A quiz for you: What are these typewriter parts?
The first photo shows a factory-made part.
The next photo shows the first three prototypes I created, inspired by the factory part.
The last photo shows my fourth attempt, which works as intended.
Guess away in the comments, and the truth will be revealed in due course.
The first photo shows a factory-made part.
The next photo shows the first three prototypes I created, inspired by the factory part.
The last photo shows my fourth attempt, which works as intended.
Guess away in the comments, and the truth will be revealed in due course.
When I saw the first photo I thought of a sort of spring used in the mechanism for releasing the paper rollers... but while this one is almost flat, the last one is more three dimensional, so I really don't know :-D
ReplyDeleteAll I see are mangled paper clips. ) :
ReplyDeleteCould it be a carriage return lever spring? Perhaps it is for a very oddly-shaped carriage return lever.
ReplyDeleteI have no idea, I'm obsessing on that interesting ruler. The part does look as if it loops around the carriage end to hold something.
ReplyDeleteI have an old boxwood rule of my grandfather's just like that. These look like retaining clips and from the patina, I'd say from a post 1960 machine. More than that would be plain guesswork.
ReplyDeleteKeep guessing, folks.
ReplyDeleteThat's a 19th-century folding ruler, a gift from a friend which is very useful.
It's the spring from the mousetrap on the rare 1956 Remington "Rifletyper" as used by Ernest Hemingway and other adventurer-authors.
ReplyDeleteNot a spring. This is a clip. It slots into a location and is meant to be pinched together to lock a component or something into place. It is also meant to be removed with occasional regularity. I'm guessing the extension is a pin that also locks something. So, I'm guessing a component that locks a ribbon spool into place.
ReplyDeleteOther than that, My other guess would be a ribbon cover, or typewriter case lock.
Looks like a spring or guide to control the motion of raising a paper bail and to provide enough pressure to hold the bail against the paper when it's flipped down. Rob
ReplyDelete