Offline
Hello everyone. I am new here. I have a nice Olivetti that is out for cleaning right now, but I'm thinking about acquiring a few more.
We have quite a few antique malls around here and I found a Royal HH that was in great working order, except that it's missing the backspace key. I did not buy it, but It got me wondering how one could replace a key without finding a similar typewriter for parts.
Has anyone here ever tried using a silicone molding material and epoxy resin casting material to mold and cast a new key? Like, would it be possible to pry off this typewriter's shift key and use it to mold and cast a new key? I actually have no idea how hard it would be to pry a key off and then get it back on without damaging it. Is that even possible?
Offline
Yes, it should be possible to prise a shift key off carefully without doing any damage. Keytops are never moulded directly onto the keylevers. They are always pressed into place when the typewriter is assembled at the factory. I have never made a replacement keytop by moulding as you describe, but I am sure it can be done. Other alternative ideas might be to obtain a block of plastic and hacksaw, file and polish a new keytop from that. To produce the slot underneath for the keystem, you could chain-drill a series of holes with a small drill-bit, then heat the keystem and push the new keytop down into place, thus part-melting the plastic and producing a perfectly-moulded slot. Possibly the best and easiest solution would be to take a similarly shaped keytop from a valueless broken 1980's portable and adapt that. OK it wouldn't be the same shape, but maybe a black one wouldn't look too bad (assuming you have the green keyboard).
Offline
Thanks for the tips. I didn't actually buy the typewriter, but it did have the green keys. The typewriter was marked $29 and I wasnt sure if it was worth that with the missing key. I was trying to decide if it was worth going back to get it.