[GreenKeys] Valkyrie

kf9nz at juno.com kf9nz at juno.com
Wed Jan 14 18:03:36 EST 2009


    OOOPS!     I stand corrected.     And I knew there were Teletype
licensed machines.   



On Sun, 11 Jan 2009 17:10:07 +0100 "Henning Treumann"
<df3oe.henning at googlemail.com> writes:
> Hi Frank and others,
> 
> nice that you already have watched Valkyrie, here in Germany we have 
> to
> wait until January 22nd.
> 
> The film was almost totally filmed in Germany at the Babelsberg film 
> studios
> in Berlin in October 2007.
> And you won'nt believe, the machines are absolutely historical 
> correct.
> I was the technical consultant... ;-)
> 
> The teleprinter room was equipped with almost 30 machines, provided 
> by me
> from my collection and from the collections of friends.
> It was the most historical correct movie I have worked for so
> far...except that the
> German Army used mainly "strip tape printers" , like Wold Western
> Union telegrams.
> Page printers very mostly used by the Air force for weathers 
> services.
> But for the movie, the messages were better readable on a page 
> printers
> so we decided to print out the main messages on page printers,
> namely Lorenz Lo15 which is a Teletype model 15 licence,
> built in Germany since the late 1920s.
> The film crew was very keen to make everything as authentic as 
> possible.
> 
> We equipped the teleprinter room with following type of machines:
> 
> Lorenz Lo15 (page printer), already mentioned
> Lorenz T32/36Lo (tape printer, model 14 licence), printing on a 
> gummed tape
> Siemens T34 (tape printer), printing on a gummed tape
> Siemens T37 (page printer)
> Siemens Tloch 1 tape punch
> Siemens Tsend 1 tape transmitter (tape distributor, as you call 
> it).
> Lorenz HL38 tape punch
> Lorenz LS36 tape transmitter (model 14 licence, tape distibutor as 
> you call it)
> Feldhellschreiber
> etc.
> 
> All machines were running ! Sometimes all together :-)
> We fed them via 10 circuits from notebooks and
> also from more modern teleprinters by tape from backstage.
> We have layed almost half a mile of "bell wire" to the machines...
> 
> All together me and friends stayed a whole week at the studios to
> build up the room and supported the filming.
> All sent and printed messages were original from archives. But I 
> would
> think that
> they used English language messages for the English language 
> version
> of the movie.
> 
> After the release of the movie here in Germany I will give some 
> (background)
> information of this project on my website www.teleprinter.net
> 
> 73,
> Henning DF3OE
> Wendeburg/Germany
> 
> www.teleprinter.net
> 
> 
> ++++
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 2009/1/11  <kf9nz at juno.com>:
> >        Just got a look at the new flick.  Being a student of WWII
> > history, I know quite a bit about the 20 April plot.  Most of the 
> facts
> > are pretty good, but it was surprising to see that the Nazi's were 
> using
> > U.S. made tty's. in 1944    (tongue firmly in cheek)  Too bad they 
> didn't
> > have a good technical consultant as some other movie makers we 
> know.   Of
> > course the U.S. made machines were printing in English too.   I 
> remember
> > "Patton" and "Longest Day" had the Nazis speaking German with 
> subtitles.
> > Seemed very effective, but I guess that would be too much for this 
> epic.
> >
> > Frankf9nz
> >
> > ____________________________________________________________
> > Click for free info on IT degrees and make up to $150K/ year.
> > 
>
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