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04-1-2026 15:59:12  #11


Re: Hello…

The We-R-Memory Keepers and it's other badge-engineered equivalents have the typeface (type slugs) actually moulded directly onto the type bars - worse than a child's toy typewriter.  To compensate for the soft plastic typeface, the platen is made from incredibly soft rubber, not far from sponge rubber in consistency.  I always say that these are a typewriter-shaped object and not a real typewriter at all.  It makes the Rover look well-engineered by comparison.  The sad thing about the We-R-Memory Keepers is that it doesn't have to be like that at all.  It is based on the mis-1970's Nakajima which wasn't Rolls-Royce quality true, but was still a perfectly adequate machine. Good enough to be sold as an Olympia (Carina), Adler, Hermes and others.  But the Chinese have degraded the design  beyond practical use.

 

04-1-2026 16:11:28  #12


Re: Hello…

PW,

If you are in the UK, you might keep an eye out for a 1970's Olympia "Monica" S or Deluxe...which were made in the UK.  The "S" gives you manually-set Tab stops along the back panel while the "Deluxe" had Tab set & clear levers on the front key-key board.  Both have 2-colour ribbon options and touch-control adjustment for the "touch" of the key-tops.

I brought one in from the UK to my home in the States, and it ran around $ 85 USD which included shipping costs to my home.  There is also a basic model "Monica" which does not get you the advanced features of the "S" or the "Deluxe".

They are great machines with full-features and puts nice print on paper (with my silk ribbons that I use). 

They come with a nice hard-pastic "lid" to keep dust out when not in use on the self or desk top
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05-1-2026 06:26:22  #13


Re: Hello…

I couldn't agree more.  These machines were made in the Olympia factory in Northern Ireland that was previously manufacturing Olympia mechanical adding machines.  They are the very last gasp of the SM series, and although they do contain a high proportion of plastic parts, they are still head and shoulders above most other manufacturers' machines that were available in the same period.  I am currently working on a customer's 1939 Olympia Simplex and the Monica is clearly the final development of that design.

 

05-1-2026 13:17:12  #14


Re: Hello…

Hi Tom,

The old Olympia factory complex has now been refurbished into a Sports and Health complex.

And you can still see the "Olympia" names of the surrounding neighborhood streets.
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