From: "Ethan Dicks"
<erd_6502(a)yahoo.com>
--- Mike Ross <mross666(a)hotmail.com> wrote:
Hope someone can help - perhaps they're lying
in a NJ warehouse!
Been checking out my old ASR33s, a couple of them are missing the small
bar (shaped like a 'double Y') which connects the keyboard mechanism to
the printer. Anybody got any spares?
Dan Cohoe and I both made the rounds of the TTY spares on the balcony
of the Armory in NJ (thanks again, William!) I do not recall seeing
anything of that nature amidst the bits. Spare keytops, plattens,
chad bins, springs and more, but no keyboard butterflies.
It's a flat part and shouldn't be as critical on the manufacturing
tolerances as parts in the printer carriage - if you have one, it
should be possible to make duplicates. If you don't have any, someone
could throw one on a flatbed scanner... You might even be able to get
away with a plastic replacement - wouldn't be as durable (months/years
instead of years/decades), but you could make a stack of them.
Hi
The piece has to transmit quit a bit of torque to reset
the keyboard. I'm not sure if a piece of plastic could handle it.
One could carve it out of a piece of cold rolled steel using
a dremel tool. It has a slot in the center to make it easy to
remove and install with a screw driver but this part isn't
needed. The rest is just cutting around the edges.
I don't have a scanner so maybe someone else can make a picture.
Dwight
If you have any friends who are train buffs, especially those who make
their own engines/cars from raw materials rather than kits, they should
have the necessary tools/skills to copy a 1"x2" flat piece of metal
with a few notches and curvy bits.
-ethan
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