Hellschreiber

Slight timing errors are compensated for by printing each line twice.

The Hellschreiber or Feldhellschreiber (also Hell-Schreiber named after its inventor Rudolf Hell) is a facsimile-based teleprinter invented by Rudolf Hell. Compared to contemporary teleprinters that were based on typewriter systems and were mechanically complex and expensive, the Hellschreiber was much simpler and more robust, with only two moving parts. It has the added advantage of being capable of providing intelligible communication even over very poor quality radio or cable links, where voice or other teledata would be unintelligible.

The device was first developed in the late 1920s, and saw use starting in the 1930s, chiefly being used for land-line press services. During WW2 it was sometimes used by the German military in conjunction with the Enigma encryption system. In the post-war era, it became increasingly common among newswire services, and was used in this role well into the 1980s. In modern times Hellschreiber is used as a communication mode by amateur radio operators using computers and sound cards; the resulting mode is referred to as Hellschreiber, Feld-Hell, or simply Hell.

Operation

Hellschreiber believed to be the last operational unit on display at Bletchley Park, United Kingdom, March 2010.

Hellschreiber sends a page of text as a series of vertical columns. Each column is broken down vertically into a series of pixels, normally using a 7 by 7 pixel grid to represent characters. The data for a line is then sent as a series of on-off signals to the receiver, using a variety of formats depending on the medium, but normally at a rate of 112.5 baud.

At the receiver end, a paper tape is fed at a constant speed over a roller. Above the roller was a spinning cylinder with small bumps on the surface. The received signal was amplified and sent to a magnetic actuator that pulled the cylinder down onto the roller, hammering a dot into the surface of the paper. All implementations of Hellschreiber print all received columns twice, one below the other (but they are not transmitted twice). This is to compensate for slight timing errors that are often present in the equipment, and causes the text to slant. The received text can look like two identical texts coming out one below the other, or a line of text coming out in the middle, with chopped-off lines above and below. In either case, at least one whole letter can be read at all times.

The original Hellschreiber machine was a mechanical device, so therefore it was possible to send "half-pixels". The right ends of the loops in B, for instance, could be shifted a little, so as to improve the readability. Any on-signal could in any case last no shorter than 8 ms, however, both because of having to restrict the occupied bandwidth on the radio, but also for reasons having to do with the mechanical makeup of the receiving machinery.

Improvements that came as a result of software implementation:

Variants

Hellschreiber has also spawned a number of variants over the years, many of them due to radio amateur efforts in the 1990s. Examples of them are:

Slowfeld

Slowfeld is an experimental narrow band communication program that makes use of the Hellschreiber principle - requiring that the transmitter and receiver both use the same column-scan speed.[1] Data is sent at a very slow rate and received via a Fast Fourier Transform routine giving a bandwidth of several Hz.[2] As long as tuning is within several signal bandwidths, the result will appear. The transmission rate is around 3, 1.5 and 0.75 characters per second. Slowfeld, along with similar modes such as very slow QRSS Morse code, may be used when all other communication methods fail.

Media

A sample Hellschreiber transmission
The text "Welcome to Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia that anyone can edit." sent as Hellschreiber.

Problems playing this file? See media help.
Spectrogram of a Feld-Hell transmission centered on 7072.0KHz.

Digital HF radio communications systems

References

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