IBM 514
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An IBM 514
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An IBM 514, center, attached to an IBM 403 accounting machine
The IBM 514 Reproducing Punch was a card punching machine developed by IBM. The 514 was manufactured from 1949 to 1978. The machine could perform these functions:
- Reproducing all or part of the data on a deck of punched cards.
- Gang punching- copying punched information from a master card.
- Summary punching- punching a total or new balance card amounts which have been accumulated in the accounting machine.
- Mark sensing- the operation by which information recorded in the form of pencil marks on a card is turned into punches on the cards.
Mark sensing allowed a person to enter data to be used in punched-card data processing without using a keypunch machine. It was used for tasks like recording long distance calls or meter readings.
References
- IBM Archive: IBM 514
- IBM (1959). IBM Automatic Punches (PDF). D24-1014-0.
- IBM (October 1959). IBM Reference Manual: 513, 514 Reproducing Punches (PDF). A24-1002-2.
External links
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