Linotype Linecasting Machine, 1952-1962
Linotype composing machine, Model 48, serial number 15866, 1952-1962
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The Linotype printing machine was a linecasting machine developed by Ottmar Mergenthaler, a German-American inventor, in 1886. The Linotype was a hot metal typesetting system and the first printing machine that could easily and quickly set complete lines of type for use in printing presses.
This machine revolutionized the art of printing and society. Linotype printing machines were the dominant form of printers for newspapers and magazines from their invention to the late 1900s, when they were largely replaced by photosetting machines and soon afterwards electronic software.
Linotype machines were initially sold by the Mergenthaler Linotype Company, established by Mergenthaler in 1886. A British offshoot company, the Linotype Company, was established in 1889, becoming Linotype & Machinery Ltd in 1903.
The Model 48 Linotype composing machine was introduced in 1935 and continued to be in use into the 1960s. The Model 48 featured a Rapid Magazine Change system which Linotype claimed allowed the operator to change from one magazine to another in one second. The Model 48 could hold up to seven magazines and was marketed for its speed and versatility.
- Measurements:
-
overall: 2120 mm x 1520 mm x 1440 mm,
- Materials:
- plastic (unidentified) , type metal (lead, antimony, tin alloy) , steel (metal) , iron and brass (copper, zinc alloy)
- Object Number:
- 1978-91/1
- Image ©
- The Board of Trustees of the Science Museum