Do ALL Smith Corona Portables sound like a 22 pistol?

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Posted by overwood
01-6-2022 18:48:44
#1

Cuz all the ones I have tried do. I even made the mistake of recovering a platen but it did no good. I'm guessing maybe the super-silent is an exception, but I've never tried one.

 
Posted by Pete E.
01-6-2022 21:00:46
#2

Hi Overwood,

I only have two S-C machines...a 1957 S-C Silent Super in green colours and a 1958 Sears Tower President in southwest colours.

Both machines had differing lives and use history...but feel, respond, and sound very similar.  Both have platens with hardnesses of 94-95 Shore A

More of a muffled " tack, ta-tack, ta-tack, ta-tack-tack-tack " sound. 

Not sure if that is what you mean by the sound of a .22 LR arm, firing.
.

 
Posted by overwood
01-6-2022 23:26:11
#3

I probably should have said 60's and up, because I don't remember my 50's Sterling being that loud but I haven't used it in a year at least and its 5 states away so I can't retest it

 
Posted by Phil_F_NM
02-6-2022 09:02:52
#4

It probably needs a good restoration, new platen and all of the baffling replaced inside the body. My 1948 Silent is a fantastic machine, not the quietest, but also not as loud as a few others I've heard. My sister's 1960s Sterling (crossover Super-5) is an amazing typer and sounds great as well. Not loud at all.

Phil Forrest

 
Posted by Uwe
02-6-2022 11:01:12
#5

I have never noted Smith-Corona portables to have on average - factoring in platen condition - a worse sound quality than portables from other manufacturers. On the other hand it's been many years since I've heard a .22 handgun being fired, and I wonder how many forum users here can relate to that particular sound reference.  


The pronoun has always been capitalized in the English language for more than 700 years.
 
Posted by overwood
02-6-2022 18:37:17
#6

Not "it". I'm talking about all of them, not just one. I did replace the platen on the newest one, and it made no difference at all. They all seem to be cannons.

Phil_F_NM wrote:

It probably needs a good restoration, new platen and all of the baffling replaced inside the body. My 1948 Silent is a fantastic machine, not the quietest, but also not as loud as a few others I've heard. My sister's 1960s Sterling (crossover Super-5) is an amazing typer and sounds great as well. Not loud at all.

Phil Forrest

 

 
Posted by New Yorker
02-6-2022 22:02:59
#7

Uwe wrote:

I have never noted Smith-Corona portables to have on average - factoring in platen condition - a worse sound quality than portables from other manufacturers. On the other hand it's been many years since I've heard a .22 handgun being fired, and I wonder how many forum users here can relate to that particular sound reference. 

I certainly can’t. A “.22 handgun being fired”. I’ve never heard that. What an obscure reference!

 
Posted by M. Höhne
02-6-2022 22:20:44
#8

New Yorker wrote:

Uwe wrote:

I have never noted Smith-Corona portables to have on average - factoring in platen condition - a worse sound quality than portables from other manufacturers. On the other hand it's been many years since I've heard a .22 handgun being fired, and I wonder how many forum users here can relate to that particular sound reference. 

I certainly can’t. A “.22 handgun being fired”. I’ve never heard that. What an obscure reference!

Funny, the second firearm comparison in a few months on TT. Here's the first, from February:

mikeytap wrote:
After fooling around with my foreign machines,I keep coming back to the Smith-Coronas as solid performers. They're like Colt 1911s versus Lugars. 
New Yorker wrote:
Colt 1911s and Lugars? Not familiar with those. ‘50’s? Standards? Portables??

M Höhne wrote:
He means Lugers.
These are highly respected firearms, semi-automatic pistols from early- and mid-20th century, the Colt being American and the Luger, German. I agree with you, it's a pretty obscure comparison as few of us have handled either one, let alone both.

 
Posted by Uwe
03-6-2022 10:28:16
#9

overwood, did you just pgrade the timbre of your Smith-Coronas from the relatively innocuous, dry pops of a .22, to the thunderous explosions of a cannon? I'd love to own just one typewriter that actually sounds like a cannon. Consider yourself lucky! 
 


The pronoun has always been capitalized in the English language for more than 700 years.
 
Posted by overwood
03-6-2022 13:23:24
#10

Uwe wrote:

overwood, did you just pgrade the timbre of your Smith-Coronas from the relatively innocuous, dry pops of a .22, to the thunderous explosions of a cannon? I'd love to own just one typewriter that actually sounds like a cannon. Consider yourself lucky! 
 

I upgraded it for the benefit of Canadians who might not know what a .22 sounds like.

 


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