Sunday, November 17, 2024

Pencil leads and fractions

Two surprise thrift store finds. 

The first is a Koh-I-Noor box of red pencil leads. Well, a box with one red pencil lead - it is however still in one piece! The card sleeve-box with wooden frame protected this sole remaining lead well, probably for more than 80 years.

Now, the label could have simply stated that it contains six (6) leads, or perhaps to be fancy it could have stated; 'half a dozen'. No, this label goes even fancier in fractional obfuscation - it contains 1/24 gross!  Nice :-)

The second find also has a fractional aspect. This is a Pelikan tube with HB leads of ~1.18 mm diameter. Great to find these on the cheap, because that is the size needed for many vintage mechanical pencils. The diameter of the lead for vintage mechanical pencils (Yard-O-Led) actually got started as 3/64 Inch. The metric 1.18 mm is a decent approximation for that :)

And it's the size for my mechanical pencil, now again well-stocked for leads :-)

Thursday, November 14, 2024

How to operate the Dalton Adding Machine

The Dalton Adding Machine can add, but also subtract, multiply and more. How to operate it is not always immediately obvious today from just looking at the machine. Below will show how to do some of these operations on a Dalton.

The machine used here is a very basic Super Series machine, i.e. a 2nd generation Dalton 10-key adding machine as was introduced in 1921. The pre-1921 first-generation Dalton machines however work much the same way, just that some function keys are in different locations. Early machines also have slightly different method of e.g. how to perform a total or sub-total. 

More advanced Super Series machines have more features and are capable of more functions:

Note by the way that the paper should be mounted to feed from the bottom of the roll.

Clearing the machine

Before any operation, make sure the machine is clear, i.e. is at zero. This is done by doing a total; press-in the total-key, it will latch in the pressed-in position. Then pull the lever forward all the way and let it return. An asterisk printed on the paper tape will confirm that the machine is empty at the start of a calculation. (Or will print a value if the machine was not empty, of course.)

If the total-key is blocked, first do an "empty-stroke". That is, one stroke of the lever with an 'empty' keyboard. This will enable the total-key. The keyboard-clear indicator is the oblong window just behind the digit-keys; if this shows 'blank' (no dots) then the keyboard is 'empty'. A total or sub-total always has to be preceded by an empty-stroke.

(Apart from the keyboard-clear indicator, control-keys on the Dalton are helpfully labeled with their function.)

Adding

To then start an addition, enter every value as is done on a modern calculator; so $ 12.50 is entered as 1, 2, 5 and 0 in that order. The keyboard-clear indicator will show the number of digits entered with coloured dots. 

To add this value into the register (or accumulator) of the machine, pull the lever forward all the way and let it return. 

Repeat for every value to be added. The keyboard will be cleared automatically at the end of a stroke.

To get the total, first do one empty stroke, i.e. a pull of the lever without any number entered (the keyboard-clear indicator blank). Then push in the total-key and do a stroke. The total will print with an asterisk next to it and the machine register is cleared to zero. (On most Dalton machines, the totals are printed in red. This most-basic machine however does not have the bi-color function.) 

The total sum of the values 12.50, 37.97 and 6.95 is thus printed as 57.42 on the paper. (This machine has a wider space between the 2nd and 3rd column numbers to make reading of dollar and cent values easier - this can however vary per machine.)

A sub-total prints the value of the register with an 'S' in the right margin, but does not re-set the register to zero. Example below with a sub-total after adding 123, 456 and 789, and then a total after adding 321, 654 and 987. 

Above shown on a bi-color capable machine, with the total and sub-total lines printed in red.

When e.g. the total-key or another function key is pressed in error, pressing the release-key will release it.

Pressing down the large correction-key will completely clear the keyboard entry. Pressing the backspace-key will remove one, right-most digit.

Multiplying (from right)

Supposing a 21% surcharge (VAT, carriage, etc) needs to be added to the $ 57.42 value calculated above. Then 57.42 needs to be multiplied by 1.21. 

Enter 5742 on the keyboard and push down and to the back the multiply-key to latch it in the down-position. (The multiply-key prevents the keyboard being cleared at the end of a stroke. That is all it does.) 

With one lever-stroke enter the right-most digit of 121. Then enter a zero on the keyboard, this will change the number entered to 57420, and pull the lever twice to enter the next digit of 121. Add another zero (making 574200) and one stroke to enter third digit of 121.

Then press the multiply-key once to release it, press down the correction-key to empty the keyboard and do an empty-stroke followed by a taking a total.

To point-off: the multiplicand and multiplier both have 2 decimals, so the result will have 2+2 is 4 decimals. The result of 694782 should thus be read as 69.4782. This gives that $ 57.42 with a 21% surcharge added as $ 69.48 when rounded to dollars and cents.

Dividing (multiplication from left)

On the Dalton, dividing is done by multiplication with the reciprocal of the divisor. I.e. dividing by 5 would be a multiplication by 0.2 (1/5). A table of reciprocals was provided with the machine, a larger table of reciprocals was available separately from the company for numbers of 1 to 10,000. 

Supposing the amount of $ 69.48 needs to be paid in 12 instalments, the value needs to be divided by 12. Looking this up in the table, the reciprocal of 12 is 0.083333.

To multiply 69.48 with 0.083333, the value of 6948 is entered and padded with zeroes to fill the buffer. Then the backspace-key is pressed once. I.e. on an 8-column machine, the keyboard-clear indicator will show 7 digits are entered.

Then multiply from the left, so start with 8 strokes of the lever for the left-most digit. Press the backspace-key once and enter the next digit with 3 strokes. Repeat until the keyboard is empty, or enough digits for the precision needed have been done (e.g. 5 digits to get a fair 4-digit answer).

Then draw the total - showing the answer as 57899973. The answer is approached from below with this method, so rounding should be up. The answer is then $ 5.79 when rounded to two decimals for dollars and cents.

Doing a quick multiplication by 12 of 579 from the right gives 6948 confirming this is the exact, correct answer. (Otherwise, there would be a correction for the final instalment to make up for any fractional mismatch.)

Subtracting

On a basic Dalton with 9-complement subtraction, digit-keys also have red numbers (co-digits). Some of the more advanced (expensive!) Daltons have direct-subtraction. These machines do not have red co-digits and can do subtraction directly with a number entered the usual way on the keyboard.

For a Dalton with red co-digits; to subtract $ 67.59 from $ 128.95 first enter 12895 in the machine. To create a record of what the operator meant to do, enter 6759 and depress the non-add key and pull the lever. This prints the number with a little arrow to its right; the number is only printed and not added to the machine's total.


Then enter 6759 again, but now using the red digits! Depress the subtract-key and pull the lever. The machine cannot print a number that is entered with red digits, but will only print a minus-sign in the right margin. Then draw a total.


This shows $ 61.36 as the result. 

Note that with this 9-complement method of subtraction on the Dalton, the paper does not have proof of the number that the machine subtracted.

Adding compound numbers

To add compound numbers, such as feet and inches, pounds and ounces or hours and minutes, these are entered in their own columns.

To calculate e.g. the total time taken for a job from submitted hour cards, the times are added with the hour values separated from the minutes with zeroes. I.e. a value of 3:45 is entered as 300045. 

After adding the times of 3:45, 4:10, 2:55, 8:05 and 7:40 in this manner, a sub-total is printed.


This sub-total shows the sum of the minutes to be 155. With 60 minutes in an hour, it can be seen at a glance that two hours (120 minutes) need to be taken off, 155 being between 120 (2*60) and 180 (3*60). Enter on the keyboard 99940. (99940 is actually minus 60 in complementary notation, for a 5-digit register.) Then pull the lever twice to take off 60 twice from the minutes column. The overflow of every 'subtraction' of 60 at the same time adds one to the hours value. Then print the total.


The total now shows the sum of the entered time-values is 26 hours and 35 minutes.

The split-feature of more advanced Daltons can be used to prevent printing of the zeroes between the hours and minutes, showing the values in clearly separate columns - more readable.

The same method of course works for feet and inches (use 99988, i.e. minus 12) or pounds and ounces (99984).

There is more...

The above are pretty much the basics of operating a Daltong Adding Machine. There are more shortcuts and tricks for the Dalton, but many are actually not specific to the Dalton and will work for any 10-key adding machine. 

The company gave examples on e.g. how to quickly calculate a 4% discount on a bill, how to check an extended invoice or a recommended way to do a trial balance with both credit and debit values. 

The Dalton company also provided more advanced calculating techniques, such as how to do a multiplication where the answer is larger than the capacity of the machine - e.g. how to calculate a 12 digit result on an 8-column machine.

Class in mechanical accounting and touch-adding, New York University Summer School

Understandable then that in their day, the operation and use of the Dalton Adding Machine was taught in (business) schools.

(That will have been a very noisy classroom, with 20+ Dalton machines in action!)

Sunday, November 3, 2024

Finishing the refurbishment of a Dalton Adding Machine

The surplus wreck Dalton is now refurbished, quite the transformation from what it was :)

The machine was cleaned inside and outside. The brightwork was de-rusted and all outer parts re-painted. With a few small repairs to its mechanism too, it can now be properly called: refurbished.

To complete the refurbishment (or restoration), the front and rear panels were re-painted and new gold decals applied. The number-keys were replaced, and as final-step fitted with new rubber feet.

Panels with decals

After some hesitation, also the front and rear panels were stripped down to bare metal. 

These panels have the gold lettering with the Dalton logo. The front decal had been severely degraded, but the rear had fared a bit better. Both in the end were removed to re-paint the panels in gloss black.

There is some variation in the exact shape of the Dalton script logo on machines. Suppliers of these decals maybe made their own cliches for this - or the Dalton company was simply 'vague' on an exact script. 

Just picked one design of the mid 1920s and created reproduction decals. The lettering on this front decal should have been a tad smaller, and the second-line should've been slightly smaller than the first. But as Dalton varied their decals too, deemed good-enough.


The yellow part of the image of course done in gold, not yellow. And the rear-decal design:

Decals printed on waterslide transfer paper as previous projects, filled with gold-paint and then applied. More softening-liquid and a lacquer clear-coat will make the film less visible. Viewed from the front it is already quite passable.

New number-keys

The wreck had ended up with the worn and damaged keys. To complete the refurbishment, a new set of number-keys were manufactured. Copies of the designs were modelled in CAD (FreeCAD). 

These designs were then 3D printed in FDM with a 0.4 mm nozzle, so fairly rough and fast prints - printing with a fine nozzle or printing in resin would create much finer detail. Even though these are relatively 'cheap-n-cheerful' replacement keys, they do look the part already.

Visible layering at the top-surface was of course sanded smooth and the keys were painted off-white. They were already printed in white PLA material, but an extra layer or two of paint makes them more opaque and also smoothens any remaining layering. The lettering was filled with red and black paint.

There are some minor mistakes in these keys so they may yet be replaced with slightly better copies, but for now they'll do.

(The 'clear-signal' indicator just above the keyboard here shows that 4 digits have been entered. This indicator was also given a new, laser-printed legend and the yellowed celluloid window replaced with a clear acrylic reproduction.)

New feet

From images in contemporary publications, these Dalton Super Model machines would have come with rubber feet. 

These feet were a little larger than the metal 'stub' and look as if less than half their diameter in height. The 'stub' at ~23 mm diameter, the factory-fitted feet were likely one inch diameter and, say, perhaps 7/16" in height.

Online there's a wide range of rubber feet - a set of 25 mm x 10 mm feet were sourced and screwed to the machine. It sits very solid, no skidding! It also transmits the sound very well into a table; definitely louder than the makeshift cork feet. Dalton's are loud machines. (Cork could've been a good choice for feet after all!)


Refurbished Dalton Adding Machine

This is the simplest, lowest cost 100-dollar 'Special' of the Super Model range. As such it is a fairly common and perhaps not very interesting machine. Indeed, these Daltons are today not very desirable or valuable; it's debatable if this was 'worth the effort'

Nevertheless it's historic digital-technology and an example of the state of office automation of 100 years ago. More than a photograph or document, it can be experienced and operated. As such it perhaps is worth preserving - plus of course that it simply was an enjoyable project!

(As always; after completing the process, then there is the insight in how it should have been done. A next Dalton refurbishment will be done better ;-)

Friday, November 1, 2024

Good advice for the Hammond typewriter

When delivered new in the 1910s, a Hammond typewriter would have had a 'Special Notice' card placed on its keyboard-card tray. It contains some useful advice for typing on the Hammond and especially on where to oil it occasionally (and where not).

From a couple of pictures found online of miraculously surviving specimens of this card, a quick re-creation was made and printed on heavy, ivory paper. Dimensions approximately 23 by 5 cm or about 9 by 2 inch:

Unlikely to remain on the machine, but good advice nonetheless :-)

Saturday, October 26, 2024

Folding Corona - as simple as closing a book

(Full-page advertisement from the February 1920 issue of Popular Science, page 153.)

Or is it.

It's intuitive and folding over works. Just like closing a book. Unlike a book however, the Corona should ideally have its carriage locked in the correct position and its shift locked.

The many images of folded Corona 3 typewriters, both online and in print, suggest that often the shift is not locked - and the rear folding-beams pop back up.

When the shift is locked however, the Corona 3 typewriter folds very neatly flat.

The locks also reduce strain on the machine when it's in the carrying-case. 

Folding Corona - almost as simple as closing a book ;-) 

Friday, October 18, 2024

Progress in refurbishing a Dalton Adding Machine

The 'surplus' machine is mostly assembled again - and the side-frames are back, painted black.

As the machine shows promise of turning out nice, decided to have another try at repairing the damper or dashpot. Especially because the manual even instructs to pull the lever forward and then let go. With an empty dashpot, the lever slams back - not nice and not great for the mechanism.

With the machine already mostly assembled, it was still possible to take out the damper. The sideframes can be left, but the top-cover and printing-mechanism and spool-plate are best taken off. Then remove the screwed pivot-rod that holds the top of the damper and at the bottom first loosen the lock-nut (fiddly) and then remove the screw. The damper can then be manoeuvred out of the mechanism. After another failed attempt with heat to unscrew the tubes, went the radical approach and drilled a hole in the side of the upper-tube of the damper. That spot should be still above the piston at the extreme extended-position, so relatively 'safe'.

After filling the dashpot with sewing machine oil, a light 'paraffin oil', it started to work quite well as a damper! The hole is above the oil-level too, so not critical. It was threaded and closed-off with a screw and washer+gasket. (Threaded with 5/32" Whitworth because that was the tap-set I had handy -and a new, brass Meccano 37b is the plug :-)

When again fitted in the machine with the top-cover in place, this filling-plug is not visible. Most importantly; it is now safe to let go of the lever after the forward pull, as per instructions. The lever will move back swiftly, but without the hard slamming.

Even though this 'wreck' Dalton appeared to be fully working, there are several small malfunctions only discovered during the refurbishing. Like e.g. the peg-board carriage making a half-movement at the 8th digit, or the non-print button failing to re-set after a stroke of the handle.

The non-print button can be pressed down with the thumb when starting to pull the lever (very ergonomic, well-designed!). When pressed-down it is latched in the down-position and should pop-up again after one stroke of the handle. 

This is achieved by the tip of a conical 'stud' that pushes the lever off the 'latching-notch'. Maybe this mechanism got deformed (this machine got knocked-about at some moment during its ~100 years), or worn down, but it didn't push the lever back enough. A few layers of copper-tape were wrapped about the tip, to give it an extra .3 mm or so.

With this little fix, the non-print is again pushed forward just enough to pop back up at the end of a stroke.

An obvious 'fail' that was also remedied, was a flat feed-roller. The front feed-roller of a Dalton is pretty small and after 90+ years the rubber will invariably be flat. The larger-diameter rear-roller was fairly round still, left as it was.

The front-roller was stripped to the metal core and given a few layers of heat-shrink tubing, per usual method. Re-assembling the 'carriage' is surprisingly tricky; the factory must've had a handy jig. After several tries it came together and now line-feeds as intended.

Overall, this new (in 1921) Super Model range is pretty impressive. It has a reassuring amount of interlocks and even this most-basic version looks fancy with that "Damaskeen finish", as Dalton called it.

Progressing to a refurbished, fully functioning Dalton :-)

Friday, October 4, 2024

Fall 2024 typewriter safari

Last week, we did a tour of the local thrift stores - and for the first time in ages there were interesting typewriters! Right at the start, first aisle, this spread of four machines immediately caught the eye.


The Olympia SM1 was the most appealing of the lot, probably an early 1950s machine. As a postwar drab-green (but with fancy chrome) it is out-of-scope for the collection. It also had minor rust all over, even a dusting of oxide on the segment. Its German keyboard then was the deciding factor to leave it there.


The fourth machine in the scene was the solid Olivetti 80, bashfully hiding behind a toy ironing board.


On another set of tables was the usual assembly of beige machines. These seem to be a fixture in the store, or of course they do sell and get replaced by similar-looking typewriters.


And then at the end of the aisle, another Olivetti Lexikon 80 with some damage and very stiff.


It was kept company by a massive Adler standard in a sorry state - painted all-over with a chalky white paint. It may perhaps find its spot as an interior decoration item (and cheaper than those modern 'typewriter' decor items, a lot heavier though) - scrap metal is a likelier destination though.

No machines were taken, but a reason to have an occasional look-round again :-)