@Robert
If you - or anyone - have links to digital copies of the Mdl. 33 service /
operator's manuals, please send those my way - would be very much
appreciated!
I presume the rubber hammer isn't so much a /rubber hammer/ as a steel
hammer with a bonded rubber face? Sort of like a pinch roller or drive
wheel from a tape machine or turntable, and so on. Lacking the rubber
facing, I could see how that would damage the 'typewheel' as you say, in
short order.
Per your suggestion, the greenkeys list will be one of my next stops. Thank
you for the help!! ;-)
On Fri, Nov 21, 2014 at 1:41 AM, Robert Jarratt <robert.jarratt at
I suggest you subscribe to the Greenkeys list. I
don't know too much but a
couple of things to know are:
1. The rubber hammer perishes. Do *not* operate the machine without
replacing it or you will cause irreversible damage to the typewheel. There
are two ways to do this. One is to use some PVC tubing, the other is to ask
on the Greenkeys list as someone has now manufactured some completely new
rubber hammers.
2. Make sure you grease and lubricate it before turning it on. Turn it
over by hand first. The manuals are available to tell you where to
lubricate etc. I can supply copies if necessary.
3. You will almost certainly need a current loop converter. I was lucky to
find one on eBay which works like a charm, I think there are others. The
alternative is to make your own. There are some designs knocking around
that don't seem too complicated.
There are probably lots of other things, checking for excessive wear for
example.
I love my Model 33, hearing that sound again is wonderful, it is
definitely something worth getting and looking after!
Regards
Rob
-----Original Message-----
From: cctalk [mailto:cctalk-bounces at
classiccmp.org] On Behalf Of
drlegendre .
Sent: 21 November 2014 06:53
To: General Discussion: On-Topic and Off-Topic Posts
Subject: What to look for in a Model 33 Teletype - a newb's buyer's
guide?
I've gone off the Deep End and now I just have to re-have a Teletype
model
33..
I feel awful about what became of the junker I
bought for $15 when I was
a 13
year-old and wish I still had it today, so I
could fix it and put it to
use.
So what should a mentally-challenged guy like myself be looking for, in
a Model
33 - preferably an ASR model with the paper tape
reader?
What does and doesn't go bad? Are there any serious game-changing, show-
stopping or buzz-killing issues that effectively render one of these
units as a
parts donor? What differences exist between the
various ASR-model units,
as
they progress through the years? What does one
look for
- and more importantly, what to avoid?
And one more - how do you differentiate a 20mA current-loop model from a
'standard' RS-232 model? Can you tell from the rear panel, or do you
need
to
go under the hood?