Re: Restoring Old Paper Tape

2016-01-22 Thread COURYHOUSE
on moldy   paper and other items
 
generally  we  will  bag it and tag it  to isolate  it  from everything 
else... check part #   or  document  name  ( in the case of  printed material) 
against what already  exists.  if it  exists then  the moldy  nasty stuff is 
  scrap.  If it is  something  that  warrants  preservation  but not  found 
elsewhere then we consider moving forward  on preservation efforts.
 
Ed Sharpe archivist  for SMECC  _www.smecc.org_ (http://www.smecc.org)  
 
 
In a message dated 1/21/2016 6:57:02 P.M. US Mountain Standard Time,  
silent...@gmail.com writes:

I'm  tossing this out here as a conversation-starter more than a
request for  help, although I may end up putting the knowledge to use.
Today I received  a set of original HP paper tapes for the 2115a
machine.  I don't know  if they've been archived or not - there are
dozens of HP tapes on bitsavers  and I'll have to make a P/N list and
compare them.  The real problem  is they're in horrible shape.  Decades
of basement moisture and likely  a few critters have turned them
blackened, moldy and stuck  together.

So, what to do?  How to get to the data without a  bio-hazardous
payload along for the ride?  My thoughts go toward  sunlight and/or U/V
light (like a hair salon sanitizer,) rubber gloves and  a mask,
isopropyl alcohol, careful picking apart of layers, etc.  I'd  think
one thing in our favor is that holes in paper are going to be  easier
to read than ink on paper.  So Part 1 is getting them into  readable
condition, with part 2 being the actual reading.

Any  experience out  there?

-j



Re: Restoring Old Paper Tape

2016-01-22 Thread Dennis Boone
 > Did anyone get a schematic on the values the fellow used in the
 > article on vintage-computer.com?

Not necessarily to squelch discussion of building optical readers, but
the original question was more about archival preservation of tapes
suffering from bad storage.  I'd be interested in hearing how people
have approached this problem in the past.

In googling about yesterday, I noticed that libraries and archives are
now at least occasionally using chlorine dioxide to deal with mold
infestations.  Wipes are commercially available for going after
surfaces.  There are also humidity-activated packets which produce a
safe level of ClO2 gas over a period of a month or so, and are intended
to "fumigate" an area.  While they packets are a bit expensive, the mold
apparently returns slowly enough that continuous treatment isn't
necessary.

Apparently ozone isn't considered very successful, and also damages
bindings, so isn't used much any more.

Now, the library and archival community has legitimate concerns about
the long term life of the objects they're cleaning.  Many in the ccmp
hobbyist community seem concerned largely with extracting the data from
the object once, and then largely ignoring the physical object.  I
wonder if we're being a bit callous here, so maybe that's an interesting
topic for discussion too.

Cheers,

De


Re: Restoring Old Paper Tape

2016-01-22 Thread jwsmobile



On 1/21/2016 10:48 PM, John Robertson wrote:

On 01/21/2016 6:46 PM, Charles Anthony wrote:



-- Charles

Would it not be simpler to make an optical reader to handle  this job? 
You need a light source and the correct number of opto transistors to 
read the light from each hole. There is an index built into the tape 
so that is easy to set.


Something like this:

http://hackaday.com/2014/05/02/reading-paper-tapes-from-scratch/

Did anyone get a schematic on the values the fellow used in the article 
on vintage-computer.com?  I see the photos, but didn't see any schematic 
showing what the actual circuit he found to work was. Also didn't see 
any real names.  Was the cited article anyone here?


thanks
Jim
Of course my assumption above is based on tape that is still complete. 
If it has holes or can't be pulled then, yes, photographing and 
visually reading the dot patterns may be necessary, but that sounds 
rather impractical if there are more than a couple of tapes to 
transcribe.


John :-#)#





Re: Restoring Old Paper Tape

2016-01-22 Thread Randy Dawson
Did you guys forget the Oliver Engineering tape reader?
Heres a construction article from Herb:
http://www.retrotechnology.com/herbs_stuff/s_paper.html



From: cctalk  on behalf of Charles Anthony 

Sent: Friday, January 22, 2016 8:27 AM
To: j...@flippers.com; General Discussion: On-Topic and Off-Topic Posts
Subject: Re: Restoring Old Paper Tape

On Thu, Jan 21, 2016 at 10:48 PM, John Robertson  wrote:

>
>> Would it not be simpler to make an optical reader to handle  this job?
> You need a light source and the correct number of opto transistors to read
> the light from each hole. There is an index built into the tape so that is
> easy to set.
>
> Something like this:
>
> http://hackaday.com/2014/05/02/reading-paper-tapes-from-scratch/
>
> Of course my assumption above is based on tape that is still complete. If
> it has holes or can't be pulled then, yes, photographing and visually
> reading the dot patterns may be necessary, but that sounds rather
> impractical if there are more than a couple of tapes to transcribe.


This is the approach I would use, based on my skill set. I have mad s/w
skillz, but building something more complicated than Legos is just beyond
me.  Also, given the described condition of the tapes, this is the approach
least likely (it seems to me) to make things worse. YMMV.

-- Charles


Re: Restoring Old Paper Tape

2016-01-22 Thread Charles Anthony
On Thu, Jan 21, 2016 at 10:48 PM, John Robertson  wrote:

>
>> Would it not be simpler to make an optical reader to handle  this job?
> You need a light source and the correct number of opto transistors to read
> the light from each hole. There is an index built into the tape so that is
> easy to set.
>
> Something like this:
>
> http://hackaday.com/2014/05/02/reading-paper-tapes-from-scratch/
>
> Of course my assumption above is based on tape that is still complete. If
> it has holes or can't be pulled then, yes, photographing and visually
> reading the dot patterns may be necessary, but that sounds rather
> impractical if there are more than a couple of tapes to transcribe.


This is the approach I would use, based on my skill set. I have mad s/w
skillz, but building something more complicated than Legos is just beyond
me.  Also, given the described condition of the tapes, this is the approach
least likely (it seems to me) to make things worse. YMMV.

-- Charles


Re: Restoring Old Paper Tape

2016-01-22 Thread Corey Cohen
Another option is something like an op-80a where you can manually pull the tape 
across sensors making sure you don't damage it.  Essentially a low tech version 
of what you guys described using a video camera. 

 The op-80a doesn't have a physical sprocket to break the tape, it uses the 
sprocket holes only for timing/triggering the character.   Even if you don't 
have access to an one, they can be built pretty easily and the schematic is 
readily available on line.

I keep one around just for such a purpose, though I really should put a 
microcontroller together to bit bang the parallel to serial or a simple UART so 
that I can hook it up to a modern computer.  It would remove the middle step of 
reading it into my sol-20 and then dumping it to my laptop.  

Cheers,
Corey

corey cohen
uǝɥoɔ ʎǝɹoɔ

> On Jan 21, 2016, at 9:46 PM, Charles Anthony  
> wrote:
> 
>> On Thu, Jan 21, 2016 at 6:21 PM, Jason T  wrote:
>> 
>> On Thu, Jan 21, 2016 at 8:04 PM, Charles Anthony
>>  wrote:
>>> For part 2, personally, I would take movies of the paper tape moving and
>>> doing image analysis to recover that data; this occurs to me because I've
>>> done a fair bit of image recognition software, so this solution may not
>> be
>>> feasible for all. If you sent me a sample movie, I would make a stab at
>>> writing some data recovery software.
>> 
>> I have heard of those approach and was thinking it may be a solution
>> in cases where the tape is too fragile (and that's pretty likely
>> here.)  It would be well beyond my abilities but might make an
>> interesting project for you or anyone else with the skills.
> 
> 
> The general approach would be to have the tape backlit (on a piece of
> glass, with a light source and and diffuser underneath ) and  guide block
> that the tape slides against so the holes move left-to-right but not up and
> down. The camera is set up so that the tape fills the image as much as is
> feasible. You start the camera, and slide the tape. Constant speed is not
> important, but avoid backing up.
> 
> Grab a frame from the movie. Figure out the approximate pixel coordinates
> of the data and pin feed holes in the axis moving across the tape (eg, the
> 1 bit is about 24 pixels from the top of the image, the 2 bit is about 47
> pixels from the top, etc).
> 
> Process the movie a frame at a time. Grab a column of pixels from the
> center of the image from top to bottom. Look at the pixels around where the
> pin feed is, decide if they are light or dark. If light, the a character is
> centered in the column. If not, move to the next frame. look at the pixels
> around where each data bit is, and decide if the are light (punched) or
> dark (unpunched). Write out that data. Skip frames until the pin feed
> pixels go dark, and then skip frames until it goes light again; that will
> be the next character. Repeat.
> 
> The pin feed holes greatly simplify the process. This process is quite
> analogous to reading multi-track magnetic media with a timing track.
> 
> Test on a known tape. Debug. Run over damaged tapes; data recovered.
> 
> -- Charles


Re: Restoring Old Paper Tape

2016-01-21 Thread John Robertson

On 01/21/2016 6:46 PM, Charles Anthony wrote:

On Thu, Jan 21, 2016 at 6:21 PM, Jason T  wrote:


On Thu, Jan 21, 2016 at 8:04 PM, Charles Anthony
 wrote:

For part 2, personally, I would take movies of the paper tape moving and
doing image analysis to recover that data; this occurs to me because I've
done a fair bit of image recognition software, so this solution may not

be

feasible for all. If you sent me a sample movie, I would make a stab at
writing some data recovery software.

I have heard of those approach and was thinking it may be a solution
in cases where the tape is too fragile (and that's pretty likely
here.)  It would be well beyond my abilities but might make an
interesting project for you or anyone else with the skills.



The general approach would be to have the tape backlit (on a piece of
glass, with a light source and and diffuser underneath ) and  guide block
that the tape slides against so the holes move left-to-right but not up and
down. The camera is set up so that the tape fills the image as much as is
feasible. You start the camera, and slide the tape. Constant speed is not
important, but avoid backing up.

Grab a frame from the movie. Figure out the approximate pixel coordinates
of the data and pin feed holes in the axis moving across the tape (eg, the
1 bit is about 24 pixels from the top of the image, the 2 bit is about 47
pixels from the top, etc).

Process the movie a frame at a time. Grab a column of pixels from the
center of the image from top to bottom. Look at the pixels around where the
pin feed is, decide if they are light or dark. If light, the a character is
centered in the column. If not, move to the next frame. look at the pixels
around where each data bit is, and decide if the are light (punched) or
dark (unpunched). Write out that data. Skip frames until the pin feed
pixels go dark, and then skip frames until it goes light again; that will
be the next character. Repeat.

The pin feed holes greatly simplify the process. This process is quite
analogous to reading multi-track magnetic media with a timing track.

Test on a known tape. Debug. Run over damaged tapes; data recovered.

-- Charles

Would it not be simpler to make an optical reader to handle  this job? 
You need a light source and the correct number of opto transistors to 
read the light from each hole. There is an index built into the tape so 
that is easy to set.


Something like this:

http://hackaday.com/2014/05/02/reading-paper-tapes-from-scratch/

Of course my assumption above is based on tape that is still complete. 
If it has holes or can't be pulled then, yes, photographing and visually 
reading the dot patterns may be necessary, but that sounds rather 
impractical if there are more than a couple of tapes to transcribe.


John :-#)#

--
John's Jukes Ltd. 2343 Main St., Vancouver, BC, Canada V5T 3C9
Call (604)872-5757 or Fax 872-2010 (Pinballs, Jukes, VideoGames)
 www.flippers.com
"Old pinballers never die, they just flip out"



RE: Restoring Old Paper Tape

2016-01-21 Thread Jay West
By all means, let's discuss and it will be a useful and fascinating 
conversation both now and in the future.

But just as a thought for the more immediate issue (your tapes)... I find it 
somewhat unlikely that a significant number of early HP 21XX paper tapes are 
not already archived, or in good condition elsewhere. So at least regarding 
your particular stash of tapes, I'd suggest first getting a list up of what all 
you have. At the least, you may find machine readable images already exist, or 
that of all your tapes there's only 3 that should be given heroic efforts

There's a major percentage of those tapes online, and I have a pretty huge 
(cases and cases) stash of early 2114/5/6 & 2100 tapes I haven't even cataloged 
yet. I should do the same, but at least mine are all (currently) in pristine 
shape :)

J




Re: Restoring Old Paper Tape

2016-01-21 Thread Charles Anthony
On Thu, Jan 21, 2016 at 6:21 PM, Jason T  wrote:

> On Thu, Jan 21, 2016 at 8:04 PM, Charles Anthony
>  wrote:
> > For part 2, personally, I would take movies of the paper tape moving and
> > doing image analysis to recover that data; this occurs to me because I've
> > done a fair bit of image recognition software, so this solution may not
> be
> > feasible for all. If you sent me a sample movie, I would make a stab at
> > writing some data recovery software.
>
> I have heard of those approach and was thinking it may be a solution
> in cases where the tape is too fragile (and that's pretty likely
> here.)  It would be well beyond my abilities but might make an
> interesting project for you or anyone else with the skills.
>


The general approach would be to have the tape backlit (on a piece of
glass, with a light source and and diffuser underneath ) and  guide block
that the tape slides against so the holes move left-to-right but not up and
down. The camera is set up so that the tape fills the image as much as is
feasible. You start the camera, and slide the tape. Constant speed is not
important, but avoid backing up.

Grab a frame from the movie. Figure out the approximate pixel coordinates
of the data and pin feed holes in the axis moving across the tape (eg, the
1 bit is about 24 pixels from the top of the image, the 2 bit is about 47
pixels from the top, etc).

Process the movie a frame at a time. Grab a column of pixels from the
center of the image from top to bottom. Look at the pixels around where the
pin feed is, decide if they are light or dark. If light, the a character is
centered in the column. If not, move to the next frame. look at the pixels
around where each data bit is, and decide if the are light (punched) or
dark (unpunched). Write out that data. Skip frames until the pin feed
pixels go dark, and then skip frames until it goes light again; that will
be the next character. Repeat.

The pin feed holes greatly simplify the process. This process is quite
analogous to reading multi-track magnetic media with a timing track.

Test on a known tape. Debug. Run over damaged tapes; data recovered.

-- Charles


Re: Restoring Old Paper Tape

2016-01-21 Thread Jason T
On Thu, Jan 21, 2016 at 8:04 PM, Charles Anthony
 wrote:
> For part 2, personally, I would take movies of the paper tape moving and
> doing image analysis to recover that data; this occurs to me because I've
> done a fair bit of image recognition software, so this solution may not be
> feasible for all. If you sent me a sample movie, I would make a stab at
> writing some data recovery software.

I have heard of those approach and was thinking it may be a solution
in cases where the tape is too fragile (and that's pretty likely
here.)  It would be well beyond my abilities but might make an
interesting project for you or anyone else with the skills.


Re: Restoring Old Paper Tape

2016-01-21 Thread Charles Anthony
On Thu, Jan 21, 2016 at 5:56 PM, Jason T  wrote:

> I'm tossing this out here as a conversation-starter more than a
> request for help, although I may end up putting the knowledge to use.
> Today I received a set of original HP paper tapes for the 2115a
> machine.  I don't know if they've been archived or not - there are
> dozens of HP tapes on bitsavers and I'll have to make a P/N list and
> compare them.  The real problem is they're in horrible shape.  Decades
> of basement moisture and likely a few critters have turned them
> blackened, moldy and stuck together.
>
> So, what to do?  How to get to the data without a bio-hazardous
> payload along for the ride?  My thoughts go toward sunlight and/or U/V
> light (like a hair salon sanitizer,) rubber gloves and a mask,
> isopropyl alcohol, careful picking apart of layers, etc.  I'd think
> one thing in our favor is that holes in paper are going to be easier
> to read than ink on paper.  So Part 1 is getting them into readable
> condition, with part 2 being the actual reading.
>
>
For part 2, personally, I would take movies of the paper tape moving and
doing image analysis to recover that data; this occurs to me because I've
done a fair bit of image recognition software, so this solution may not be
feasible for all. If you sent me a sample movie, I would make a stab at
writing some data recovery software.

-- Charles


Restoring Old Paper Tape

2016-01-21 Thread Jason T
I'm tossing this out here as a conversation-starter more than a
request for help, although I may end up putting the knowledge to use.
Today I received a set of original HP paper tapes for the 2115a
machine.  I don't know if they've been archived or not - there are
dozens of HP tapes on bitsavers and I'll have to make a P/N list and
compare them.  The real problem is they're in horrible shape.  Decades
of basement moisture and likely a few critters have turned them
blackened, moldy and stuck together.

So, what to do?  How to get to the data without a bio-hazardous
payload along for the ride?  My thoughts go toward sunlight and/or U/V
light (like a hair salon sanitizer,) rubber gloves and a mask,
isopropyl alcohol, careful picking apart of layers, etc.  I'd think
one thing in our favor is that holes in paper are going to be easier
to read than ink on paper.  So Part 1 is getting them into readable
condition, with part 2 being the actual reading.

Any experience out there?

-j