I obtained this vintage terminal. It was used in a shop in the 80s for sending orders to the central store. It has a loudspeaker which was coupled to the telephone. It probably used a 300 baud modulation. It contains 4 coin batteries. I've been able to power it at 5V; it has three working modes: "calc" (it works as a simple calculator), "oper" (unknown, you can type numbers and other symbols) and "send" (but it doesn't make any sound). I expected to be able to store codes and then send them through the modem, but I haven't been able to find how. I have not found further information or instructions manual on the web. I would like to try and demodulate its signals with http://www.whence.com/minimodem/ or send them over a ham radio. Currently I seek advice to make it work. Thanks in advance.
The unit is powered with a 5v wall adapter and alligator clips instead of four 1.5V coin cells. The mode switch (at the lower right) is set to "OPER" and a letter 'P' is shown in the screen. Enter "0406091001" and press "ent"; a letter 'H' is now shown. Enter "001290" and "ent", a '0' is displayed: that was the end user ID. Now, different product codes can be stored.
Begin with 'H' or 'P' and type digits, then press "ent". Information is briefly displayed like:
0004 0451
with the first number increasing and the second decreasing. Probably means the number of occupied and free memory positions. After a few seconds, '0' can be seen again. The arrow keys let you check previously stored data but I don't know how to edit or delete a position.
After storing a few codes as "H12345678" or "H96385274" I place the mode switch in "SEND" and press button "SND/=". The screen displays "SEND BUSY" and this audio sequence is emitted:
For 4.4s a 1.200 Hz tone is heard. Then, for 6s, it is 1 kHz. For 2.8s there is a modulation. For the last 3s, the 1 kHz tone is sent again. A careful look at the spectrum shows the frequencies are not very accurate. The tones actually seem 980 and 1180 Hz.
Even though Bell 103 has 1070 and 1270 Hz tones instead of 1000 and 1200 as I found.
Maybe the components have aged and the tone and symbol frequency have drifted. I edited the audio clip for speeding it up 1.8%. The audio tones were now close to 1000 and 1200 Hz and the symbol rate close to the theoretical 300 bps:
In both cases the demodulated data makes sense in spite of some errors. The code "H12345678" is now "H��3�56��". It could be due to some 50 Hz mains noise on top of the modulation, caused by the cheap wall adapter. minimodem program reports a low confidence value (2), consisten with a distorted signal. All in all, the esential features and technical specs have been understood.
I got some advice from a former user and I was able to make it work, at least partially. An initial code must be entered and then product codes can be stored. The terminal also sent the data through the speaker. The sound seemed a 300 baud modulation. I will provide further instructions and audio samples.