TAPES SNAPPED ON THE CONSOLE PRINTER OF THE SSM 1130
The console printer (1053) of the 1130 computer is based on the IBM Selectric typewriter. It has a rotating and tilting typeball that moves across the print line while the paper stays fixed in position rolled over the platen (roller). The typeball on the moving carrier will spin or tilt to type one of the 88 characters on the ball.
A pair of metal tapes connect to the moving carrier and are threaded over pulleys on the two sides of the typewriter - when the pulleys pivot they turn or tilt the typeball regardless of where the moving carrier is sitting along the print line. There are reasons why the metal tapes may break, thus requiring replacement. A misadjusted typewriter can stress the tapes, the tape might have had a crease that leads to metal fatigue breaking, or people turning the typeball by hand might put too much tension on the connectors at the ends of the tapes.
I suspect that visitors to the museum have played with the typeball one time too many and caused the tape to snap during operation, as the broken tape and its partner had signs of such abuse. It is very tempting to touch the typeball, a natural reaction to curiosity for someone seeing the Selectric mechanism operating for the first time. I think it will be important to add a plexiglass box over the typewriter to protect the ball from someone twisting it.
BOUGHT NEW TAPES AND INSTALLED THE ROTATE TAPE FIRST
The museum dropped off the 1053 during a recent trip to Florida and I removed the old tapes. I ordered new ones, as fortunately there are still plenty of spare parts available on places like eBay. Today I installed the tape that spins the ball.
The typeball is mounted on a coil spring to provide rotary tension. One end of the tape is connected to the disc that holds the coil spring. First the type ball is turned to wind up the coil spring, then the typewriter is triggered and manually cycled to the halfway point of a typing stroke, where a lever locks the ball from turning; this keeps the tension on the ball while the tape is installed.
One end of the tape has a T shaped hook that fits into a slot on the coil spring holder disk. It is threaded out of the movable carrier and routed to the left where a pulley is mounted on a lever. A selection mechanism in the typewriter will pivot the lever and pulley to one of eleven positions, which are intended to rotate the typeball left or right up to five steps of about 16 degrees.
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| Slot for T shaped connector |
The tape goes round the pulley and then is routed from left to right side of the typewriter passing underneath the carrier. As the pulley pivots out or in, it pulls on or releases the tape to cause the typeball to turn.
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| Left pulley on lever |
On the right side of the typewriter frame is a lever with a pulley on the end. The lever pivots to move right or left, which would pull on or release the tape as it pivoted. This pulley pivots between two positions, intended to place the typeball in the middle of one or the other hemisphere, so that it can access one of 44 characters on that hemisphere; traditionally the hemispheres were for upper case and lower case characters. The tape goes around this pulley and then routed back to the left. This end of the tape has an eyelet attached which will hook over a screw on the right side of the carrier.
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| Right pulley and shift lever |
Once the tape is correctly routed and attached to both the disc and the carrier screw, the typewriter manual cycle can be finished to release the lever so the coil spring can wind up the tape as the ball turns. With the tape in place, the lever on the left frame selects a rotational position for the ball and the right side lever pulls enough to spin the ball 180 degrees to pick which hemisphere to use.
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| Tape path |
NEXT STEPS - TILT TAPE AND ADJUSTMENTS
Another tape with pulleys is used to tilt the typeball so that it selects one of four rows around the ball. A typeball has eleven rotary positions and four rows on a hemisphere, thus containing 44 characters on each side and 88 for the full typeball. I have to attach the tilt tape on my next visit to the workshop.
The metal tapes can stretch very slightly over their lifetime, plus manufacturing variances mean that the position of the typeball with replaced tapes may not be at the exact same position as it was with the prior tapes just before replacement. As a result, a sequence of adjustments must be made to ensure that the typewriter will tilt and rotate the ball so that the character to be typed is centered vertically and horizontally as the ball strikes the ribbon and paper. This will be done after the other tape is installed.










