Look at this FINE piece of craftsmanship!

Non-fashion, non-skirt, non-gender discussions. If your post is related to fashion, skirts or gender, please choose one of the forums above for it.
User avatar
moonshadow
Member Extraordinaire
Posts: 7282
Joined: Sun Aug 09, 2015 1:58 am
Location: Lake Goodwin, Washington
Contact:

Look at this FINE piece of craftsmanship!

Post by moonshadow »

Holy cow, this machine is about 40 +/- years old, and when I plugged it in.... IT STILL WORKS! (Just needs some ribbon, still available at Amazon)

I purchased it for Amber, as she has taken an interest in all things vintage. She fell in love with an old typewriter at a flea market a few weeks ago, however we were not able to make the purchase. Today, while I stopped at a local church thrift store to check out some skirts (didn't find anything suitable) I happened upon this prize, and picked it up for Amber on the condition that if she get's tired of it, she will return it to me, in other words, she is not to sell it, or give it away. If she don't want it... I DO!

Image

Ahhh... when I plugged it in and switched it on, I heard the motor start spinning, I fed some paper through it, and began to type. Despite the ribbon cartridge being dried out, it was feeding, all of the hammers worked, and it just made sounds that were music to my ears. To me, the sound of a typewriter going at full speed is like the snaps and pops of a vinyl record. Music, sweet music. I could go to sleep to it. Amber can't wait for me to get a ribbon in so she can start typing out her stories. I may use it myself a time or two.

I took great pleasure in teaching her how to load the paper, set the margins, and what all the little levers and switches were for. When I was a kid, mom gave me an old business IBM selectric III typewriter, and I used to use it all of the time. It was really heavy, and sadly, I can not remember what I did with it. I think something broke on it, and it found it's way to a thrift store. Dad got me a modern typewriter one year for Christmas, around 2000. It was okay, but it was plastic, made in China, and you know... all that. I left it at the old house when we moved because it wasn't working right anyway. And to think, the typewriter we picked up today had 30 years on the one I got for Christmas and it's still chugging along! Of course I don't think there's a plastic component in it....

And I think this might have something to do with it's longevity....

Image

WHAT??? You mean the U.S. used to actually PRODUCE THINGS? You mean there was a time when there was more to our economy than doing each others laundry, stocking shelves, and flipping burgers? So that's what all those big empty abandoned buildings I see in every town were used for.... MAKING THINGS! How 'bout that....

Yeah... I was a weird kid. I loved to type on typewriters and listen to LP records. Son... what do you want for Christmas? A foot ball? A BB gun? A bike? No Dad, I'd like a typewriter and some CSN records please....
User avatar
Kilted_John
Member Extraordinaire
Posts: 1285
Joined: Wed Oct 22, 2003 12:07 am
Location: Duvall, WA, USA
Contact:

Re: Look at this FINE piece of craftsmanship!

Post by Kilted_John »

We had one that was a bit older. A Smith-Corona 250. Made in 1963... Not ours, but identical to the one we had.

Image
Skirted since 2/2002, kilted 8/2002-8/2011, and dressed since 9/2013...
flickr: http://www.flickr.com/photos/245gt-turbo
dillon
Member Extraordinaire
Posts: 2719
Joined: Mon Nov 18, 2013 8:12 pm
Location: southeast NC coast

Re: Look at this FINE piece of craftsmanship!

Post by dillon »

Classy machine, but still missing that classic sound of the older mechanical typewriters with their manual return arms, and little bells. Those were the days when people actually needed and used grammar and spelling. ~Waxes nostalgic for the days of basic education and (American) English literacy.~

It's ironic that the era of the PC, which was supposed to save trees and paper by making all our work electronic, caused an explosion in paper use. It's just too easy to click print, and raise the number of copies beyond what's actually needed. When copies were carbon-paper based, or at least Xerox copy machine based, we were much more thoughtful about our documents. Smart phones may relieve this a bit, but I am nervous about having my life stored on something I might easily lose or destroy.
As a matter of fact, the sun DOES shine out of my ...
dillon
Member Extraordinaire
Posts: 2719
Joined: Mon Nov 18, 2013 8:12 pm
Location: southeast NC coast

Re: Look at this FINE piece of craftsmanship!

Post by dillon »

It also makes me recall the advent of secretarial "word processors", precursors to PCs for secretarial staff. I worked in a University as a research-grunt/graduate student in the early 1980's, and the secretary for our group was a bitter and difficult older woman, in her late fifties, I presume, and was highly resistant to the transition from an IBM Selectric to some sort of digital machine. I can sort of relate though, being at that age myself now; she just wanted to make her thirty years and escape without having to master something new; I can't blame her for that; but that does not excuse her personality otherwise. One of the younger project leaders, a tech-savvy fellow, put a joke program on her new machine that would cause the text from a completed page to drip slowly off the screen, letter by letter, as if the floor beneath each line of text was being slowly pulled away. She almost had a breakdown as she watched paragraphs of work disintegrate before her eyes. It was cruel, but hilarious, especially so to those who had to work with this less-than-pleasant person.
As a matter of fact, the sun DOES shine out of my ...
Gordon
Member Extraordinaire
Posts: 570
Joined: Sun Sep 14, 2014 6:30 pm
Location: Western Washington, USA

Re: Look at this FINE piece of craftsmanship!

Post by Gordon »

Ah, the memories. I spent many hours in front of my moms typewriter doing school reports. If you made a mistake you had to start the page all over again. I was overjoyed the first time I used a computer to do the same type of thing. Old things like this bring back some good memories, but I wouldn't go back for anything.
-----------------------------
Namaste,
Gordon
Kilted Musician
Member Extraordinaire
Posts: 389
Joined: Sun Aug 15, 2004 3:50 pm

Re: Look at this FINE piece of craftsmanship!

Post by Kilted Musician »

This brings back a lot of good memories. My mom used to have a Smith Corona typewriter from, I'm guessing, the late '50s, early '60s. It had a distinct smell to it that I really enjoyed. Yeah... I was a weird kid... still am! When I was high school, I took a typing class and for the life of me, I have no idea why but I'm glad I did. I was the only guy in a class of about 28. All but 2 typewriters were Royal manuals. The others were IBM electrics. About the same time, my dad bought a used electric [IBM] that we used for quite sometime in addition to the Smith Corona. Then, shorly after I graduated from high school, we moved and I have no idea where the typewriters ended up...

--Rick
User avatar
crfriend
Master Barista
Posts: 15176
Joined: Fri Nov 19, 2004 9:52 pm
Location: New England (U.S.)
Contact:

Re: Look at this FINE piece of craftsmanship!

Post by crfriend »

Kilted Musician wrote:This brings back a lot of good memories.
Aren't those wonderful to have brought back, especially in a place where'd you'd likely least expect it?
My mom used to have a Smith Corona typewriter from, I'm guessing, the late '50s, early '60s. It had a distinct smell to it that I really enjoyed.
I'll bet dollars to doughnuts it had to do with oil -- and if the machine was an electric, it'd be warm oil at that. Teletype machines bring back similar memories to computer folks, and depending on the calibre of the human those memories can range from very fond to outright terrifying -- but that was frequently hot oil.
Yeah... I was a weird kid... still am!
Join the crowd. :)

I've got an electric of some ilk in a storage-locker somewhere. Sadly, the ones that I used in my childhood, an Underwood of some unremembered model and an exquisite pre-Selectric IBM, are long gone. You win some, and you lose some; I still have a (mostly) functional Teletype ASR-33, though. The kiddies don't get it, but the some adults do and it's fun to watch the reactions once the sounds and smells trip long-abandoned neural pathways.
Retrocomputing -- It's not just a job, it's an adventure!
skirted_in_SF
Member Extraordinaire
Posts: 1081
Joined: Tue Feb 16, 2010 1:56 am
Location: San Francisco, CA USA

Re: Look at this FINE piece of craftsmanship!

Post by skirted_in_SF »

crfriend wrote:. . . and an exquisite pre-Selectric IBM, are long gone.
I'm of an age where I've seen IBM Executives (pre-Selectric) with proportional type at my first employer.
crfriend wrote:You win some, and you lose some; I still have a (mostly) functional Teletype ASR-33, though.
I've worked a couple of places in the '70s/early '80 that had those. My second employer used one to communicate with operations in Europe. Many of us had HP or Televideo serial terminals hooked to our Prime minicomputer at a princely 1200 bps. Those of us who were tech savvy knew the key combination to turbocharge the date rate to 2400. :shock: Our joke was to use the key combination that changed the character set to one that was made up of various combinations of lines.
Stuart Gallion
No reason to hide my full name 8)
Back in my skirts in San Francisco
User avatar
denimini
Member Extraordinaire
Posts: 3590
Joined: Wed Jan 07, 2015 2:50 am
Location: Outback Australia

Re: Look at this FINE piece of craftsmanship!

Post by denimini »

I don't have any fond memories of typewriters - in fact I am quite traumatised being reminded of their existance; spending hours retyping due to mistakes, trying to get the eraser ribbon to properly remove a character, getting high on whiteout and spending a fortune on an IBM golfball to have another font. Thanks goodness for the advent of the backspace and delete keys, let alone cut & paste.
My name is Anthony, please accept me for the person that I am.
Kilted Musician
Member Extraordinaire
Posts: 389
Joined: Sun Aug 15, 2004 3:50 pm

Re: Look at this FINE piece of craftsmanship!

Post by Kilted Musician »

Kilted Musician wrote:My mom used to have a Smith Corona typewriter from, I'm guessing, the late '50s, early '60s. It had a distinct smell to it that I really enjoyed.
cfriend wrote:I'll bet dollars to doughnuts it had to do with oil -- and if the machine was an electric, it'd be warm oil at that.
The typewriter was a manual, stored in its case which probably held in the smell of the oil.
Kilted Musician wrote:Yeah... I was a weird kid... still am!
cfriend wrote:Join the crowd. :)
Thanks! :)

My high school in Flint Michigan [yeah... the city with the leaded water] was the first school in Flint to be connected to a computer for student use. In the classroom, we had the same model, the Teletype ASR-33, connected to a computer in Maryland using an accoustic coupled modem. We'd punch the paper tape [in BASIC], connect to the computer, run the tape, and watch the results on the Teletype! Those were the days!
--Rick
User avatar
hoborob
Member Extraordinaire
Posts: 346
Joined: Mon Jul 21, 2014 4:03 pm

Re: Look at this FINE piece of craftsmanship!

Post by hoborob »

Yes we are all dating ourselves in this topic that's for sure. I can still remember the days when we got 300 Baud and that was fast!
Kilted Musician
Member Extraordinaire
Posts: 389
Joined: Sun Aug 15, 2004 3:50 pm

Re: Look at this FINE piece of craftsmanship!

Post by Kilted Musician »

hoborob wrote:Yes we are all dating ourselves in this topic that's for sure. I can still remember the days when we got 300 Baud and that was fast!
Yep... 300 Baud with my Volks 6420 modem for my Commodore 64 computer!

--Rick
User avatar
moonshadow
Member Extraordinaire
Posts: 7282
Joined: Sun Aug 09, 2015 1:58 am
Location: Lake Goodwin, Washington
Contact:

Re: Look at this FINE piece of craftsmanship!

Post by moonshadow »

Ribbons are on the way!

:flower:
User avatar
Kilted_John
Member Extraordinaire
Posts: 1285
Joined: Wed Oct 22, 2003 12:07 am
Location: Duvall, WA, USA
Contact:

Re: Look at this FINE piece of craftsmanship!

Post by Kilted_John »

Kilted Musician wrote:
hoborob wrote:Yes we are all dating ourselves in this topic that's for sure. I can still remember the days when we got 300 Baud and that was fast!
Yep... 300 Baud with my Volks 6420 modem for my Commodore 64 computer!

--Rick
First computer we had with a modem was my father's old Kaypro XT compatible. A 1200 baud modem. Neither the C64, nor my original Apple //e had one. First modem I had was a 2400 baud Zoom fax modem. Used it with the //e after it became a IIgs (upgrade kit machine - used case and keyboard from the //e, along with power supply, but new board and basepan) and with a Mac IIsi. 860Kb file took 85 minutes to download from AOHell. Upgraded in late 1995 to a 28.8, which worked better at 14.4. Between 2001 and 2007, used a USRobotics 56K modem. Been DSL since then.

-J
Skirted since 2/2002, kilted 8/2002-8/2011, and dressed since 9/2013...
flickr: http://www.flickr.com/photos/245gt-turbo
Kilted Musician
Member Extraordinaire
Posts: 389
Joined: Sun Aug 15, 2004 3:50 pm

Re: Look at this FINE piece of craftsmanship!

Post by Kilted Musician »

moonshadow wrote:Ribbons are on the way!

:flower:
Sounds good, Moon. I'm curious... how much for them?

--Rick
Post Reply