Teletype 317212 Tape Splicer (Bell 2A) - Donauld Inc. Ideal SC-3 | |||
1. Align tapes using pins on either side of blade 2. Trim tape ends flush with rotating blade 3. Position Splicing Patch (all holes) adhesive side up on lower row of pins - press tapes onto adhesive and press down with roller tool |
Sales brochure (thanks to Internet Archive) |
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TT-54/FG Chadless Tape Splicer (Bell 1A) |
Punch pins in spring loaded base |
tape die (jaw) on head |
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After splicing |
Flipped over to show holes |
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Model 28 Tape Splicer (LTS) |
Used to splice together unpunched tape - to add a new feed roll to a 28RT Reperforator-Transmitter | -- | -- |
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Tape Handling
Equipment Brochure
Table of Tape Winders/Unwinders |
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TW204 Tape Winder |
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AN/FGM-1 (NPG) AN/FGM-2 (NPM) AN/FGM-3 (NSS) AN/FGM-4 (NPO) Test Message Generator |
Telegraph Test Set AN/FGM-1 electronically generates undistorted 7.42
Baudot code telegraph characters (in an 88-character test message) at 60, 75, or 100 words per minute, for
use in performance checks and maintenance of wire and radio-teletype circuits and equipments.
The 88-character test message (standard "fox" sentence preceded by three call letters and
followed by numerals) is stored in a plug-in relay unit. Terminals are provided to allow the use of remote control to start and stop the
message. Stelma Model EDU-100-75 - includes 5 ea. TDP-1 Distribution Panel plus 80 ea. ER-17 Electronic Relay. Manuals are NAVSHIPS 94048, 94050, 94052, 94054 |
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AN/PGM-1 AN/PGM-1A Voltmeter/Power Supply |
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General purpose test set which supplies a monitored output voltage, or measures external dc voltage. Operating range: 175 to 275 vdc. The sensitivity is l,000 ohms per volt, and the accuracy is two percent at full scale. | |||
AN/SSQ-88 Quality Monitoring System | |||
AN/UGM-6(V) | TTY test set |
Manufactured by Stelma |
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Missing 3 optional cards (for FOX message) |
WORD diode matrix |
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AN/UGM-8 AN/UGM-8A AN/UGM-8B |
TTY test set - includes FOX message generator | NAVSHIPS 0967-378-4010 | |
AN/UGM-10 TS-3437/U |
Please let me know if you have a manual I can borrow or buy. |
Relay Test Set | |
AN/UGM-11 | TTY test set - includes UCC-1 tone generators, FOX and CRYPTO message generators. Manuf -Wavetek 404 | NAVSHIPS ??
Please let me know if you have a manual Notes from repair |
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Adaptor |
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TS-652/GG Teletype DXD200 (Bell 1A) Distortion Test Set |
Test message/character generator with selectable distortion
Info & Restoration ProjectNAVSHIPS 91654 |
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TS-658/UG (60 wpm) TS-659/UG |
Test signal generator |
TS-658/UG = Teletype ED51DT TS-659/UG = Teletype ED58HE
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TS-917/GG TS-917A/GG |
TTY distortion analyzer manuf Stelma TDA-2
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TS-917/GG NAVSHIPS 93008 - download TS-917A/GG |
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TS-1908/UG | USMC TTY Test Generator | Manuf by Wang Laboratories
Please let me know if you have a manual |
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TS-2616/UGM | TTY Signal Analyzer | ||
TS-3069/USM | TTY Signal Analyzer | NAVSHIPS ??
Please let me know if you have a manual |
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TS-3069A/USM | |||
TS-3604/UG
Please let me know if you have a manual |
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AN/GGM-15(V) Digitech DT-9600 |
Complete System |
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AN/GGM-15 manual TM 11-6625-1668-12 SG-860/GGM-15 manual |
Stelma RTS-5 Relay Test Set |
Please let me know if you have a manual I can borrow or buy. | == | |
Digitech DT-603-3 | TTY Signal Analyzer
Commercial equipment used by USN |
NAVSHIPS 0969-200-1010
Manual download |
F-1032/SG
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AN/FGC-7 |
Contains 8 ea. TT-63/FGC
Manuf Meridian NAVSHIPS 91247 |
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AN/FGC-7A |
Contains 8 ea. TT-63A/FGC
Manuf Stelma NAVSHIPS 91689 AN/FGC-7A manual avail from Fair Radio |
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TT-63/FGC
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Manuf Meridian Inc. |
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TMC SFO-2
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Manuf TMC SFO-2 - slightly different circuit and controls from TT-63A | spec sheet | |
TT-63A/FGC
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regenerative repeater - see pp 168-172 of "RTTY from A to Z" - see RTTY Bulletin info below Manuf Stelma |
AN/FGC-7A manual avail from Fair Radio |
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AN/UGA-5 |
Repeater/regenerator
Includes 4 ea. TH-73/UGA-5 |
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TH-42/UGTwo-way repeater |
Stelma TR-2B Repeater - manual |
Stelma TR-2A (includes a loop supply) |
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Stelma patent
covering TR-2 |
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TH-83A/FGC low-level TTY hubbing repeater |
TH-83A aboard USS Iowa |
for +/- 6v signals
More info in NAVSHIPS 0967-391-6010
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THE TT-63A REPEATER IRVIN M. HOFF K8DKC - RTTY Bulletin April 1964 In recent months ads have appeared in various amateur magazines telling about a surplus government item called a regenerative repeater for teletypewriters. This unit was made for the Navy and is called the TT-63A/ FGC. They have been selling for slightly under $40, and a great number have been sold-unfortunately not very many manuals have been available (these items were part of a set called the AN/FGC-7A which used eight repeaters, and this would indicate some of the reason that manuals are scarce!). What Is It? WA9IBB (Jim Haynes) has pointed out that a "well-adjusted" printer in itself works as a regenerative repeater, and in this case a repeater has little to offer. This is correct, of course, but the repeater has several other functions available that add to its versatility. In the first place a "well-adjusted" printer is at times hard to come by. If your printer runs from maybe 15 to 100 points or so on a local loop and prints well between those extremes, it could be considered "well-adjusted." It should print well on nearly any RTTY signal that is not horribly biased, with no further adjustment. By varying the range setting intentionally, you can move the five millisecond sampling area from the middle of the 22millisecond pulse toward the beginning or the
end to help counteract marking or spacing bias on the incoming signal. However, the chances that you will do this are remote. Instead you will probably just tell the fellow that you cannot copy him. On the other hand, the repeater has a range adjusting knob right on the front in a prominent position and can be quickly used not only to counteract for bias, but also to FIND AND DETERMINE BIAS. If the knob is toward the right (100 ), the bias is marking. An excellent signal will print correctly from 0-100, representing 2-20milliseconds. As you can imagine, not many signals will print the entire range perfectly. One need not send any special characters or at any special speed to determine the type or presence of bias. This unit will not measure HOW MUCH bias directly, but you can get an idea if it is a small amount, medium amount or lots of bias by how nearly you approach 0 or 100, etc. Another feature is the unique manner by which the sampling is taken. Since this triggers a multi-vibrator circuit, if the signal happens to be a continuous space signal, then after printing one blank key, the printer again locks up until a transition occurs to again trigger the multi-vibrator. Essentially, this gives you "mark-lock" even on a constant space signal, after the first blank letter was printed. Thus if a station sends its CW ID on NFSK on mark or space either one, the printer will tend to stay in idle. (This assumes the NFSK was narrow enough to stay in the mark or space filter during the ID.) There are many other features which enable this unit to be used in other manners. Since it has character-recognition circuits in it already, it could probably be used in connection with a series of binary counters for autostart on lower frequencies such as 80m. It can be used to key transmitters directly; one fellow is using it to trip a "sounder" for CW as he copies that better than MAB CW; and last but not least it can be used as a converter, directly. For this purpose, it would take a very narrow IF position on the receiver for copying only the mark signal or space signal alone, plus a loop circuit in the output to drive the printer. Fairly narrow audio filters such as the FL-8 tone filter have been used with this unit as a converter. However, it should be pointed out that this gives only moderately good copy unless the signal is quite strong. This would work in a similar manner to other normal converters being used on Mark only or Space only copy-sort of marginal on MAB-it was for this reason, mostly, that the two-tone converters are being developed. All in all, this unit enhances the station of the serious amateur, particularly the traffic man who likes to reperf incoming material. With this unit, the reperf and the printer will both print the same. Hooking the Unit Up You now have modified the unit to high impedance, and a normal polar-keyed signal such as is normally gotten from the output of a flip-flop stage or a Schmitt trigger (or a DC amplifier stage giving a large plus and minus swing from mark to space), will work ok. Figure One shows a typical 6W6 output stage in a converter. We have all the ingredients right here to now use the converter with no other part needed except one more resistor which will drop the same voltage as the keyer tube, which we can replace readily. Get an octal male plug with cover-wire it as shown in Figure 2. You are then finished when you connect those wires to the terminals of the repeater. In some converters such as the Electrocom, the keyer tube is located inside the converter and not easy to remove. We have a circuit worked out for that purpose if anyone is interested, but please send a large-sized self-addressed, stamped envelope in that event. With this method, you can use the repeater on various converters easily and quickly; or change back-and-forth on any regular converter to note the effect. We can't include circuits for every configuration in a simple article, but probably you can integrate one into your present station easily enough. Just remember that the output on the repeater is merely a mercury-wetted relay that opens and closes. It will be closed for mark and open for space. There are many ways it can be used, and only one has been presented here to accommodate the majority of converters. The Repeater as a Converter Theory of Operation There is a switch for 60, 75 and 100 wpm so that operation of this RANGE CONTROL is about the same for any standard speed. Output from V4 also operates V8 which is the false start gate. This tube is biased off so that an output from V4 causes it to conduct, and depending on the position of the RANGE CONTROL, a noise burst of less than 11 milliseconds will allow this tube to again be cut-off, and it will not trigger V6. In this case no output can result. This is one of the more important features of the repeater. Perhaps we could state this another way. If the. RANGE CONTROL is set at normal mid-range, then it would take a start signal of at least 11 milliseconds to keep V8 conducting so that the sampling pip through V5 would trigger V6. This of course can be varied with the RANGE CONTROL so that start pulses from 2-20 milliseconds would be required for the repeater to operate on that particular start pulse. However, if one delays the RANGE CONTROL too far to guard against noise bursts, then you stand the chance of missing the start pulse entirely if it might be distorted, and it is possible that you could trip off on the first mark-to-space transition instead; which would disrupt synchronization for several characters. If the start pulse was a good TTY signal then the output of V5 is applied to V8, which in turn triggers V6, which is another one-shot multi-vibrator and runs for 143
milliseconds. Since a character is 163 milliseconds in duration, then you see this "timing" runs out in Once V6 is "fired" then it in turn turns on a third multi-vibrator tube, V7. This output fires every 22 milliseconds and the output differentiated into 1 millisecond samples; one for each of the six 22 milliseconds pulses and for the stop mark. A feature of this converter which is very nice on autostart, etc., is that by use of the MARK-HOLD switch, a pulse from the V6 gate tube triggers the bistable trigger tube V10 to mark at the end of each gate cycle. Thus the output will return to mark EVEN IF THE INPUT GOES TO STEADY SPACE. For instance, if a CW station got on your space frequency, it could trigger the printer for one cycle-(which would print a "blank" key in all probability) and then the printer would lock up. The printer would also have a tendency to remain locked up if the CW station were on MARK frequency, depending on the position of the RANGE CONTROL, and the speed of the CW station, etc. Summary It acts as a rather nice indication of what type of bias a transmitting station has, and approximately the amount, with no special letters being needed. A few fellows "retransmit" onto other circuits and other transmitters, etc., and this system will offer optimum range to those other circuits.
All in all, to the serious enthusiast, the $40 price for this item seems to be well worth investigating, and for the station just starting, with the circuits included, one can make a decent converter for around $50 or less which can then be used later in conjunction with other equipment constructed, since the repeater is normally used behind a regular converter. |