Today I visited a couple of local antique malls and spotted the following typewriters.
I've seen photos of the Tomy's Tutor Typer before, but don't think I've actually tried one before today. Note how what looks like a keyboard actually consists of only three blocks of linked keys; each block controls one typebar. Also note that Tomy anticipated today's colloquial use of the term "typer."
IBM Correcting Selectric II, $350. The classic big beige slab of the 1970s. Is it worth $350? Maybe, to some people, if it's working—a question I did not attempt to answer.
Royal HH, $55. A fair price for the most popular American standard of the mid-1950s. I do wish that its most popular color weren't brown. In case you don't know, that odd device on the right side of the keyboard is a palm-operated tabulator. No other Royal model has it.
Wide-carriage Royal KMG, $125. This seller did some research, identified the model, and even dated the typewriter to 1949.
Olympia SF, $75. This seller is concerned about our behavior, and is also ready with an answer to the most common question about typewriters.
Wide-carriage Royal KMG, $125. This seller did some research, identified the model, and even dated the typewriter to 1949.
Remington Quiet-Riter, $95. This green paint is not the most common, and the typewriter is very clean. The return lever has gotten disconnected from the line-advance mechanism, but otherwise it's in good shape.
Olympia SF, $75. This seller is concerned about our behavior, and is also ready with an answer to the most common question about typewriters.
Would you have taken any of these machines home?