[GreenKeys] When hobbies cross over...
Richard Knoppow
1oldlens1 at ix.netcom.com
Wed Nov 27 16:13:32 EST 2019
It might be the Flex-O-Riter. I just sent a link to a movie
on You Tube and watched it. It shows the vary machine you talk
about with three automated typewriters driven by a player piano
roll.
On 11/27/2019 12:32 PM, Ralph Irish wrote:
> Jeff
>
> Friden made a typewriter with tape gear that could do what you
> described. A friend of mine found one and put it to
> use making Resumes for his job hunting. Someone made a machine
> called a, "Flex-I-Writer" or maybe "Flex-O-Writer",
> It might have been Frieden, not sure.
>
> I think that it had "STOP"codes one could punch into the tape so
> that manual entry of a name or company name could
> be inserted, making each letter appear to be unique, when it
> might have been one of fifty, going out for business purposes.
>
> These had their own unique codes. My friend's was an 8-Level
> thing, but I never had a chance to play with it or make a
> test tape to run on a 33ASR, for comparison, etc.
>
> Ralph - W8ROI
>
> - - - - - - - -
>
> *From: *"Jeff G" <jeffg at junknet.net>
> *To: *greenkeys at mailman.qth.net
> *Sent: *Wednesday, November 27, 2019 3:21:32 PM
> *Subject: *[GreenKeys] When hobbies cross over...
>
> Figured you guys and gals would enjoy this - this is an excerpt
> of an email from a long-time vendor in my car hobby who often
> tells stories in his emails, and I thought it was ironic that one
> hobby would mention another:
>
> "In the 1960s and 1970s my Dad did a lot of marketing for major
> insurance companies. Most people would call this “junk mail.” I
> would agree with that assumption. At one time, my Dad had 3
> automatic typewriters that would auto-type full-page letters for
> mailings. They looked like they were personally typed letters to
> individuals. These typewriters worked similar to a player piano
> working off a roll with holes it. One person could run 3 machines
> at once. He also had a machine (not sure what it was called) that
> using a fountain pen and could duplicate a hand-signed signature
> of a person. This was pretty advanced stuff for the 1970s. I
> worked with this equipment as well as ran inserting machines back
> in the day."
>
> While I'm sure there were a bunch non-teletype typewriters that
> fed on paper tape, you never know.
>
> Jeff aka "Bags"
> KC3GJX
>
>
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--
Richard Knoppow
1oldlens1 at ix.netcom.com
WB6KBL
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