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[Closed] Middle-aged People - are you familar with the term "Banda Copier".

 Esme
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Anyone remember those faded hand-written foolscap worksheets, with the faint odour of methanol/ethanol?
Produced on a [url= http://www.1900s.org.uk/banda.htm ]Banda Copier[/url], before they introduced that new-fangled photocopier thing.


 
Posted : 15/09/2015 10:40 am
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Middle-aged People - are you familar with the term "Banda Copier".

Is it this guy?

[img] /revision/latest?cb=20110908165917[/img]


 
Posted : 15/09/2015 10:42 am
 Esme
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Ah yes, I didn't read the full thread ๐Ÿ˜ณ
Thanks, Stoner (and others)


 
Posted : 15/09/2015 10:46 am
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[img] [/img]

I'd never heard of it. It's possible that our school used one for worksheets but it's not ringing any bells with me.


 
Posted : 15/09/2015 10:49 am
 Esme
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You are clearly far too young, Cougar ๐Ÿ˜‰


 
Posted : 15/09/2015 10:56 am
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I'm nudging 40 (does that count) - never heard of it until today.


 
Posted : 15/09/2015 10:58 am
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nope never heard of it. Is it something they used in the war?


 
Posted : 15/09/2015 11:02 am
 nbt
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I'm 43. I wouldn't have known the name but having seen the other thread title, I knew *exactly* what you meant


 
Posted : 15/09/2015 11:05 am
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Does it refer to the pilots that follow the lead kamikaze pilot on a mission?


 
Posted : 15/09/2015 11:08 am
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I though that was a Roneo copy? It produced faint purple print like this:

[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 15/09/2015 11:13 am
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Yep I remember them. My Dad used to be a teacher and I remember helping him produce copies of stuff he'd typed by cranking the handle on the side of one over & over again.

I was very young at the time though.

..honest....


 
Posted : 15/09/2015 11:19 am
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My teachers used them at various schools right up until I left college in '89.


 
Posted : 15/09/2015 11:20 am
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It was all a bit before my time.

But My brother and I did produce our own ceefax on the amstrad 464.


 
Posted : 15/09/2015 12:05 pm
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I remember a failed assassination attempt on a maths teacher in about 1983. Somebody tried to bump him off by putting Banda fluid in his brew. Unfortunately the plan was foiled as the brew turned purple and stunk of alcohol, much like the intended victim.


 
Posted : 15/09/2015 12:09 pm
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[url= https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gestetner ]Gestetner[/url]. That's all. Just old enough.


 
Posted : 15/09/2015 12:11 pm
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I remember a microfiche machine in the local library. The general public were never allowed to use it, and you'd have to wait for the fierce head librarian to try to find the information for you. This was always very slow, and not always successful, as she had terrible eyesight and hand-/eye co-ordination.


 
Posted : 15/09/2015 12:16 pm
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Yep. We had them at infant / junior school. Used to love the smell of newly printed sheets!


 
Posted : 15/09/2015 12:20 pm
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Posted : 15/09/2015 12:21 pm
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I was never one for that new fangled technology....

This is where it's at

[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 15/09/2015 12:21 pm
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Yes I was at a weird cross over in teacher training

I use to make banda work sheets by running them through a dot matrix printers. I then added diagrams by hand. I even used a variety of colours by using different colour "ink sheets" on one master

I think this was because it was cheaper than photocopying


 
Posted : 15/09/2015 5:07 pm
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I remember a microfiche machine in the local library.

Ye gods, I remember those. We had half a dozen in our library I think, they fascinated me as a kid. Pretty sure they were free to use, I vaguely remember having a play with one for about ten seconds until the novelty wore off.


 
Posted : 15/09/2015 5:13 pm
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Banda sheets defined the smell of purple!


 
Posted : 15/09/2015 6:51 pm
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I remember those sheets from primary school, which I left in 1988. Apparently, teachers would always run off fresh copies for bottom set classes that they taught on Friday, because the fumes would settle them down a bit.


 
Posted : 15/09/2015 7:00 pm