How It Works

How It Works

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Directions: Read the excerpt from Archibald Williams’s “How It Works” and analyze the drawing. Then answer the questions.
By attaching a small wheel to the end of a Morse-sounder lever, by arranging an ink-well for the wheel to dip into when the end falls, and by moving a paper ribbon slowly along for the wheel to press against when it rises, a self-recording Morse inker is produced. The ribbon-feeding apparatus is set in motion automatically by the current and continues to pull the ribbon along until the message is completed.
The Hughes type-printer covers a sheet of paper with printed characters in bold Roman type. The transmitter has a keyboard on which are marked letters, signs, and numbers. Also, a type-wheel, with the characters on its circumference, rotates by electricity. The receiver contains mechanisms for
rotating another type-wheel synchronously—that is, in time—with the first, for shifting the wheel across the paper, for pressing the paper against the wheel and for moving the paper when a fresh line is needed. These are too complicated to be described here in detail. By means of relays, one transmitter may be made to work five hundred receivers. In London a single operator controlling a keyboard in the central dispatching office causes typewritten messages to spell themselves out simultaneously in machines distributed all over the metropolis.
The tape machine resembles what was just described in many details. The main difference is that it prints on a continuous ribbon instead of on sheets.
Automatic electric printers of some kind or others are to be found in the foyers of all the principal hotels and clubs of our large cities and in the offices of bankers, stockbrokers, and newspaper editors. In London alone over 500 million words are printed by the receivers in a year.
Note
Only spelling mistakes, if any, in the above passage have been corrected. No other corrections, including grammatical, have been made so that the originality of the passage is maintained.

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