A BABY TO THE STRANGE old Electromechanical "Flip Dot" Display. How Does It Work?
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- Опубліковано 14 кві 2024
- Today we look at this Electromechanical Digit from a Totalisator board, follow along with the project of plomping it all back together! first to fettle the displays back into life. These have come from lucien nunes MEET collection. got them bit back, glad to get these going! hopefully will be able to get the rest of the puzzle soon.
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#vintage #telephoneexchange #restoration #telephony #telephonetuesdays - Наука та технологія
The totalisator equipment you are talking about came from the Perry Barr Stadium in Birmingham which opened in 1928. The ticket machine is from the original HiSpeed tote system which was superseded by the Union Multispeed machines in 1951, the stuff in Gloucestershire (ticket machines, flaps, aggregators etc.) are from this system. My father worked on this machinery from 1951 onwards, I worked with him for a while at Perry Barr and also on the HiSpeed system we installed on a small track at Norton Canes.
hello thanks for the information. sadly its not at gloucestershire anymore. since 2010 it was moved and split between two storage aread merged in with a bunch of other stuff. the challenge is making sure we wont miss anything. as the person who put it there has sadly passed away. is there any more information you know of? or pictures? thanks!!!
It could be a “hours until the museum closes” sign. Or another idea, it could be made so that you can call the display from any of the museum phones and change its current digit using the phones rotary selector. Would be an interesting build if there are no arduinos involved!
It's not very good at counting backward though, making it not ideal for a countdown-to-close. It would have to rotate through the entire display once an hour. I mean if that's the point, having an excuse to flip through all the numbers every hour, then cool, go for it. But it will never be completely smooth or quiet (it wasn't designed to be, it didn't need to be), so it's probably better suited for counting up, or carrying fixed data.
this is some of the most genius engineering to make a large display in a simple manner. so rad.
Dunno, I'd consider a ribbon or drum, that just spins, simpler than this.
Congratulations on understanding a 200 year old idea. You must be so proud.
@@derkeksinator17 A drum would take up a _lot_ more space, a ribbon would wear out and get stuck. This thing is robust, compact and easy to maintain.
Can't wait to see the actual totalizer "accumulator". Absolutely genius mechanical computer engineering.
With a telephone dial and a uniselector it could add (modulo 10)
Thumbs up for that closing tune!
Since it’s an orphaned unit and not in top shape I think it’s a good candidate for a “Will it music?” video.
An idea for the single digit would be a display on the number of concurrent calls being serviced by the telephone switch.
i think fran (franlab) would find this quite interesting
Old mechanical displays are interesting. It would be great if they were still made. Maybe 3D printables...
While watching, I kept smelling WD40 ! Strange. Your museum is only going to get more precious as the years pass :-)
Ive had that happen b4 also. I was watching a you tube video about an electronics project gone wrong.
and started smelling burning electronics. I sniffed around my laptop and sound system. and realized it
was just a very strange illusion trick that my mind played on me
I like that it does not just let the flaps active from one number to the next but it dims and displays all at the same time
They remind me of what I imagined "the Clacks" system described in Terry Pratchetts excellent Going Postal would look and operate like. Its a complex semaphore system spread across the land, and is used to comment on modern internet and telecommunications, and how that effects everything from social interactions, commerce, monopolies, governments. an array of shutters opening and closing on huge towers could transmit large amounts of data relatively quickly, with a great cacophony of clacking each time it changed state, hence, the clacks.
one of my favourites in the discworld series. I wouldn't be surprised if the totaliser display served as direct inspiration for the concept.
Or the book "The Difference Engine" by William Gibson and Bruce Sterling. A particular entertainment was to go watch high-resolution versions of that and to see what clever tricks a touring "clacker" was able to do on the mechanical display.
Connect it to a rotary phone dial for people to select the number to view
the cam and follower method is what Disney used for their early Animatronics in the Disneyland Ca theme park
now I think its all computer controlled servo motors for the most part, with ULED screens for faces.
Maybe you can display the number of hours till closing the museum. Or number of visitors (times a multiplier perhaps). Or, last one, rating of the museum by the people at the museum that can voluntarily cast a vote/score at a terminal in the museum. Daily refreshed mean score.
Sam! Great video, I just love this kind of old electromechanical stuff! Thanks for sharing and keep up the good work mate! 🙂😎🤓❤
This really reminds me of a “apocalypse run-down future”
I didn't know little paul had a UA-cam channel, haven't seen him for years.
Up-counter automaton with lots of cams and followers, eh? Beauty in simplicity. Looking forward to the moment when you put the whole system back together and... Fire To The Wire!
So cool!
How many rhythms on the OG valve drum machine thing? Could be a display for that? That was missing a noise source for a snare/hats -might I suggest tuneable squarewave oscillators feeding a xnor logic gate - all doable via valve.
Big display - have a public hymnbook of 1000 organ classics - use big numbers to show which "hymn" is playing.
Very cool.
Can you imagine the noise when you had a whole display board of these running simultaneously? Yikes!
You could use the smaller digits to display after the coma for example
Sam you recently got a whole load of rev counters, hundreds of them, made me think. Why not have a handle that people can wind. A rev counter measures how fast they are turning the handle and shows a number between 0 and 9 on the display. Anyone reaching a speed of nine tings a bell.
The electronics need to be clever. A contact on the handle (like the distributor in your mini) sends pulses to a R/C circuit so the faster you turn, the higher the voltage in the capacitor. Voltage to number.... compare the voltage against a resistor ladder and use it to turn on one of 10 transistors these activate the motor until their selected contact is made. Thing is reversing the motor would be hard I guess they are designed to go in one direction only, as the speed drops it would need to count down....
..well its 1/3 of an idea but an Arduino would do it easy peasy but thats cheating.
Telephone dial and a uniselector and then you can just dial a number that would be simple and fun....
cool mechanism.
i love all this old tech its super interesting how they did it and made it reliable anddddd massive hahahahah
The biggest question is now, how did they (or the electronics) know the position of the numbers or what number is on the display? It is not a servo motor and it is not a stepper motor and I cannot see any sensors.
the selector at the top. It's shown later in the vid
Make it a random number selecter :)
Cam-driven? That's a step in the right direction, I guess.
Thingamagoops 🥳
I noticed in the last video that the larger machine looked almost like stop-motion animation when it was running, but this one seems to be running more smoothly. Is there a difference between how the two operate that explains this?
Are you sure that those aggregators aren't clockodials?
How about a random number generator? The motor runs for a random amount of time on the push of a button.
Have a luverly time yourself, me old china😅
Ah yes, 42 that's the answer
hook into telephone exchange?
Subscriber counter?
oh well, 2010 isn't so far a- ...it's been 14 years...
giant calculator
Imagine yourself in the old days, looking up at that display and wondering how your dog/team/wager did... and it's not just a matter of the numbers appearing, they have to step through to the final value. Your number comes up... then continues past! Argh!
you're talking without moving your lips !
I think some cricket grounds used the display technology for the score-board.
Very cool.