Dominique,
Well, that is in principle very easy.
You need a COM port (or simulator) and a little box converting RS232 to 50 BPS serial.  Diagrams can be found everywhere. But you could also look at www.i-telex.net. This is a (primarily) german "band of brothers". They have set up an international of teleprinter users, so they can communicate through internet. Nice system, can recommend it. If you have (or get) a special interest in teleprinters, I have the software for a teleprinter exchange, also interfacing to i-telex.net In this way, you can have a complete telegraph office in your living room (more likely : a garage....)
73, Nico

On 2021-12-08 21:29, Dominique Carlier via cctalk wrote:
The subject interests me because I have the same beast but which only works in local mode. I currently don't know what is required to send text in this monster through a computer
Below is a link to a video of my machine in action:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dL-XU855C80

Dominique

On 8/12/2021 20:52, Paul Koning via cctalk wrote:
No, it's 5 bit tape.  2 data bits, transport sprocket holes, 3 data bits -- top to bottom on the reader (right side), left to right on the punch (left side).

DEC PDP-10 systems used six bit code internally but I don't remember those appearing on punched tape.  The punched tape machines I have seen with 6 channels are typesetting devices, from early tape operated Linotype machines (1940s vintage) to 1960s or 1970s era phototypesetters.  Those are upper/lower case.

    paul

On Dec 8, 2021, at 2:23 PM, Mike Katz <bit...@12bitsbest.com> wrote:

I thought I had recalled that Baudot was 5 bits but the paper tape is 6 bits across and I don't know of any 6 bit character codes except for DECs upper case only character set and even their paper tape had 8 bits so I guessed Baudot.

On 12/8/2021 1:16 PM, Paul Koning wrote:
5 bit; if it really were 6 bits it would typically be typesetting codes.

That's a relative of the machine used as console terminal on Dutch Electrologica X8 computers; I recognize the "Iron cross" symbol, the figures shift character on the D key. But some of the other function codes have different labels so it isn't actually the same model.

The description I have says that the X8 console used CCITT-2, a.k.a., Baudot, code but with the bit order reversed.  And also that it used the all-zeroes code as a printable character rather than as non-printing fill.

    paul


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