On 02/15/2017 03:40 PM, couryho...@aol.com wrote:
I have not heard of  40 mil loop  here on ttys...   generally  20 mil or
60 mil.  - At  least  what   I have encountered. Is the 40 mil.  standard in
Europe?

I have not heard about 60mA - at least not in the Telex network.
All mechanical 5 step teleprinters I have ever seen and owned run on 40mA. And my test equipment has a mark on the scale at 40mA. I thought that this is international. But I also know that with respect to teleprinters there are some CCITT norms that are internationally used - except for the US. It starts with ITA2 code which is the official international 5-bit telex code. But US uses "US-TTY" which slightly differs.

Only the ASCII stuff (asr 33/35 etc) run on 20mA. But that's a totally different thing.



Ed#  _www.smecc.org_ (http://www.smecc.org)


In a message dated 2/14/2017 2:24:15 P.M. US Mountain Standard Time,
hac...@hachti.de writes:



On 14.02.2017 22:18, geneb wrote:
On Tue, 14 Feb  2017, ben wrote:

On 2/14/2017 6:27 AM, Alfred M. Szmidt  wrote:
FWIW, Mini-B connectors are on their way out, nor USB  OTG compliant.
Though agreed that they are flimsy... Why not  just a type A or
something? Easy, big, and  robust.

Why not mini and regular?
 Ben.
PS: Add a 45.5 baud serail port. Control everything with  a  5 level
TTY. :)

Dirty casual.  20mA  current loop or nothing.
The 45 baud machines do NOT run on 20mA. They  usually run on 40mA :-)

20mA is the domain of model 28, 32, 33  etc.


--

Dipl.-Inf. (FH) Philipp Hachtmann
Buchdruck, Bleisatz, Spezialitäten

Alemannstr. 21, D-30165 Hannover
Tel. 0511/3522222, Mobil 0171/2632239
Fax. 0511/3500439
phil...@hachtmann.com
www.tiegeldruck.de

UStdID DE 202668329

Reply via email to