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Found this article about why most old-school forums seem to go dormant in today's times.
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Very interesting article which proves that 'Typewriter Talk' seems to be doing everything right - and long may it continue !!!
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Hi Tom,
I do wish more members are more active with postings and sharing their machines.
And I am surprised there are not more private member (vs. dealer) "For Sale" ads. An active trader-section always brings in lots of member traffic.
I belong to a CF Martin acoustic guitar forum which has been around for over 30 years.
The number of members posting show & tell stuff is way down...but the "Classifieds" section is always going at warp-speed.
And the guitar photos in those for-sale ads is simply delicious eye-candy...even if one is not buying.
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Hi Pete and Tom
Although I haven't read through the entire article yet, I did notice the author mentioned AI moderators in far off countries. When Uwe brought me on as a moderator, he showed me where to find the basic checking tools and how to recognize spam-bots.
Applicants who look genuine enough get an e-mail from me asking why they would like to join. Sometimes I'll get one line, and others give a full-page answer. As long as I get a sensible answer, they get approved. I had one applicant who figured I was AI, but when I told him that I'm only human which is why I make the occasional mistake, he was more than happy to be approved. I believe the human touch does make a difference to how a forum feels for the users. Cheers,
Sky
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For my part, I've not been on the forum as much because work and other commitments have had me completely swamped, and I've not purchased a new typewriter in over a year.
That said, I have been making very, very slow progress through my backlog of cleaning/restoration. I've a 1958 Imperial Good Companion 5 on the workbench which gets some attention in little 15-30 minute spurts. Just got it almost entirely back together. Unfortunately lost one of the little screws that holds the left margin stop together so I need to find a replacement (looks like it's M2.5, but I need to find a really short one or cut another down).
Have done a few other experiments - like taking out the bichrome selector stop in my Artistic Script Torpedo 18b to see if it would do bichrome anyway (yes, with quality ribbon and good alignment), or testing out fountain-pen papers like Tomoe River and Yamamoto papers (TR is pretty decent) - but haven't had time to write anything up.
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One thing I will say - I wish there was image hosting on this forum to make using images easy (therefore encouraging more discussion) and durable (no more broken link images for something I really wish I could see). But, I realize there are costs involved with that. Probably moderation headaches too.
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The margin stop screw on your Good Companion will be a BA size (British Association thread, usually used on electrical fittings in the UK until metric took over). 'Imperial' - Imperial by name, and Imperial (measurements and threads) by nature !
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Thanks, Tom! I had thought the M2.5 would work, but screwing it in a few mm, it binds up. The screw from the other margin stop is almost exactly the same diameter, but a slightly coarser thread - which fits the description in the charts of a 7BA screw.
Well, that saves me trying to go to some more hardware stores because nobody here in the US will stock that. Guess it's time to make another sweep of my workspace with a magnet. Wish me luck!
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Dear Rob,
If you get badly stuck, let me know. I might be able to find you a spare screw. Thanks to your president, sending anything into the USA by post is incredibly difficult and expensive now, so see if you can find the original first !
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Rob,
You could also get a very small metric tap and run it through the BA screw hole with a drop or two of cutting oil. And then use a small metric screw.
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