Seeking paper tape punch
Paul Koning
paulkoning at comcast.net
Mon Feb 21 16:11:20 CST 2022
> On Feb 21, 2022, at 4:26 PM, Guy Fedorkow via cctalk <cctalk at classiccmp.org> wrote:
>
> [apologies if this is a dup, but I didn't see it coming back in any of the cctalk digests]
>
> Greetings CC-Talk,
> I've been working on a low-budget project to help to introduce students to history of computing through material we have from MIT's 1950's Whirlwind project. The activity would have more of a hands-on feel if we could use actual paper tape.
> A simple reader is easy enough, but a punch is a bit harder. We don't need anything "authentic", or fast, or high performance, just something fairly reliable.
> If anyone can suggest where to find such a machine, could you let me know? Fanuc PPR, GNT 4601/4604, and the DSI NC-2400 have been cited as possible candidates, but I don't see anything that looks like a good match on ebay.
>
> Thanks!
> /guy fedorkow
Do you mean a punch as a computer peripheral, or a keyboard operated tape punch? For the former, the ones you mentioned are obvious choices; BRPE is another. Also the DEC paper tape reader/punch (PC01 or some such number).
For keyboard operated, there's Teletype, Flexowriter, Creed, Siemens, depending on where you're located. ASR33 is a common 8-bit punching terminal. Older models that use 5-level tape ("Baudot") may also be around, and those could certainly serve for 1950s era machines that may well have actually used those. I don't know what Whirlwind used, but I know some other 1950s machines that used 5 bit tape for their I/O. Electrologica X1 is an example.
paul
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