OlivWriter wrote:
Thank you, but there is also another difference that I notice, the "W" on some models has the central bar that goes up to the top, and other models have the central bar that stops halfway up...
What does this represent ?
That represents a design choice by the typeface designer, a variation for style reasons. You can see a similar, tho opposite, variation in some "M" designs. In fact, once you begin looking closely at typeface design, you will see a tremendous number of such tiny differences in all the characters (though not in every pair of characters every time). Such variations show up often in the numerals and such alpha characters as G, g, Q, f, K, R, and so on. You will see dollar signs with one vertical line and others with two.
This is the same phenomenon you see when you compare typeface designs on your computer: Times, Baskerville, Garamond, Palatino, Cambria, Bookman, Courier, Goudy, Minion, Bembo, Wiedeman among serif designs and Arial, Avant Garde, Avenir, Comic Sans, Eras, Helvetica, etc. among sans serif designs.
None of these designs have anything whatsoever to do with pica and elite in typewriters which are solely measures of pitch and not even the height of the characters.
HTH