element14 Community
element14 Community
    Register Log In
  • Site
  • Search
  • Log In Register
  • About Us
  • Community Hub
    Community Hub
    • What's New on element14
    • Feedback and Support
    • Benefits of Membership
    • Personal Blogs
    • Members Area
    • Achievement Levels
  • Learn
    Learn
    • Ask an Expert
    • eBooks
    • element14 presents
    • Learning Center
    • Tech Spotlight
    • STEM Academy
    • Webinars, Training and Events
    • Learning Groups
  • Technologies
    Technologies
    • 3D Printing
    • FPGA
    • Industrial Automation
    • Internet of Things
    • Power & Energy
    • Sensors
    • Technology Groups
  • Challenges & Projects
    Challenges & Projects
    • Design Challenges
    • element14 presents Projects
    • Project14
    • Arduino Projects
    • Raspberry Pi Projects
    • Project Groups
  • Products
    Products
    • Arduino
    • Avnet Boards Community
    • Dev Tools
    • Manufacturers
    • Multicomp Pro
    • Product Groups
    • Raspberry Pi
    • RoadTests & Reviews
  • Store
    Store
    • Visit Your Store
    • Choose another store...
      • Europe
      •  Austria (German)
      •  Belgium (Dutch, French)
      •  Bulgaria (Bulgarian)
      •  Czech Republic (Czech)
      •  Denmark (Danish)
      •  Estonia (Estonian)
      •  Finland (Finnish)
      •  France (French)
      •  Germany (German)
      •  Hungary (Hungarian)
      •  Ireland
      •  Israel
      •  Italy (Italian)
      •  Latvia (Latvian)
      •  
      •  Lithuania (Lithuanian)
      •  Netherlands (Dutch)
      •  Norway (Norwegian)
      •  Poland (Polish)
      •  Portugal (Portuguese)
      •  Romania (Romanian)
      •  Russia (Russian)
      •  Slovakia (Slovak)
      •  Slovenia (Slovenian)
      •  Spain (Spanish)
      •  Sweden (Swedish)
      •  Switzerland(German, French)
      •  Turkey (Turkish)
      •  United Kingdom
      • Asia Pacific
      •  Australia
      •  China
      •  Hong Kong
      •  India
      •  Korea (Korean)
      •  Malaysia
      •  New Zealand
      •  Philippines
      •  Singapore
      •  Taiwan
      •  Thailand (Thai)
      • Americas
      •  Brazil (Portuguese)
      •  Canada
      •  Mexico (Spanish)
      •  United States
      Can't find the country/region you're looking for? Visit our export site or find a local distributor.
  • Translate
  • Profile
  • Settings
The Electronics Inside
  • Challenges & Projects
  • element14 presents
  • The Electronics Inside
  • More
  • Cancel
The Electronics Inside
Documents REMEX Paper Tape Drive Teardown -- The EIectronics Inside 38
  • Blog
  • Forum
  • Documents
  • Polls
  • Files
  • Members
  • Mentions
  • Sub-Groups
  • Tags
  • More
  • Cancel
  • New
Join The Electronics Inside to participate - click to join for free!
Actions
  • Share
  • More
  • Cancel
Engagement
  • Author Author: tariq.ahmad
  • Date Created: 4 May 2021 1:28 PM Date Created
  • Last Updated Last Updated: 30 Dec 2020 8:24 AM
  • Views 3279 views
  • Likes 4 likes
  • Comments 16 comments
Related
Recommended

REMEX Paper Tape Drive Teardown -- The EIectronics Inside 38

element14 presents

element14 Presents  |  About David   |  Project Videos  |  The Electronics Inside

 

 

You don't have permission to edit metadata of this video.
Edit media
x
image
Upload Preview
image

 

Continuing with our history of data storage, we are going back - way back - to see how punched paper tape storage worked.

  • punched paper tape
  • tei
  • telex
  • data storage
  • e14presents_davidedwards
  • the electronics inside
  • Share
  • History
  • More
  • Cancel
  • Sign in to reply

Top Comments

  • DAB
    DAB over 4 years ago in reply to a531016 +3
    ASR33 goes back to the 1950's at least. They were using an early version in the 1940's and I believe there was some usage even before then. They go way back, but they were perfect for sending ASCII messages…
  • DAB
    DAB over 4 years ago in reply to mr_widget +3
    Paper tape worked fine for small projects. It was easy to carry around, you could write notes on it and as long as you were careful, it would last for years. We did a lot of amazing things back in those…
  • beacon_dave
    beacon_dave over 4 years ago in reply to a531016 +3
    "...I'd love to get hold of a complete old computer like a PDP8..." In the meantime there are always the PiDP-8 and PiDP-11 kits... PiDP-8 https://obsolescence.wixsite.com/obsolescence/pidp-8 PiDP-11 https…
Parents
  • colporteur
    colporteur over 4 years ago

    Thank you for a tour of some of the electronics I worked on in my career.

     

    The teletype picture caused me to shudder. One such beast sat at a weather station at 64 degress lat, in northern Canada, in 1983. Small pins, as you described in your video, sensed the holes in the paper to read the data. The paper dust in the grease would cause the pins to bind. SOB to clean and not bend the pins!

     

    The board edge connector immediately took me back to our company training facility. After equipment theory instruction, students would be sent into a lab with the equipment. Instructors would have cards withe cellophane tape over pins on the edge connectors to simulate faults. The more devious instructors would run wires from the pins on the edge connectors to a switch panel in order to switch faults in and out.

     

    A basic troubleshooting skill. Actually, if you really got stumped with a fault and time was running out. Pull a card and look for tape. Well you didn't tell the instructor that. You just found the pin with the tape, looked on your schematic to determine the cause. Phew solved that one in the time limit.

     

    Again thanks for a revisit of my life so many years ago.

    • Cancel
    • Vote Up +2 Vote Down
    • Sign in to reply
    • More
    • Cancel
Comment
  • colporteur
    colporteur over 4 years ago

    Thank you for a tour of some of the electronics I worked on in my career.

     

    The teletype picture caused me to shudder. One such beast sat at a weather station at 64 degress lat, in northern Canada, in 1983. Small pins, as you described in your video, sensed the holes in the paper to read the data. The paper dust in the grease would cause the pins to bind. SOB to clean and not bend the pins!

     

    The board edge connector immediately took me back to our company training facility. After equipment theory instruction, students would be sent into a lab with the equipment. Instructors would have cards withe cellophane tape over pins on the edge connectors to simulate faults. The more devious instructors would run wires from the pins on the edge connectors to a switch panel in order to switch faults in and out.

     

    A basic troubleshooting skill. Actually, if you really got stumped with a fault and time was running out. Pull a card and look for tape. Well you didn't tell the instructor that. You just found the pin with the tape, looked on your schematic to determine the cause. Phew solved that one in the time limit.

     

    Again thanks for a revisit of my life so many years ago.

    • Cancel
    • Vote Up +2 Vote Down
    • Sign in to reply
    • More
    • Cancel
Children
  • a531016
    a531016 over 4 years ago in reply to colporteur

    Awesome! I love hearing stories like these, thank you so much for sharing!

    • Cancel
    • Vote Up +1 Vote Down
    • Sign in to reply
    • More
    • Cancel
element14 Community

element14 is the first online community specifically for engineers. Connect with your peers and get expert answers to your questions.

  • Members
  • Learn
  • Technologies
  • Challenges & Projects
  • Products
  • Store
  • About Us
  • Feedback & Support
  • FAQs
  • Terms of Use
  • Privacy Policy
  • Legal and Copyright Notices
  • Sitemap
  • Cookies

An Avnet Company © 2025 Premier Farnell Limited. All Rights Reserved.

Premier Farnell Ltd, registered in England and Wales (no 00876412), registered office: Farnell House, Forge Lane, Leeds LS12 2NE.

ICP 备案号 10220084.

Follow element14

  • X
  • Facebook
  • linkedin
  • YouTube