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Typewriters

jerryleetypes

New in Town
Messages
14
Location
Indianapolis
I see...three, maybe four Olivers...one L.C. Smith & Bros., one Remington Portable, at least two Coronas, maybe two or three Smith-Premiers...Not sure about the rest.

Good eye! Some of the others are: Fox No.4, Caligraph No.2, Hammond No.2, Mignon No.4, Chicago No.3, Wellington, New Century Caligraph, Blickensderfer No.7 & Imperial D.
 

martinsantos

Practically Family
Messages
595
Location
São Paulo, Brazil
Several wonderful typewriters here!! ;)

My everyday typewriter, a Royal KHM, 1937.

KHM.JPG
 

Sloan1874

I'll Lock Up
Messages
8,425
Location
Glasgow
In modern newsrooms, you can always tell which reporters learned to type on beasts like that - though maybe not as full-on - because they're the ones hammering their keyboards mercilessly and deafening those on either side of them. Old habits die hard...
 

Futwick

One of the Regulars
Messages
154
Location
Detroit
When I was a little kid, I used an old black typewriter with 1910 on it. It had been in my family for years but I don't know how my parents came to own it. Can't remember the make but it looked a lot this. Those dual black ribbon metallic canisters really ring a bell. That really looks a lot like it from what I remember. I have no idea whatever happened to it.

6359574_orig.jpg
 

martinsantos

Practically Family
Messages
595
Location
São Paulo, Brazil
I got a Royal portable from 1929. It went to the technician and now is back. But I think it is too heavy to write. The technician told me that this model is just this way. I really don't believe. Anyone here can tell me about how this model is to write?

297125_255739574462462_89295024_n (1).jpg
 

Shangas

I'll Lock Up
Messages
6,116
Location
Melbourne, Australia
When you mean 'Heavy', do you mean that it's really stiff in the typing action?

The next model up from this (the Royal Model O) came with touch-control so that you could adjust that. But I don't know about this one. I know it certainly didn't have touch-control.
 

rjb1

Practically Family
Messages
561
Location
Nashville
This may or may not be the best place to put this, but the network news earlier today said that the Russians are buying typewriters for their most-secret correspondence and communication. The lack of ANY electronic connection makes them totally hacker-proof.
 

Shangas

I'll Lock Up
Messages
6,116
Location
Melbourne, Australia
Just make sure you burn the carbon paper.

And the ribbons.

Russian Federal Guard Service reviving Typewriter Use

On that note, I have a question to ask.

A relatively common plot-device used in mystery/detective TV shows/movies, is where the detective or his assistant steals the ribbon off a typewriter. They unroll it and hold it up to the light. And now, they can magically read the incriminating blackmail letter that was typed up, and then burnt, purely because the impressions of the letters were left stamped into the ribbon.

Does this have ANY basis in fact, AT ALL?

I know that such a thing is possible with later, electronic typewriter ribbons (I've done it myself). But with older silk/nylon ribbons, I don't think it can happen. Or can it? I've never noticed it on any of my ribbons. And at any rate, a ribbon that's been through a machine at least twice would've had everything typed over itself, anyway, making any 'evidence' impossible to retrieve.
 
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GE-Man

New in Town
Messages
25
Location
Hamburg, Germany
This may or may not be the best place to put this, but the network news earlier today said that the Russians are buying typewriters for their most-secret correspondence and communication. The lack of ANY electronic connection makes them totally hacker-proof.

But you have to watch out for bugs. I'm sure the sound of the letters being typed gives a good hint to the text.
 

RegentSt1965

Familiar Face
Messages
99
Location
London
My GLW (Good Lady Wife), an experienced old-school typist AND a latter-day electronic document security supremo, assures me that it is quite feasible to read a new ribbon (and they often were read!)
 

Shangas

I'll Lock Up
Messages
6,116
Location
Melbourne, Australia
When you mean a 'new ribbon', do you mean a nylon ribbon that's been used once? Or a "new" ribbon being those plastic one-use, throw-out ribbons that electric typewriters use?

But you have to watch out for bugs. I'm sure the sound of the letters being typed gives a good hint to the text.

If you hit two keys at once, a typewriter will freeze. And pressing the carriage-release button can cause it to crash.
 

Asienizen

One of the Regulars
Messages
223
Location
Vietnam
I almost bought a Royal Portable, glass keys and black shiny finish - but I was a broke college student at the time. Now being out of the US, I wonder if I'll be able to get one. Ah, such a shame.
 

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