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05-2-2022 02:03:52  #1


Facit TP-2 & 1620

Greetings All

Here's a question for you Facit aficionados in our group. If you lift the ribbon cover off your TP-2 or 1620 and turn it over, you see an alignment dowel which locks into the retaining spring on either side of the machine. On each of the 4 corners of the ribbon cover, there is a cylindrical post cast into the metal.

Can anyone tell me if these 4 posts originally had a cork or rubber pad glued to them, or is it a metal to metal contact between the ribbon cover and the metal tabs either side of the retaining springs? I can add pictures later if my description is not sufficient. Thanks and all the best,

Sky


We humans go through many computers in our lives, but in their lives, typewriters go through many of us.
In that way, they’re like violins, like ancestral swords. So I use mine with honor and treat them with respect.
I try to leave them in better condition than I met them. I am not their first user, nor will I be their last.
Frederic S. Durbin. (Typewriter mania and the modern writer)
 

05-2-2022 08:33:16  #2


Re: Facit TP-2 & 1620

Hi Sky,

On my TP2, 1620, and even the ADDO...it is all metal-to-metal contact. 

On the 1620, the ribbon cover did a bit of rocking and metal rattle when I typed.  Solved that with a very thin piece of felt material...the type you use to float a glass table top on a table frame.  Only had to add the felt to 1 of the 4 contact points.

The ADDO has its ribbon cover making contact with some metal (adjustable) horizontal levers screwed in place to the frame and not the cast-in-place "posts" of the earlier models.  Its ribbon cover was rocking a bit too, so I re-formed the metal lever to solve that problem.

 

05-2-2022 15:30:16  #3


Re: Facit TP-2 & 1620

Hi Pete

Thank you for the information, I used a flat blade screw driver to lift the ends of the horizontal plates which hold the locating springs and are riveted to the main body of the machine. Ribbon cover rock and rattle completely gone. Thanks again,

Sky


We humans go through many computers in our lives, but in their lives, typewriters go through many of us.
In that way, they’re like violins, like ancestral swords. So I use mine with honor and treat them with respect.
I try to leave them in better condition than I met them. I am not their first user, nor will I be their last.
Frederic S. Durbin. (Typewriter mania and the modern writer)
     Thread Starter
 

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