Tin Falcon
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One piece of machinery that IMHO is totally amazing in construction, design, and complexity, is the Line casting machine.
http://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2011/05/celebrating-linotype-125-years-since-its-debut/238968/
The machine has been around for over 125 years. It was called the 8th wonder of the world by Thomas Edison . It was used to set type for newspapers and other busnesses for something like 80 years. It became obsolete sometime in the early part of the 20th century. The article says it became obsolete in the 1960s to 70s but there was a local print shop using several at least into the early 1990s .
The machine had hundreds of brass molds or matrices. Several for each lower case letter,uppercase letter ,the numbers , characters and spaces.Each of these had its own bin. Hit a key and that character would drop into the casting station. when an entire line (think newspaper column ) was complete and the return key hit the machine would cast the line in lead. he molds would drop and then be automatically sorted. the line of type would drop onto the composing table . when a column was complete the type setter would move it to the printing frame. When the frame was complete , the type was inked and a proof was printed. the proof went off to the proof reader and it was marked up. Any lines with errors were reset/recast the bad line(s) were removed from the frame and the corrected ones inserted.
I can only imagine the task of maintaining one of these machines.. But I came across a book of tips on troubleshooting this complex device.
http://archive.org/details/HardingLoomisLinecastingOperatorMachinist1958
Hope folks find this of interest.
And the next time you see one in a museum maybe you will understand this amazing machine at least a little bit.
To my amazement the linotype company is still going strong providing typographic services to the world.
Type is now set with a computer . offset plates are prepared with a laser printer. Virtually every home in the modern indusrial world has there own typesetting machine(word processor) and printing press(we call it a printer) and it started with mechanical technology 1n1866.
http://www.linotype.com/48/aboutlinotype.html
Tin
http://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2011/05/celebrating-linotype-125-years-since-its-debut/238968/
The machine has been around for over 125 years. It was called the 8th wonder of the world by Thomas Edison . It was used to set type for newspapers and other busnesses for something like 80 years. It became obsolete sometime in the early part of the 20th century. The article says it became obsolete in the 1960s to 70s but there was a local print shop using several at least into the early 1990s .
The machine had hundreds of brass molds or matrices. Several for each lower case letter,uppercase letter ,the numbers , characters and spaces.Each of these had its own bin. Hit a key and that character would drop into the casting station. when an entire line (think newspaper column ) was complete and the return key hit the machine would cast the line in lead. he molds would drop and then be automatically sorted. the line of type would drop onto the composing table . when a column was complete the type setter would move it to the printing frame. When the frame was complete , the type was inked and a proof was printed. the proof went off to the proof reader and it was marked up. Any lines with errors were reset/recast the bad line(s) were removed from the frame and the corrected ones inserted.
I can only imagine the task of maintaining one of these machines.. But I came across a book of tips on troubleshooting this complex device.
http://archive.org/details/HardingLoomisLinecastingOperatorMachinist1958
Hope folks find this of interest.
And the next time you see one in a museum maybe you will understand this amazing machine at least a little bit.
To my amazement the linotype company is still going strong providing typographic services to the world.
Type is now set with a computer . offset plates are prepared with a laser printer. Virtually every home in the modern indusrial world has there own typesetting machine(word processor) and printing press(we call it a printer) and it started with mechanical technology 1n1866.
http://www.linotype.com/48/aboutlinotype.html
Tin