After the tinkering with the carriage, wanted to temporarily re-assemble the whole typewriter to experience the result. The re-fixing of the ruler had a very noticeable effect on the carriage and how it holds the paper; much improved.
(For tinkering and test-typing, rolling a sheet around the platen is handy)
Before putting the body-panels on again, I did want to replace all the sound-proofing padding. This old (paper-pulp?) padding was warped and fouling some mechanisms, plus it is probably the main source of the moldy old-house smell. So the remaining sheets of padding were removed and used as template for cutting new patterns from stiff card.
Could have used a bit thicker card still (a next time), but the idea was to use a paperboard backing to stiffen/dampen the thin metal body-panel and cover the paperboard with felt as the sound-proofing towards the mechanism.
Thicker felt for the rear-panel, thinner 1mm felt for the side-panels and the cover. First totally covered the card patterns with a paper-glue (stick) and then placed on the felt - to let it settle flat placed a large, heavy book on top. When set, the laminated panels are cut out of the felt sheet with scissors and glued to the inside of the body-panels (card to the panel, felt facing mechanism).
The margin-release button with its push-rod now is clear from the side-panel padding (lower left). The margin-release again works and the button pops back as it should.
Exercising the machine a little now that it's re-assembled, it still is not a very comfortable typewriter with a very uneven 'touch' of the keys. Not what I would expect from an Underwood machine. Despite a good clean (with white spirit, should have removed most old gummed up dirt), it is still uncomfortable to type on. What is more and worse - it now squeaks! Like there's mice.
Looking in a bit more detail at some of the typebars quickly revealed more 'issues'. Not sure if this is contributing to the squeaking, but typebar-links are not supposed to look like that.
That thin, spidery link is not an original Underwood part. Several more typebars have 'suspect' linkages. Have not seen something like this before; how does this happen to a typewriter?
So now up next is tackling Singing Typebars... :-)
Congratulations on your repair journey. Great looking typewriter. I've not seen those kinds of linkages on my Underwood Universals or Champions. Both are great typers with the only difference being the Universal lacks a tabulator (and sometimes has the cheap plastic key tops).
ReplyDeleteIt does look 'swing-era' smooth :)
DeleteAa an expensive 'brand' item made in 1939 in North America, this would have been quality stuff! Many fixes to go still, but improving :)
Nice, precise work on the panels.
ReplyDeleteIt's hard to see what is going on in that last photo. But on my Champion from the same era, every typebar to the right of center has a linkage that hooks into it from the right, not the left.
Yes, not so easy to see - that thin, bendy wire acts as a link; definitely not original, that. And more - tried to make better imgs (next post).
DeleteHave actually been poring over pictures of similar-age Champions on the web and on The Database - for this one I'll be needing many references... ;)