The plastic keys of Blickensderfer typewriters can sometimes be missing. These keys can't be pulled off. They've been molded onto the keystem, a small hole in the metal stem firmly locks the plastic key. When a key is missing, it will have somehow broken - the black plastic either deformed or became brittle, causing the key to become loose and be lost.
It looked as if these ~1906 keys have a brass ring molded into the plastic. This would a useful strengthening to reduce the chance of a key splitting, becoming loose and be lost. (Wondering if early Blickensderfer typewriters also have this brass ring! Or was this a change to fix this vulnerability of the keys.)
This ring will work well as a re-enforcement, make it much less likely for a plastic key to split and get lost.
This little detail became noticeable during the thorough cleaning of the keybars of the Blickensderfer 5 typewriter - before re-assembling the base of the typewriter.
Assembling the base of the Blickensderfer is reasonably straightforward. Very well described and pictured elsewhere online. One tricky bit perhaps is the special springs in the middle of the machine. These four springs have a different shape and act on the activating segments, spacebar and universal bar. Here still in-situ seen from below:
Taken off the machine, these four springs laid out in the same order.
The strong outer springs drop their 'eyelet' hook over a stud on the side of the activator arms. One stud indicated below:
After cleaning and polishing all parts individually, everything was placed back. Then it's ready for all the keys with their springs.
First all keylevers were cleaned too. Mere brass-polish was not enough to tackle the stubborn dirt and tarnish of these parts; fine steel wool first however gets them back to their shiny state. (Polishing with steel wool always creates a lot of steel-wool-dust; so always used inside a tray or other container. Parts then washed in soapy water to remove any steel wool particles.)
The missing keytops were replaced with newly manufactured keys. The lettering will be filled when the keyboard is fully cleaned, to then match the whiteness (or rather, the "brownish-grayness") of the original keys.
Start of re-building - next; on to a carriage : )