[GreenKeys] Teletypes at the Maker Faire
W2HX
w2hx at w2hx.com
Fri Apr 20 14:42:03 EDT 2018
?Bravo! Well done!
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From: greenkeys-bounces at mailman.qth.net <greenkeys-bounces at mailman.qth.net> on behalf of Jordan Spencer Cunningham <js at cunni.co>
Sent: Friday, April 20, 2018 1:03 AM
To: Green Keys
Subject: [GreenKeys] Teletypes at the Maker Faire
Hi all,
Thanks for the encouragement and kind words. Showing the teletypes off at the Maker Faire was a success. John Whitney brought his Model 35 and had it connected to a Linux terminal, and I had my 19 printing out SMS and email people sent it whilst my 15 was printing out art the whole day.
I have never been to the Maker Faire here in Salt Lake City before, but there were I believe 80-90 total groups showing off various projects of every kind in the State Fairpark Grand Building. I think it's safe to say that the teletypes were one of the more popular exhibits there. I had a pretty good crowd most of the time, and most adults and kids were enthralled with the machines and had a lot of questions. One probably 11 year old girl said she just got a new room, and she said a piece of art I printed out at her request depicting Charle's Shulz' "Lucy" from the Peanuts cartoons would be the perfect thing for her wall. John's machine, which was set up just across the way from mine, seemed to attract a lot of people, too.
I enjoyed explaining the history of the machines and how they worked electrically and mechanically to people interested in them, which were many. I had a mechanical engineer and an electrical engineer both exclaim that they'd never seen anything so amazingly engineered.
There were maybe three or four people who came up with big smiles on their faces and talked about the old days when they or their parents used to work with teleprinter machines back in the 70s. It was fun to see those memories reawakened.
A lot of people thought I had retrofitted typewriters. They were excited to hear that the teletypes were completely original designs dating from 1930, operating exactly as they did back then.
I was invited to bring the machines to the Thanksgiving Point Maker Faire in September (that's around 20-30 miles south of Salt Lake City), and there were some other groups that wanted me to bring them by.
It was a fun day and one I'd love repeating again.
I was up until 6:00 AM before the faire with a long night of polishing up some finishing touches, printing out extra art to give away, testing, and fixing a couple of bugs in both the software and the machines that I discovered. There was a heart-stopping moment when I thought I had somehow destroyed my last remaining optoisolators on the two boards and thought I'd be completely unable to operate since I couldn't get any replacement components in time. Luckily it turned out to be a really weird hardware bug I have not had time to fully trace that was simply solved by reversing the loop polarity (the boards are supposed to be polarity insensitive and were working fine in the opposite polarity until that moment). I had a few moments like this where I grumbled things like, "Why can't I just be like everyone else and do something easy like play video games?!" However, the end result is well worth the moments of frustration.
The machines ran incredibly well and are a monument to how well the last person who owned them took care of them. He became silent key in the 70s, and the machines sat idle in his basement for about 40 years until I had them shipped across the country to me last year. I had oiled and greased the major parts, replaced a couple of missing parts, tightened some nuts and bolts, and did some modest cleaning, but there is still plenty I want to do to clean and restore them. Despite that, both machines ran incredibly well for hours and brought enjoyment and wonder to hundreds of visitors.
Attached are some photos. I meant to have more, but I forgot to bring my camera. My phone was plugged into the Raspberry Pi to supply the internet connection, so I couldn't take it more than a couple feet away for pictures. Most pictures were taken by my wife.
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