IBM 519

The IBM 519 Document-Originating Machine, introduced in 1946, was the last in a series of unit record machines designed for automated preparation of punched cards. Others in the series included the IBM 513 & IBM 514 Reproducing Punch.

An IBM 519 Document-Originating Machine with plugboard control panel open (it would be closed during operation).

The 519, which was "state of the art for the time",[1] could:

  • reproduce all or parts of the information on a set of cards
  • "gangpunch" - copy information from a master card into the following detail cards
  • print up to eight digits on the end of a card
  • compare two decks of cards
  • "summary punch" — create punch cards containing summary information provided by a connected accounting machine, such as totals from a group of processed cards
  • "mark sense" — detect marks made with an electrographic pencil in designated locations on a punched card and then punch holes corresponding to those marks into the card
  • number cards consecutively (an optional feature)

The reproducing, gangpunching, summary punching, and comparing features of the IBM 519 are very similar to those of the IBM 513 and IBM 514.

IBM 513 Reproducing Punch

An IBM 513, left, connected to a device used to generate keys for the SIGABA cipher machine during World War II

The IBM 513 Reproducing Punch, like the IBM 514, had some - but not all - of the capabilities included in the IBM 519.[2][3]

IBM 514 Reproducing Punch

An IBM 514, center, attached to an IBM 403 accounting machine

The IBM 514 Reproducing Punch was introduced in February 1949.[4] Like the 513, it had fewer capabilities than the IBM 519. The 514 was withdrawn in 1978.

The identifier "IBM 514" has been partially recycled in the form of "IBM 514 Watt(s) Hot-Swap Power Supply."[5][6]

Capabilities table

Capability 513
Repro
Punch
514
Repro
Punch
519
Doc
Mach.
Comparing 513 514 519
Editing 513 514 519
End Printing 519
Gangpunching 513 514 519
Mark-Sense
Punching
513 514 519
Reproducing 513 514 519
Summary Punching 513 514 519


The IBM 513, 514 and 519 all operated at 100 cards per minute,[7] and their operations were directed by a removable control panel that was known as a plugboard.[8] As with other IBM punched card devices that operated as automatic punches, cards are fed "face down, 12-edge first."[9]. (On devices that operated as automatic readers, cards were fed "face down, 9-edge first instead.)

History

Production of the IBM 519 was still going strong in 1956/1957, and production was consolidated to Rochester (for the Americas) and Milan, Italy.[10][11] IBM closed its last punched card manufacturing plant in 1984,[12] nearly a century after Herman Hollerith's 1886 construction of the first card sorting machine.[13]

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References

Another view of a 519.

IBM manuals:

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