[GreenKeys] WRU key code
Russ Miller
wa3frp at gmail.com
Tue Oct 1 18:10:28 EDT 2019
I-Telex is a hobby telex network or telex network, originated and supported
as an open source project.
The history of i-telex goes back to the year 2000, when it was still called
"TelexPhone" (TxP for short), because the connections were made over the
analog telephone network and not over the Internet. At that time,
relatively few V.21 modems were used, but over time these modems became
harder to obtain. As telephone company telephone networks moved to Voice
over IP solutions (VoIP), a trouble-free, analog modem connection, was
almost impossible to obtain. The alternative was to move to an IP based
solution and that was the "TelexPhone 2" (TxP 2 short), which is just "i-
Telex ".
i-telex allows the user to operate one or more teletypes so that they can
be connected internally or over the Internet. The i-Telex network emulates
the original Telex worldwide network, providing a real-time and modern
equivalent to the former electromechanical telex network.
The system has a modular structure so that it can be adapted to individual
requirements. If more than one device is connected, internal connections
are possible, so it is a kind of Telex PBX.
You can find more by going here: https://www.i-telex.net/
Please ask me questions. I'll also ask Henning to jump in to elaborate.
Thanks,
Russ WA3FRP
iTelex 834328 WUTMPAM
On Tue, Oct 1, 2019 at 5:22 PM ad7i <ad7i at ad7i.net> wrote:
> Thanks Russ for the info about WRU/Answerback
>
> And where's the best place for me to learn about iTelex? It sounds like a
> neat system, but until your email I had never heard of it.
>
> Best wishes,
>
> Paul, ad7i
>
>
> On Tue, Oct 1, 2019 at 2:57 PM Russ Miller <wa3frp at gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> Speaking specifically about the Teletype Model 28 Telex machine. First,
>> this was a rare item in the North American Telex networks. I doubt if any
>> exist today, except for the machine that I use on the iTelex network here
>> in Pennsylvania. Most Telex machines were Teletype Model 32ASRs. There
>> were some Siemens T100 and T1000 machines. There were also some Extel
>> machines. But, a Teletype Model 28 on Telex was rare, even in the 1960s,
>> 70s and 80s.
>>
>> Getting to the Teletype Model 28 as a Telex machine. The keyboard is
>> shown in the attached picture. The Keyboard reflects the modified ITA2
>> standard used on the Telex network in Canada and the United States. FIGS D
>> was a German "iron cross". The same was true for the Model 28 Typebox.
>> There are other differences. Note that FIGS V is ; and not =. Note that
>> FIGS Z is " and not +. FIGS F, G and H are undefined in ITA2 but the North
>> American Telex Network defined these as $, & and #.
>>
>> The Model 28ASR Telex Stunt Box uses a clever way to block the local
>> answerback (Teletype LABD500) from being triggered when FIGS D is sent to a
>> distant machine while, at the same time, allowing an incoming FIGS D to
>> start the answerback message.
>>
>> There is a CCITT ITA2 standard but there are many modifications based on
>> user requirements. Remember that lots of Model 28 machines were used in
>> Private Wire service on point to point or point to multipoint using
>> dedicated WAN lines.
>>
>> Russ WA3FRP
>> iTelex 834328 WUTMPAM CHIL
>>
>> On Tue, Oct 1, 2019 at 1:50 PM <steve.n4tty at gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>>> Paul,
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> As Paul, W2TTY, indicates the 28s you’ve seen with “WRU” as the FIGS
>>> character on the “D” key was used in Telex communications. The “$” on the
>>> FIGS “D” key was a standard communications setup (not Telex). I have a “$”
>>> FIGS “D” key on all my 28s. But I used them on the iTelex service from
>>> Henning and the guys in Germany. If the other end type their “WRU” key the
>>> software on the iTelex board that sits on my intranet router sends back an
>>> “ANSWER BACK” message that is programmed right now as “30083 N4TTY” which I
>>> can change if I so desire on the iTelex board. The iTelex board sends that
>>> ANSWER BACK sting back to the other end and also send it to my 28 so I can
>>> see what is happening. Most Telex machines also had another key called the
>>> “HERE IS” key that also sent the same string of characters if you were
>>> initiating the ANSWER BACK instead of wait or expecting a “WRU.”
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> There was a drum with 12 or 13 (or so) blades that had each of the
>>> characters in the answerback string encoded on them. I’ve never actually
>>> seen an ANSWER BACK mechanism on a 28, but would imagine that the reception
>>> of the FIGS D sequence would trip the mechanism and cause the string to be
>>> sent over the loop, which may have caused it to print locally as well as at
>>> the other end. And if the operator pressed the HERE IS key the same think
>>> would happen. I’m also guessing that the reception od the FIGS D
>>> suppressed printing until the ANSWER BACK drum kicked into action. That
>>> way if you had a normal comms type box you probably would not see the “$.”
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> Others feel free to jump in and help me out here, as I’m definitely not
>>> an expert on the matter.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> I can say that if I send an apostrophe from my keyboard they (real Telex
>>> machines) hear the bell on their end. And if I send the BELL character
>>> they see an apostrophe. And in reverse, if they send an apostrophe I hear
>>> my bell and if they send their bell I see an apostrophe. A little
>>> disconcerting until you get used to it. I tend to shy away from the
>>> apostrophe and the bell unless I really need them. And for new iTelex
>>> users, especially across the pond, I find I have to sometimes explain this
>>> difference.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> Steve G./N4TTY
>>>
>>> iTelex #: 30083
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> *From:* greenkeys-bounces at mailman.qth.net <
>>> greenkeys-bounces at mailman.qth.net> *On Behalf Of *ad7i
>>> *Sent:* Tuesday, October 1, 2019 12:31 PM
>>> *To:* greenkeys at mailman.qth.net
>>> *Subject:* [GreenKeys] WRU key code
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> I know that for ITA2 TTYs that the WRU command is FIGS-D. In looking at
>>> photos of what I presume to be USA Model 28 keyboards most have the D key
>>> marked "$ over D" (FIGS-D prints as $) but I have seen a few USA Model 28
>>> with the D key marked as "WRU over D".
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> In the USA was it typical for those TTY systems that made use of
>>> WRU/Answerback that FIGS-D was always used as the WRU command? In the USA
>>> if a WRU command was received by a TTY would that received FIGS-D result in
>>> the "$" character being printed on the paper in addition to triggering the
>>> Answerback generator (if one was installed), or was FIGS-D a "command only,
>>> no key printed" type of thing?
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> thanks,
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> Paul, ad7i
>>>
>>>
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>>
>>
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