[GreenKeys] Taking orders for USB/Teletype Interface Boards

Jordan Spencer Cunningham js at teletype.net
Sat Mar 30 06:47:25 EDT 2019


Hello friends,

I will be doing a manufacturing run of the USB <--> Current Loop boards after Eric Volpe's design <http://heepy.net/index.php/USB-teletype>, and I will be taking orders for anyone who wants one or multiple. Use these to interface your heavy metal machines to modern computers and exercise them more than they otherwise would be. See some machines in action with these boards at https://nerdology.org/youtube. Every teletype-related video there including the RTTY ones shows my machines being driven by these boards.

I should be able to ship the boards to you for no more than *$35-$40* per board, which covers the board, continental U.S. shipping, and any shipping/packing materials I need to invest in. I might be able to do it for less, but I will get things finalized and let you know.

*Please email me off list with the number of boards you'd like so I can gauge the overall interest and know if I should order more/fewer boards.* Even if you already emailed me before about this, please do so again just in case I lose your previous message from last year.

Let me answer a few questions people may have ahead of time; more details to come:

 * I'm outside the continental US-- can I make an order?
   * Absolutely-- shipping will probably be higher, which I will deal with on an individual basis.
 * When will the boards be ready?
   * I'm hoping to ship by May, 2019. Maybe June if I'm slow.
 * How will funds be collected?
   * I'll probably set up an account with Stripe or Square to make it easier on myself, though I'm happy to take payment via PayPal or Google Wallet as well.
 * Will [X] teletype work with this board?
   * Any 5-bit machine running on a 20ma/60ma high voltage current loop should work. 300 baud should be easily attainable-- possibly much higher speeds.
   * ASCII machines should work, too
 * Is a power supply included?
   * No. You'll need your own PSU with appropriate current limiting resistors to power the loop. I've used a prebuilt one from China that has served me very well driving multiple loops at once. There are other options, too.
 * Will this work with [X] computer?
   * I'd recommend investing in a Raspberry Pi to be your teletype controller, but any computer with a USB 2.0 or better interface should work, including but not limited to ones running Linux (any *nix, really), MacOS, and Windows.
 * What software do I need to use it?
   * Pretty much anything that can manipulate a serial interface. There are a number of options that should work, or you could roll your own. I will probably write up some details on the range of options when I get a chance. I have been rolling my own for a while-- it's not quite user-friendly enough that I'd want to release it yet, but I'm working on making it public.
-
Jordan Spencer Cunningham
teletype.net
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