On 9/1/23 14:38, Chuck Guzis via cctalk wrote:
With all this talk about Friden and Singer, perhaps someone can help me
jog my memory.  We were working on a contract that, as remote terminals,
included a card reader (singer) and a printing terminal (singer also).
The terminal consisted of a leadscrew-fed printing head with a vertical
typewheel rotating perpendicular to the (tractor-feed) paper.  Said
typewheel was in contact with an ink-soaked felt wheel.  Carriage return
was accomplished via a large spring.   Utter steampunk simplicity.

I remember a Kleinschmidt (I think) printer that had a wheel that spun on a horizontal shaft that was in front of the paper.  The wheel had a spline so that it turned synchronously with the shaft, but could be slid left and right, maybe by a toothed belt.  Then. I guess there was a hammer behind the paper that pressed it against the ribbon and type wheel when the right character passed by.  It printed at 30 chars/second.  I looked for this model online but didn't find anything.

Jon

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