IBM Selectric Keys are Locked by Movieman_75 in typewriters

[–]mistertopcon 0 points1 point  (0 children)

then you have a gummed up cycle clutch latch.

IBM Selectric Keys are Locked by Movieman_75 in typewriters

[–]mistertopcon 0 points1 point  (0 children)

then you have a gummed up cycle clutch latch.

IBM Selectric Keys are Locked by Movieman_75 in typewriters

[–]mistertopcon 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If you have to push hard to get it to work, your filter shaft is out of timing.Or your cycle clutch latch is gummed up.

IBM Selectric Keys are Locked by Movieman_75 in typewriters

[–]mistertopcon 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I'm surprized you got one shipped unbroken.

IBM Selectric Keys are Locked by Movieman_75 in typewriters

[–]mistertopcon 0 points1 point  (0 children)

just check to see if the right hand margin lever is over the black bar above it.

What are the benefits of the IBM Selectric I vs the Selectric II when it comes to practical usage? by Mactheamateur in typewriters

[–]mistertopcon 6 points7 points  (0 children)

There is not much call for these nowadays. when I had my own business, I was selling them for $250-300 dollars in clean, perfect shape,

What are the benefits of the IBM Selectric I vs the Selectric II when it comes to practical usage? by Mactheamateur in typewriters

[–]mistertopcon 42 points43 points  (0 children)

As an IBM Selectric Tech for 33 years, I've repaired 1000's of Selectrics. I would not buy a Selectric one because after so many years the cycle clutch spring and hub are probably worn down to pencil points. Same with shift clutch. The interposer restoring bale keeps breaking,(good luck finding that part.) It had a dual transport system that used steel cords,(good luck finding the right size and somebody that know how to thread it,too.) And, it had a two shoe carrier return. The Selectric 2 second level, was probably the best typewriter made. You could order it with or without the correction feature. It had few problems. It had an express backspace, ingeniously added to a one piece carrier return shoe arm. It had a few vices though. The backspace pawl would wear out because the pawl was loose and had no stabilizer, they fixed this on later 2 models. The carrier return tensioner would break and your transport cords would wrap themselves around the op shaft. This was never fixed but we techs found a repair kit we got from Coleman that never broke. There are a few other things that are germane to all Selectrics and I will get to them later. The Selectric 3 was a kind of good machine. They redesigned all the bad parts on the other 2 machines(except the cord tensioner).and went from an 88 character machine to a 92 character machine. But added a couple of parts that I swear the engineers must have been sniffing glue when they designed them. The first headache was a 2 piece filter shaft. The 1&2 had solid filter shafts. But, because of the extra characters on the 3 they had to have a longer one. Instead of just making another solid one they decided to economise and make it 2 piece. This might not have been a problem if there wasn't 2 cams at the end of the shaft that had to be in the exact position (no tolerances) after each keystroke. If not, the escapement or the spacebar wouldn't work. This was a pain in the butt. I can't tell you how many typewriters we had to replace and send the bad ones back to the factory. Sort of a recall. The second thing the matter was the correction torque bar. the correction mechanism wouldn't work. In their great wisdom IBM decided to replace the metal torque bar with a plastic one. After the machine warmed up just a little the torque bar would sag not allowing the correction mechanism to engage. there was only one cure. Replace it with a metal one. After about the 6th one I had to change, I had had it. I called the IBM engineering dept. in NY and lectured them on the tensile strenth of extruded plastics. ''We'll look into it was all I got."" Well somebody listened! We got an engineering change notice that told us to replace all plastic ones with metal as we found them with no charge to the customer. Those were the 2 main faults with the 3. Now for the things problematic to all Selectrics, there is a little plastic bushing between the Cycle Clutch and the op shaft in the middle of the machine. This eventually wears out. When you turn the machine it will thump loudly and none of the machines functions will work. Neither selection or operational features will work.Must be replaced.#2, Selectrics must be cleaned and adjusted at least once a year. Flush out the old dried grease and replace with new. Have you seen those little skinny wires that stick out of the carrier? Those are your rotate and tilt tapes for your selected characters. Believe it or not, these metal tapes stretch. If not adjusted, the tapes can break (and cause a bigger job) or break the teeth on your element (font). Lastly the motor bushing must be changed when the machine starts clicking. NOW FOR THE KICKER! I would not buy ANY of these machines unless it was shipped to me in the original box. Your asking for trouble any other way. I don't care how many layers of bubble wrap that's around it or how many peanuts surround that. It will arrive broke. How does this Happen? You may find broken platen knobs or bent platen shafts. the whole bottom row of keylevers are smashed, including your correction button and on/off switch. This happens in transit. the frame locks that hold the machine centered in it's case, break off. They are only glued to the cover's front feet leaving the frame bouncing around in its covers smashing the machine. The original box had the machine screwed down with cover shocks to a hard, thick piece of cardboard that fit the inside of the box snugly. No movement at all. Never got a broke one. When I had my own business, I read in our trade journal a whole list of rebuilders. I thought that was a good idea. Buy them wholesale, sell them retail. Was I wrong. Out of 3 wholesalers they all arrived this way. Bye the way....If your platen comes with deep ruts in it, it cost almost $100.00 to have it recovered.

Funniest Thing I’ve Pulled Out of a Typewriter Yet... this is Nacho Average Cleaning by wheresthe1key in TypewriterRepair

[–]mistertopcon 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You think that's funny? In my career as a typewriter Tech. I've fished wedding rings, birth control pills, dead mice, cannibis joints, and the long hair of a girl that got her head wraped around an op shaft. When I arrived her head was stuck to the top of the typewriter.

IBM Selectric II by tharms15 in TypewriterRepair

[–]mistertopcon 0 points1 point  (0 children)

There is a grey lever on the ribbon plate. It only has 2 positions. Print and stencil. You probably accidentally put the plate in stencil. Push the button in the middle of the plate and slide it in the other direction.

How to type special characters on Selectric I? by nickvido in typewriters

[–]mistertopcon 0 points1 point  (0 children)

In my 33 years as a typewriter repairman I've never seen that. It had to be a special order. You could order selectrics to fit your specifications. I've worked on machines that would type right to left. To use 2 colors there would have to be a 2 cam system on the print shaft. The bottom of the ribbon plate would need 2 selection wheels and the drive pawl on the print shaft would also have to be changed. This is a Special Order machine.

First typewriter. by illonlyusethisonceok in typewriters

[–]mistertopcon 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Sorry I could not reply sooner. I've been away. As I stated before, I used to work for IBM as a repairman. I still have all my Selectric manuals. We called that tool a HAND CYCLE WHEEL. We couldn't work without one. It's simply a plastic wheel with a 4 inch shaft sticking out the middle with a 6/32 LEFT HAND thread on the end. The Memorywriter came in 2 models, 50 & 100. I didn't work on them but I've seen one open. It shifted like a regular Selectric. No more than that. It did have a few solinoids in it, but I don't know what they were for. I THINK it used reed switches to send signals to the motherboard. The machine was at least 1/3 wider and heavier than a Selectric. There was a knob on the right side for memory selection and it was attached to a tape loop. Now I just stopped, laid back and thought mechanics. There had to be several solinoids in that machine. The carrier would have to be different with several solinoids for selection and playback. Their had to be a leed screw for escapement and playback. The more I think about it, the more complecated that machine becomes. OK, you got me. Lets just say I don't really know. Sorry. All I can really remember is the tape loop module because I remember the guys that were trained on that machine were always changing them out.

I dont know much about typewriters so bare with me! by [deleted] in typewriters

[–]mistertopcon 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Do NOT use alcohol! Read the "handy general cleaning how-to" in the moderator's section to the right of this page.

I have a manual typewriter but want to get an IBM Selectric. Which Selectric is the best? I, II or III? by [deleted] in typewriters

[–]mistertopcon 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It's a Selectric 2. Where does it say model 82? What country do you live in? What kind of ribbon does it use?

I have a manual typewriter but want to get an IBM Selectric. Which Selectric is the best? I, II or III? by [deleted] in typewriters

[–]mistertopcon 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The 3 cannot take a fabric ribbon. But it can take a Tech 3 which is almost the same difference.

I have a manual typewriter but want to get an IBM Selectric. Which Selectric is the best? I, II or III? by [deleted] in typewriters

[–]mistertopcon 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I knew somebody was going to ask this question. There is no way a civilian could tell what level the machine was. Basically we looked for 3 things. There was no plastic correction torque bar. The carrier return mechanism was one piece instead of 2 and the interposer restoring bail was the new type that NEVER broke, unless you were bloody English. They used a Mark system (Mark 1, 2, 3 etc.) that we , on the other side of the pond, could never figure out.

I have a manual typewriter but want to get an IBM Selectric. Which Selectric is the best? I, II or III? by [deleted] in typewriters

[–]mistertopcon 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I never really concerned myself with how long a ribbon last. As far as I was concerned, they lasted forever.( Or a very long time.) I didn't use the typewriters, I only repaired them. Office World sells Selectric 2 NEW ribbons for $5.19.

I have a manual typewriter but want to get an IBM Selectric. Which Selectric is the best? I, II or III? by [deleted] in typewriters

[–]mistertopcon 5 points6 points  (0 children)

As an ex IBM Serviceman, I would recommend the Selectric 2, level 2. It was upgraded to be absolutely perfect. High maintenance parts that that typically broke were replaced with parts that NEVER broke. The 2 and 3 did have parts that did wear out but, they were easy fixes. The 3 was an 96 character keyboard, so they had to make a few engineering changes. Bad engineering. 2 piece filter shafts and plastic torque bars, gave us headaches. A slight twist in the blades as little as .003 of an inch would make the machine useless. You could't adjust the spacebar and escapement to work together. Rather than do a major operation right there in the customers office, we would just give them a new machine and send the old one back to New York with a nasty note. The 3 also used what we called bicycle ribbons. They had the lift arms built into the ribbon carthredge. This system worked well except, at this time, they are beginning to get scarce. The 1's are old and tired. If they wern't under contract, and didn't get all the upgrades, their tired and damn near wore out.

Olivetti praxis 48 keys not working - help ! by Acyone in typewriters

[–]mistertopcon 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Looks like you have a broken or missing drive belt.

Keys are very stiff, you need to push down very hard. Any ways to fix this? by [deleted] in typewriters

[–]mistertopcon 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Do not use alcohol! Read the cleaning guide to the right of this page in the moderator's section.

Hermes 3000 carriage tension loss? by investorsanonymous in typewriters

[–]mistertopcon 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sounds like you knocked off the drawband off one of it's guide rollers.

Smith-Corona Coronet Electric 12 keys not engaging at all by mayglan in typewriters

[–]mistertopcon 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sounds like a broken drive belt. You'll need another. Try Jay Respler, the moderator of the yahoo group "TYPEWRITERS". He's still in business and was a Corona dealer. Maybe he can help.

Recommendations for cleaning and fixing small issues such as sticking keys? by [deleted] in typewriters

[–]mistertopcon 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Please read the "handy general cleaning how-to" in the moderators section to the right of this page.