I would guess a flexowriter. I havn't seen one with two readers, but when I worked for
an Insurance Company ours had two punches (and one reader).
They were used to print Policies and capture the policy information for the master file as
these were mixed case documents and the line printers we had were upper case only.
The input tape contained the Policy wording and had stop codes that marked the places for
the variable information, such as policy holder, life assured, premium etc.
As the dataentry operator typed these they were captured on one punch for input to the
Mainframe, a Honeywell H200 via a paper tape to mag tape converter,
and also onto a second tape that was re-read to produce a fancy folder/wallet/encvolope
into which the policy was inserted for safe keeping. If I can find any of my policies I
will scan them.
I can envisage systems in which the variable information also came on paper tape, thus
needing two readers on the Flexowriter, and there being codes on the tapes to switch
between the two inputs...
Dave
-----Original Message-----
From: cctalk [mailto:cctalk-bounces at
classiccmp.org] On Behalf Of Kyle Owen
Sent: 07 January 2017 22:50
To: General Discussion: On-Topic and Off-Topic Posts
<cctalk at classiccmp.org>
Subject: Friden Auxiliary Reader
I guess I'm on a roll, trying to find out what some things are in the collection.
Any idea what this paper tape reader could've been connected to?
http://imgur.com/a/DjRj7
Thanks,
Kyle