Jump to content United States-English
HP.com Home Products and Services Support and Drivers Solutions How to Buy
» Contact HP
 
HP.com home
About us  >  History  >  Virtual museum  >  Imaging & printing

Moseley Autograf, Model 7101B strip chart recorder, 1965

» 

Company information

» About us
» History
  » HP Timeline
    » Virtual museum
   
»Early instruments
   
»Personal systems
   
»Imaging and printing
   
» Chronological order
    » HP garage
    » Measure Magazine
    » HP Journal
    » Origins video
    » FAQ


Content starts here

» Virtual tour

Take this product for an interactive spin. The QuickTime plug-in is needed to view this presentation.

Click to go to download the QuickTime plugin.

» Six views

View this product from six static angles.
Click to go to larger photo of the Moseley Autograf,  Model 7101B Strip Chart Recorder.
HP's first-ever acquisition was Pasadena, California-based F.L. Moseley in 1958.

HP's Moseley division produced plotters and other graphic recording instruments that automated the labor-intensive process of plotting data by hand.

Strip chart recorders were used primarily in industrial applications where there was a need for continuous recording of such data as aircraft testing (wing stress), oil well exploration (seismic logs) and satellite solar converters (voltage output).

The Moseley 7101B provided 10-inch strip chart recording capabilities. Each input channel accepted any of the wide variety of input modules, which determined the electrical span or special purpose recording capability. The 7101B had one pen and took one input module (as opposed to two pens and modules for the 7100B). Metric and rack mounting models were also available.

The Moseley technology was pioneering in the field of two-axis graphic recording instruments.

In the late 1920s, Francis L. Moseley, tired of the tedious task of writing down columns of data, plotting graphs and drawing smooth curves, conceived the idea of an x-y recorder using standard-size graph paper. An x-y recorder is an electromechanical device that produces permanent graphical displays of two input variables as they relate to each other.

In 1951, the F.L. Moseley Co. was formed in a California garage to manufacture the first commercially available models of the x-y recorder, called the Autograf line. For scientists and engineers everywhere, the Moseley x-y recorder meant that a means for automatically recording the relationship between two variables was finally available. Friction to heat, vibration to velocity, current to voltage—whatever the variables, the Autograf made it possible to trace them on chart paper automatically, rather than tracking them by hand.

In 1958, HP acquired the Pasadena, California-based F.L. Moseley, complementing its highly diversified line of measuring and signal-generating instruments. The association made it possible to further develop and improve the graphic recording instruments, which by then had become a standard in the industry, and to correlate uses and applications with many HP products.

Printable version
Privacy statement Using this site means you accept its terms Feedback to webmaster
© 2012 Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P.