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