[GreenKeys] AN/FGC-38 Torn-Tape Relay Equipment
David F
nnn7dxb at aol.com
Sun Aug 27 09:48:49 EDT 2017
Hi Paul:
During the tape relay era, there was NO set length on how "long" a tape could be.
Actually, length was as long as the message was, and tape lengths ranged from
maybe 8 to 10 inches for an hourly "Channel Check" tape, to maybe a hundred
feet or more.
The governing factor in military messages was found the message preparation
regulation (in the case of the Army, AR 105-31 Message Preparation), which
dictated teletype messages be no more than 6 pages in length. Consider then,
that a 6 page teletype message had 20 lines of text per page and pages were
normally numbered, and there were 4 line feeds to separate pages. Heading
and Routing information did count as part of a page.
So, if you had a message longer than 6 pages, and we often did, the message(s)
were sent in Sections and number "Section 1 of -----". Sometimes, we would
have 26 or 30 Sections in some messages. These kinds of messages were
common from certain senders. In addition, the entire military establishment
sent and received message traffic all day long, so the traffic flow was unending,
except on Christmas, New Years and on Sundays, when things slowed way
down. On Christmas, for example, you might have no traffic at all -- just the
hourly Channel Checks to make sure the equipment was still working or that
the circuit was still there (sometimes, circuits dropped out, so the hourly
Channel Checks were sent to and from distant stations to insure circuit
availabilty and equipment intregrity.
Print-on-tape was a technical innovation. Siemens, Kleinschmidt and Lorenze
offered printing on tape, and this came in handy for tape relay operators who
prior to printing, had to learn to read the holes in the tape. Most of learned certain
letters and machine functions very quickly and easily...so, "reading" tape was
never an issue and no harder than learning the Morse Code....
Kleinschmidt equipment used the wider tape and thus printed on the outside
edge of the tape, making reading easy. Siemens printed in the middle of their
narrower tape along the TD guide holes. Easy reading here too.
Bear in mind, a tape relay was essentially a message factory. Message traffic
was prolific and continuous and never ending most of the time. Tape relays
were often very warm, or hot, because all those machines put out a lot of heat!
We (in the Army) took off our fatigue uniform shirts and just wore T-shirts in the relay,
as it was so hot at times. We sometimes had large floor fans, but they often
tended to blow tapes everywhere!
Tape relay equipment had to be cleaned and wiped down every day, usually
by each shift. The Army was a nit picker on appearance. Likewise, the teletype
repair guys maintained the equipment on each shift...cleaning, oiling, adjusting,
etc....drinking, eating and smoking on the relay floor was not permitted.
DAve
# # #
-----Original Message-----
From: Paul Birkel <pbirkel at gmail.com>
To: greenkeys <greenkeys at mailman.qth.net>
Sent: Sun, Aug 27, 2017 4:41 am
Subject: Re: [GreenKeys] AN/FGC-38 Torn-Tape Relay Equipment
A fascinating thread (for me, anyway :->). What sorts of tape-lengths would one expect to typically encounter? Feet, tens-of-feet, hundreds-of-feet? Were there any maximum message-length strictures in place?
I now understand the purpose (or at least one purpose) for the M14 typing reperforator :->.
What were the other reasons for print-on-tape capability? Simple avoidance of learning to sight-read Baudot :->?
From: greenkeys-bounces at mailman.qth.net [mailto:greenkeys-bounces at mailman.qth.net] On Behalf Of Dave F via GreenKeys
Sent: Sunday, August 27, 2017 1:26 AM
To: greenkeys at mailman.qth.net
Subject: Re: [GreenKeys] AN/FGC-38 Torn-Tape Relay Equipment
…
We had a few TGC-1s in Europe in the early 60s. Operators did not
normally get in each others way, since an operator was often assigned
to a "bank" of about 3 or 4 Chesters to work. Rather than one op moving
from one Chester to another to send or receive tapes, it was common
practice to toss tapes from one op to another. In order to do this, tapes
were hand-rolled into a figure eight and either handed to a bank op by
an expediter (an expediter is a person who moved traffic within the relay
bay), or tapes were sometimes just tossed back and forth if the working
ops were in close proximity. When tapes were handled by an expediter,
they were NOT rolled into the figure eight; he wore them around his neck
bandolier style as he moved from position to positon or operator to operator.
As he moved around the relay bay, he read the Routing Indicators to where the tape(s)
were destined and then delivered the tape(s) to the appropriate operator,
or hung it on the tape holder for that circuit. (Routing Indicators == Sort of
like a Call Sign in the tape relay world consisting of a series of letters (no numbers
or figures unlike ham radio Call Signs). See ACP-121 to understand Routing
Indicator formulation and ACP-117 Routing Indicator Lists.
…
Dave
# # #
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