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IBM Selectric III

I have had a Selectric III for quite a few years and it has always
worked perfectly. As I was using it today, and while it was working
just fine, in mid-sentence, it began typing characters that didn't
correspond to the keys I was hitting. Any idea what's going on? It's
never done this before.
 
P

PeterD

I have had a Selectric III for quite a few years and it has always
worked perfectly. As I was using it today, and while it was working
just fine, in mid-sentence, it began typing characters that didn't
correspond to the keys I was hitting. Any idea what's going on? It's
never done this before.

Other than the motor there is nothing electronic about this
typewriter...

But, been there, done that. Check the cables that shift the ball, one
i sprobably broken.
 
J

James Sweet

mc said:
You can probably get another used Selectric III very cheaply.

Can you? I remember those, I haven't seen one in years. Seems like the sort
of thing that would be collectible some day if it isn't already.
 
S

Sam Goldwasser

James Sweet said:
Can you? I remember those, I haven't seen one in years. Seems like the sort
of thing that would be collectible some day if it isn't already.

A bunch on eBay, most not very cheap though.

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W

William Sommerwerck

When someone says their Selectric is suddenly typing the wrong characters, I
wonder whether this is a troll.

The ball can be put on only one way, and locks in place. It isn't clear how
it could suddenly slip.

The mechanism that moves the ball is, if I remember correctly, laterally
"balanced". If it broke, it seems the symptoms would be more serious than
just the wrong characters.
 
M

mc

William Sommerwerck said:
When someone says their Selectric is suddenly typing the wrong characters,
I
wonder whether this is a troll.

The ball can be put on only one way, and locks in place. It isn't clear
how
it could suddenly slip.

Teeth broken off the bottom of the ball are another way to get wrong
characters.
 
L

Lee Richardson

Good morning.
It can happen. The tilt and rotate tapes get the ball in the general
vicinity of the correct character, then the alignment pawls, one vertical
for the part the ball mounts on and another horizontal that engages with
teeth in the bottom of the ball itself, engage to ensure correct alignment
by the time the ball fires into the platen. Any problem with any of these
can cause incorrect or incomplete characters being printed. The tapes drive
the ball in one direction, spring tension alone pulls it back in the other.

Lee Richardson
 
I

isw

I have had a Selectric III for quite a few years and it has always
worked perfectly. As I was using it today, and while it was working
just fine, in mid-sentence, it began typing characters that didn't
correspond to the keys I was hitting. Any idea what's going on? It's
never done this before.

A pair of thin metal strips impart "tilt" and "rotate" motions to the
ball. You can see those strips not very far down inside the typewriter
(they run from one side to the other, and connect to the ball carrier),
and if you push on them (gently), the ball should move appropriately.

Two possibilities:

1) One of the strips is broken. That should be easy enough to discover.

2) One or both of the mechanisms that pull on the strips has fallen out
of adjustment (the nature of a Selectric is that the adjustments tend to
be "binary"; i.e. either they're right, or they're NOT). If that is the
case, it should be possible to readjust things to work properly again.

I haven't adjusted a Selectric for a *long* time, but if you're
"mechanically inclined", you should be able to find the appropriate
adjustment, which will be some sort of threaded rod or screw, or
something similar. AIR, there is a pair of vertical arms with pulleys on
the tops for those metal strips to pass around, on the left side as
viewed from the keyboard. They move laterally according to how many
levels of "tilt" or "rotate" is necessary to position the desired
character on the ball.

Looking at the ball, and the incorrect letters being printed, should let
you discern whether it's "tilt" or "rotate" that's in error.

If you can find the adjustment, crank it one way until it's wrong, then
the other, counting turns, and then set it back half way between. I
don't think that being "wrong" can cause any damage; just incorrect
letters being printed.

--

The Selectric is probably the last and most wonderful "mechanical
mechanism" ever to be designed (there's nothing "electrical" in one
except for the motor, which just rotates a shaft; everything else is
purely mechanical). It really is a magnificent piece of engineering. It
includes, among other nifty features, a totally mechanical two-key
rollover, and a simple but clever device that absolutely forbids
multiple keys being depressed simultaneously.

Isaac
 
I

isw

William Sommerwerck said:
When someone says their Selectric is suddenly typing the wrong characters, I
wonder whether this is a troll.

The ball can be put on only one way, and locks in place. It isn't clear how
it could suddenly slip.

The mechanism that moves the ball is, if I remember correctly, laterally
"balanced". If it broke, it seems the symptoms would be more serious than
just the wrong characters.

Nope; just incorrect characters, that's all. If one or the other of the
bands breaks, then only a "vertical" or "horizontal" subset of
characters can be selected. If one of the band "drivers" becomes
maladjusted, then characters above, below, to the right, or to the left,
of the desired one will be selected. A comparison of the source to the
printed output vis-a-vis the position of the characters on the ball will
give a lot of clues.

Isaac
 
I

isw

mc said:
Teeth broken off the bottom of the ball are another way to get wrong
characters.

True, but I've seen balls so used that the metal plating was mostly worn
off, but with intact teeth; I don't think there's any way for them to
get broken while installed.

(That Selectric had been used in an airline reservation system; there
was a "crater' on the platen at every possible character location.)

Isaac
 
M

mc

The Selectric is probably the last and most wonderful "mechanical
mechanism" ever to be designed (there's nothing "electrical" in one
except for the motor, which just rotates a shaft; everything else is
purely mechanical). It really is a magnificent piece of engineering. It
includes, among other nifty features, a totally mechanical two-key
rollover, and a simple but clever device that absolutely forbids
multiple keys being depressed simultaneously.

I agree. It is probably the last of the world's great purely mechanical
machines (with no electrical control signaling, only mechanical movements).
I have a Selectric II in my office which I bought in 1975 and still use
occasionally. I had the University's typewriter technician overhaul it for
me just before he retired, so it will probably last me the rest of my life.
 
L

Larry

[email protected] wrote:
: I have had a Selectric III for quite a few years and it has always
: worked perfectly. As I was using it today, and while it was working
: just fine, in mid-sentence, it began typing characters that didn't
: correspond to the keys I was hitting. Any idea what's going on? It's
: never done this before.

These 3 items would cause wrong characters that would not be perfectlt
formed characters:

1. Take the ball off and look up the centre of it. Is there a thin groove
in the circular piece or is that broken out?

2. While the ball is off, check the back of the tilt ring (thing the ball
mounts on) and see if the vertical spring on the back of it is not broken.
This spring pulls the rotate detent up and locks the ball in position
rotationally when it strikes the paper.

3. With the ball still off; on the left side of the tilt ring is the tilt
detent which locks the tilt ring in one of the 4 rows of letters when the
ball strikes the paper. It is a vertical spring that you can see to the
left and on the left side of the left post.

If the characters are wrong but perfectly formed, my guess would be a broken
spring down inside on one of the selector interposers. You would likely
need to get help to find this. There are people repairing them still. Try
Googling selectric repair. Here is one I found http://www.selectric.com/
Where do you live?

Larry (Retired IBM tech)
larry17 at gmail.com
 
W

William Sommerwerck

isw said:
Nope; just incorrect characters, that's all. If one or the other of the
bands breaks, then only a "vertical" or "horizontal" subset of
characters can be selected. If one of the band "drivers" becomes
maladjusted, then characters above, below, to the right, or to the left,
of the desired one will be selected. A comparison of the source to the
printed output vis-a-vis the position of the characters on the ball will
give a lot of clues.

Thanks for the clarification.

I agree that the Selectric is a Truly Neat mechanical device. My only
problem with the Selectric is that it has a "woman's" keyboard, unlike the
original IBM PC, which had a "man's" keyboard. It took my fingers years to
adjust to the Selectric.
 
H

Henry Mydlarz

William Sommerwerck said:
When someone says their Selectric is suddenly typing the wrong characters,
I
wonder whether this is a troll.

The ball can be put on only one way, and locks in place. It isn't clear
how
it could suddenly slip.

The mechanism that moves the ball is, if I remember correctly, laterally
"balanced". If it broke, it seems the symptoms would be more serious than
just the wrong characters.
As well as the Rotate Tape and the Tilt Tape which shift the golf ball to
its various character positions, there are keyboard interposers and
selection latches, a couple of mechanisms which can result in suddenly the
wrong character being typed, without the character being in any way out of
place. It's been a couple decades since I used to fix hundreds of these,
though.

Henry Mydlarz
 
L

Luc

Actually The Selectric III (3 Pitch) is still widely used by Insurance
and Trucking companies. I repair plenty of the as well as the II and
even some 721. I do not sell Selectric III for a low price as the
demand is still there. You can get a Selectric I for a low cost or a
721.
 
M

mc

Luc said:
Actually The Selectric III (3 Pitch) is still widely used by Insurance
and Trucking companies. I repair plenty of the as well as the II and
even some 721. I do not sell Selectric III for a low price as the
demand is still there. You can get a Selectric I for a low cost or a
721.

What is a 721?
 
Sometimes, when I always stop off at the Goodwill store on my way to the
food store, I see a IBM Selectric typewriter for sale.Typewriters in
that store usually sell for $7.00.
cuhulin
 
M

Michael A. Terrell

Luc said:
Actually The Selectric III (3 Pitch) is still widely used by Insurance
and Trucking companies. I repair plenty of the as well as the II and
even some 721. I do not sell Selectric III for a low price as the
demand is still there. You can get a Selectric I for a low cost or a
721.


I passed up a free one Saturday at a church yard sale. I did take the
Nitsuko (NEC) digital PBX and five telephones, though. :)


--
Service to my country? Been there, Done that, and I've got my DD214 to
prove it.
Member of DAV #85.

Michael A. Terrell
Central Florida
 
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