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I just acquired this Underwood teaching typewriter with blank keys. Will the lack of letters keep away the keychoppers?
It looks like a student got frustrated at the blankness and gave a good whack to a few of the keys. Is there a way to remove the finger pad piece from the arm and replace it, or do I need to replace the entire pad/arm (which would require getting the identical key from another machine, I assume).
Sorry for the blurry pictures. Too much coffee today.
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Hi Foli
Blank keys do not keep keychoppers away. A few years ago, there was a Royal QDL with all blank black keys on eBay USA. I tried to buy it but the seller would not ship to Canada. A couple of weeks later, she was trying to sell the set of chopped keys from that typewriter. Needless to say, I was a little disappointed. All the best,
Sky
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Foljambe wrote:
Will the lack of letters keep away the keychoppers?
Have to agree with Sky. They'll just insert their own paper backing in the keys to create their baubles.
Foljambe wrote:
Is there a way to remove the finger pad piece from the arm and replace it,
If you look on the underside of the key you should see that there are three tabs holding the nickel-plated trim in place. If you gentle bend those tabs straight, you should be able to remove the trim and the key label glass/acrylic so you can insert whatever you want there. I wouldn't do this too often as I'm not sure how quickly the metal making up the tab and trim will fatigue; you don't want to end up breaking them off.
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A cure for keychoppers? How about showing them pictures of parts of fingers amputated after a frostbite or some other accident,and tell them, "That's how a typewriter feels after you've stolen its keys!"
Maybe all you have to do is just turn on the lights and night and watch 'em scatter in all directions.
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The rhinoceros is endangered because some people in Asia believe the horn is an aphrodisiac. Aside from this weird belief they are not too smart since if they really believed this substance was an elixir of ecstasy they might look into sustainable rhino farming.
The people to blame for typewriter mutilation are not the suppliers - because I have demonized them they are merely pests - but the end consumers who wear the damn things. I am sure they would not be satisfied with key tops of modern manufacture even if they were made the same way as vintage keys, because they must have some strange belief that the real stuff enhances their libido. Like the rhino horn consumers it probably excites them more to drive a species to extinction for their pleasure than otherwise - a variation on thanatophilia.
Better cut off this rant before I really am inciting violence, which I never would do because it would be wrong and violence never solves anything and begets more violence! Unless, that is, you get all of them...
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Repartee wrote:
The rhinoceros is endangered because some people in Asia believe the horn is an aphrodisiac. Aside from this weird belief they are not too smart since if they really believed this substance was an elixir of ecstasy they might look into sustainable rhino farming.
The people to blame for typewriter mutilation are not the suppliers - because I have demonized them they are merely pests - but the end consumers who wear the damn things. I am sure they would not be satisfied with key tops of modern manufacture even if they were made the same way as vintage keys, because they must have some strange belief that the real stuff enhances their libido. Like the rhino horn consumers it probably excites them more to drive a species to extinction for their pleasure than otherwise - a variation on thanatophilia.
Better cut off this rant before I really am inciting violence, which I never would do because it would be wrong and violence never solves anything and begets more violence! Unless, that is, you get all of them...
Throughout our history as human beings, there have always been those among us who are turned on in many ways by the expense and destruction of what they neither relate to nor understand. We can at least be thankful for our knowledge of what we can save, nurture, and appreciate.
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You probably saw it from me.
I used them to re-key a Remington 12.
They have little loops cast on them to use for necklaces etc, which I removed when I attached them to the typewriter
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It might be a discontinued product as I don't see it listed at the manufacturer's website.
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