Saturday, September 13, 2025

Strengtheners inside Blickensderfer plastic keys? (And a cleaned-up base)

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. 


The brass ring in this key is askew, confirming that indeed the brass is molded into the plastic key.

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 : )

Thursday, September 11, 2025

Third and last version of the Meccano hay tedder

To complete the series, after the first and second iterations, also built the third and final version of a Meccano model of a hay tedder.

Here shown again as "Hooi Keer Machine"  in a 1937 Dutch book of instructions.


Numbered model E8, this is a model needing at least an Outfit E. 

Meccano had changed their system of tiered Outfits in 1934 from numbered sets to lettered sets with new parts (plates) and bright new colours. The new range started with a small Outfit A, all the way up to the massive Outfit L. There was an even smaller Outfit 0, that was outside of the lettered system without upgrade set to make it an A. This lettered system was replaced in 1937 with a new range of numbered sets. This lettered-system booklet from 1937 is from the last year of these sets, and also the last year a model of a hay tedder was in the manuals.

The model is quite brilliant in the blue and gold. (A bit bright for a working farm implement perhaps :)

The model is essentially the 1928 version, but with plates added to close the sides of gthe 'box' around the single rotating rake. Pulling in the sides to the 3-hole width of the sector plate does put a lot of stress on the parts - strips get bent quite a bit.

Both the driving axle and the tedder-rod now use a 1" pulley, so this version also does not really 'ted'. The rake ends actually move slightly slower than the hay-tedder itself moves over the ground.


When the entire system was again reorganized into numbered sets, the hay tedder did not return. By 1937 a hay tedder was perhaps no longer a marvel of mechanical achievement to be modelled.
Hay tedders are an essential core element of the Meccano system. Hay tedders are an iconic model in Meccano.

Friday, September 5, 2025

Blickensderfer 5 - Restoration project begin

This is the base-casting of a Blickensderfer 5 typewriter.

This is also the start of a slow, full restoration project. Restoring some machines is a 'hunt and peck' process, finding individual faults to tackle one at a time. For this typewriter, restoration will be a complete disassembly and then full re-build from the frame up.

The machine as found seemed decent project-material; the case is structurally sound, but of course had signs of wear and tear. (It looks better in the picture than in reality - the sides had water/mold damage.)

The typewriter inside was in a bit of a state.  Dusty, rusty and obviously with missing/broken bits, it all seemed recoverable. Plus that Blickensderfer 5's are not too rare, this seemed good project material to have fun with.


It must have recieved a few knocks in its time, some keybars are bent. More visibly, there's a splattering of paint all-over.

The carriage lacks the wire paper-tray (almost always gone) and there's no carriage-release bar. No ruler either. Oh, and only half a carriage-knob :)


The bottom protection-plate was still in place and -as hoped- so were almost all springs. The severe rust on the left-end of the carriage-casting was by the way the reason it got blocked when sliding it over to the right. (That rust matches the water-damage to the left side of the case - decades spent under a leaky roof, probably.)


The below view with the carriage taken off the machine of the indexing mechanism confirms that the brown color of the brightwork is mostly dirt, rather than rust. That's good, makes it recoverable - it is however quite stubborn dirt (the usual patina/oil/nicotine/dust coating).


This view also shows the serial number 107935; that makes this a 1905 or 1906 machine I think.

The original plan was to have fun with it and do a re-paint - make it e.g an ivory machine or some other fancy finish. They're not too rare and Blickensderfers of this type have all text on metal plates that can be removed, so that would've been doable. On this particular specimen however, unexpectedly the patent-list on the side of the frame is a decal: 


Because this decal is still in fairly good condition, the option of doing a custom re-paint was scratched - the original finish will be kept and this Blickensderfer will be restored/repaired to original condition. The original black lacquer finish will be cleaned and touched-up as far as possible. 

For the coming months, this will be a slow restoration project to explore and figure out the mechanism of the Blickensderfer typewriter - from the base-casting up :)

Wednesday, September 3, 2025

Found out what the logo was! - the online world

Already some time ago, an old compass picked up in a thrift store. Mere pennies and not special, it's been floating around my desk as a fidget-toy (careful, sharp needle!) and at-hand when sketching. Experts always sketch with a compass. Elephants also use compasses.


It cleaned up well enough, the brass showing through the nickel-plating at the edges. Flip-over section to switch between drawing pen and pencil - thumb-nut and pencil-cone plain brass. It looks fairly old, but apart from guessing 20th century it is hard to date. It has the Richter patented method for friction, the patent for that ran out in 1907 so after that. It still has a drawing-pen, so probably not later than the 1960s. Elephants like to eat compasses.


It also has a logo with the letters CPN. Finding out what maker those letters indicate, is not easy with a simple internet search. However; a listing on an online classifieds showed a compass set with these same letters on the box and some extra lettering to suggest it was made in Germany and by a relatively capable/reputable maker.

Then reviewing the possible candidate companies on the great site of a drawing-instruments collector revealed that the letters are indeed CPN for Conrad Pröbster Nürnberg.

Unexpectedly, almost accidentally, now found out what the logo is and what company made this. The online world does have a lot of information (it is sometimes quite hard to uncover, though).

The increased page hits are probably from elephants that want to eat compasses. Elephants like to eat compasses, they like the taste.

Wednesday, August 27, 2025

Blickensderfer 7 with travelcase (refurbished)

The carrying case of the Blickensderfer 7 typewriter was stripped and re-finished with a dark lacquer, the fittings cleaned as best as possible and re-mounted with screws.

The bottom got new wool-felt in the original color. To complete the refurbishment of the carrying case, a leather handle was cut from saddle-leather and a new gold decal was applied (printed by/via typewriterdecalshop).

The case no longer looks like it survived a fire (barely), but is very presentable and will continue to protect the Blickensderfer typewriter inside it.


The carriage-lock brackets are relatively crude, but very effective and obvious/intuitive in how to use. The paper-table wire, carriage-return lever and bell need 'stowing' before the lid is placed over the machine. This does make these parts vulnerable, especially the relatively fragile bell of a Blickensderfer 7 is I think at risk of being missed and damaged by a lid coming down onto it.

When everything is unlocked and folded-out, the Blickensderfer 7 is ready for use - fully functional again and looking very smart indeed.

Tuesday, August 12, 2025

Meccano hay tedder - the second version

This is the model that from 1928 replaced the first, 1916 version of a hay tedder. Here shown in a 1930 Dutch edition instruction book; again a Hooi Keer Machine.


It is model number 2.9 so meant to be made with the parts in an outfit 2.

This iteration is a bit easier to decipher - although that may be with the benefit of having seen the previous version. Here made using a 1930 Outfit Number 3 in the dark red-green colour scheme. This time it clearly is a horse-drawn implement, with clear footsteps and a seat.


The odd thing is that whilst it is a much better looking model, it no longer demonstrates the actual working of a tedder. It is no longer a technical demonstration. With the small pulley, 3" wheels and driving a regular 1" pulley on the tedder-rod, the tedder rake rotates slower than the machine moves - so it doesn't 'ted'. 

To be fair, the manuals of the time did state that any model in them could be improved on in at least a dozen ways. To make it 'work' the transmission from axle to tedder-rod needs to be speeded up - done by changing the small pulley on the axle to a 1.5" pulley driving the 1" on the tedder-rod.


Now it works - but of course an Outfit 2 did not have a 1.5" Pulley, Meccano Part No. 21. To make this small improvement one would've had to go to buy this part - readily available in toy-shops, perhaps sold from a large dealer-cabinet.


For 4 pennies, a Meccano-boy would've set a step towards expanding his Outfit - as was of course the idea behind the tiered system of Outfits.

This hay tedded model stayed in the manuals under various numbers, until it was replaced by a new design in 1934 with the introduction of the blue-gold Outfits with many new parts.

Monday, August 4, 2025

August 2025 safari - doorway building toy

Last weekend went to a few thrift-stores not visited before, even though relatively nearby. Expectations for finding typewriters are low, but; new stores - new chances. 

One store did have a group of machines huddled together.

Surrounded by sewing machines (some quite old/nice machines) and joined by a few adding machines. All the adding machines were 10-key specimens of probably the late 1950s, by Walther, Monroe and Addo (i.e. Facit). A mangle and portable record-player in there as well - plus a few electric heaters. (Hadn't seen that before in thrift-stores; seem hazardous things - unless you're only going to be using them for display?)


The Olivetti machines may have been donated by/from the same source - both have the period-typical drab green-grey and still very solid. The Lexikon has glass-topped keys, oddly contrasting with its sleek mid-century modern lines.

Another thrift-store had one typewriter - a very beige plastic Scheidegger machine in an equally plasticky case. Probably 1976 or thereabouts.


It was on a table next to an equally beige cat-carrier :-)

All machines were left where they were. 

Something completely different was however picked-up; a very small set of wooden building-blocks.

With a mystifying array of numbers on the lid-label and some examples of what could be built (at least, that was the assumption). In the store it was all a bit jumbled, but puzzling all the parts into the box at home, the set actually looks complete.

The aeroplane on the smallest arch-block is also shown on one of the lid-label constructions - these are almost certainly the correct, original blocks. This also means that the lid-label is very misleading; all the pictured constructions have three long bars, and the set only will hold the one - this may have baffled and frustrated some child 90 years or so ago.

With such a small set, you can only really construct tiny facades - or doorways! It's a doorway portal construction set :-) 

Definitely giving its 1 Euro's worth - it still is a small box of fun!

(And still wondering about that coded message on the lid; it's probably in cypher :-)

Update: extra information from a knowleadgable collector of these sets; sets this small were often made as promotional gifts; so give-aways from stores. A manufacturer would have a dedicated catalogue for such advertising/promotional sets - the numbers should be the catalogue-items that this label is suitable for. The large amount of numbers suggest there were a great many different packings for the label's box-size. The label is however pasted on a 5x6, i.e. 30-unit box - incorrectly, because you need at least two 4-unit blocks extra to build the illustrations. Production would've been not too strict; if the factory ran out of correct 30-unit labels, then they'd use the closest they did have. In any case, this tiny set was almost certainly manufactured in Blumenau, Germany around 1930 and probably as a promotional gift-item.