Offline
I purchased a 1951 Smith Corona Silent a few days ago and it could become one of my favorite typewriters, although not quite beating the Olympias. I added a new felt cushion for the keys and straightened out one slightly bent bar. A new ribbon and it went right to work. I like the feel of typing with it and the rapid strike and release of the keys.
Offline
Enjoy it!
I have not yet had a Corona in hand, but I am curious how it feels compared to Remingtons, which I almsot always like to use.
Offline
I'm wondering how the SC is holding up for you, and whether it still ranks up near your Olympias.
Offline
I'd love to hear other impressions of a SCS c.50s machine as compared to an Olympia. I consider the Olympia the gold standard, and I wonder if a SCS takes Silver or Bronze in your view?
Offline
The Smith-Corona Super-5 models were fantastic typewriters, and I would rank them, when compared to other portables that were manufactured in North America, very high - perhaps even highest. There's no question that their somewhat stodgy design is more difficult to get excited about, but in terms of performance and type action, I would argue that it's only the Remington -Riter models that rival them. In Smith-Corona's marketing hyperbole the Super-5 models were claimed to be "The World's Fastest Portables".
A comprehensive comparison of portable typewriters from that era would be a daunting task, but given your criteria, and despite how good Super-5 models are, I would always opt for an Olympia SM given the choice.
It's too bad that I still haven't finish the article that I started long ago entitled Slaughterhouse Five that compares the features of all the Super-5 models, because this would be an appropriate place to post it.
Offline
Are the SC Super Silents the same machine as the Super-5?
Offline
Ok, I think I get it now. 5 was the body style, correct?
Offline
pdxtypewriter wrote:
Ok, I think I get it now. 5 was the body style, correct?
Yes, Super-5 was the name for the design generation of models that Smith-Corona sold from the late '40s to the early '60s.