diode across the coil with it's polarity
>
> such
>
>>>that when the coil is forward biased the diode is back biased, but
>>>(forgetting about the bi polar drive for a minute) that will not
>
> work
>
>>>and at the same time allow the coil to operate quickly, instead the
>>>diode slows the coil way down since now there's a current
>
> circulating
>
>>>in the diode and coil with it's own long L/R time constant.
>>>
>>>I think the fix for (2) is to use a bi polar Transil. It's sort of
>>>like back to back zener diodes (which probably would also work) with
>
>
>>>a breakdown voltage greater than the DC drop across the coil when
>>>saturated but much much faster and rated to absorb spikes.
>>>
>>>I'd like to hear from someone who has done this type of experiment.
>
>
>>>My gut feeling is that a properly designed driver can work with a
>
> low
>
>>>voltage supply. My brain is telling me that there's a lot of people
>
>
>>>using high voltage that would not be if there was an easy way to
>>>avoid it.
>>>
>>>Have Fun,
>>>
>>>Brooke Clarke
>>>w/Java http://www.PRC68.com
>>>w/o Java http://www.pacificsites.com/~brooke/PRC68COM.shtml
>>>http://www.precisionclock.com
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>Peter Gottlieb wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>>>Well obviously a power op-amp (Burr-Brown) or homebrew
>>>>(complimentary pair, see National app notes) will take RS-232 and
>>>>make bipolar.
>>>>I am not too familiar with the dynamics of polar relays but TTY
>>>>selector magnets need a high voltage to get current into the high
>>>>inductance rapidly. I couldn't get my 2B to run at 28 volts even
>>>>though I needed a series resistor to drop the current, but go to
>
> 100
>
>>>>and it ran like a champ.
>>>>Peter
>>>>Brooke Clarke wrote:
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>>Hi:
>>>>>
>>>>>I'm trying to bring a Western Union Ticker-5A Stock Quotation
>>>>>Machine back to life. This is the machine that replaced the older
>
>
>>>>>stock ticker machines that were under glass domes to keep down the
>
>
>>>>>noise. I'd say that it's father was the Edison Universal stock
>>>>>ticker that changed Edison from someone who was broke to a multi
>>>>>millionaire. It's mother was the model 26 Teletype machine since
>>>>>they both use a similar, but not interchangeable, selector cage.
>>>>>
>>>>>It's my understanding that the 26 was good for 100 CPM yet the 5A
>>>>>was good for 500 CPM.
>>>>>
>>>>>The 5A uses a permutation code that consists of 5 bits but instead
>
>
>>>>>of using a character for shift to numbers and another character
>
> for
>
>>>>>shift to letters the 5A uses another code bit for this so the
>
> total
>
>>>>>number of bits in the code is 6. This solves the stuck in figures
>
>
>>>>>problem.
>>>>>
>>>>>But unlike teletype machines the 5A does NOT use start and stop
>>>>>bits. This is one of the things that makes it fast.
>>>>>
>>>>>The thing I'm working on now is how to drive it. The input goes
>
> to
>
>>>>>a polar relay that expects to see current polarity reversals, not
>>>>>the on off keying that a normal teletype machine uses. Testing
>
> has
>
>>>>>revealed that it wants to see 50 to 100 ma and being a 20 ohm coil
>
>
>>>>>a little over 1 volt is all that's required.
>>>>>
>>>>>Are that circuits already in existence that will take in RS-232
>
> and
>
>>>>>supply the bi polar drive current? I think that might be more
>>>>>common in the UK or Australia than in the US.
>>>>>
>>>>>Why do teletype machines typically have loop voltages in the 100
>
> to
>
>>>>>200 volt area? Could these be replaced by current sources that
>>>>>have a voltage compliance a litter higher than the voltage drop
>>>>>across the input relay coil?
>>>>>
>>>>>For more on the 5A see my web page:
>>>>>
>>>>>http://www.pacificsites.com/~brooke/WU5A.shtml
>>>>>
>>>>>Have Fun,
>>>>>
>>>>>Brooke Clarke, N6GCE
>>>
>>>_______________________________________________
>>>GreenKeys mailing list
>>>GreenKeys at mailman.qth.net
>>>http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/greenkeys
>>>
>>
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