Overall a decent machine with lots of potential to be a very fine ancient typewriter; at 45 Euro an entirely reasonable asking price too. (Left on their shelf :)
Backspace does not erase
Sunday, February 1, 2026
Sighting of an old Adler on a shelf
Overall a decent machine with lots of potential to be a very fine ancient typewriter; at 45 Euro an entirely reasonable asking price too. (Left on their shelf :)
Sunday, January 25, 2026
Marchant Pony B calculator coming together
When putting the cover on the carriage, the counter register did not align properly with the openings - the left digits drop below the viewing holes.
For the whole 'typical look' of the Marchant, a quick-fix reproduction nameplate was mounted on the top-cover and a bit of felt was cut to size to put between baseboard and machine. The long-lost factory original felt probably was black or dark purple/blue, but green is nice too.
Sunday, January 18, 2026
Agelist for Underwood frame numbers (left-foot numbers re-visited)
Spurred on by extra datapoints of Underwood typewriters left-foot numbers on The Database (Thank you James!), and now looking only at the Underwood 5 samples, there are enough points to reasonably map a relation. [Updated graph; showing 24 Underwood 5 numbers.]
It is not quite a linear fit (the portfolio mix of Underwood was evolving), but a polynomial fit gives a pretty good correlation. Using that fitted relation and the serial numbers from the agelist, then an 'auxiliary' agelist based on frame numbers can be created:
This agelist from frame numbers (a.k.a. the front-left foot numbers) probably has a margin of about a quarter-year either way. Note that after 1926 the first digit of the frame number can be missing, but the full number likely still stamped on the carriage side.
This 'auxiliary' agelist very likely can also give a year-estimate for Underwood typewriters that fall in other serial number ranges than the 5, but were built from the same frame-casting and assembly line.
There's more information still to be had from more data - e.g. there are hints that 1916 saw a significant, sudden shift in the Underwood portfolio -or factory set-up. Also there are hints on batch-sizes, and production buffering was not completely first-in first-out either.
I.e. as more frame-numbers become known, the data will improve and more information can be extracted.
But already possible is a rough "front-left foot agelist" :-)
[Update: volume estimates.]
After 1929 the data becomes hazy; maybe because of portfolio shifts or because of the market upheaval from the October stock market crash. After October the sales of expensive business equipment such as typewriters (or Elliot Fisher bookkeeping machines!) probably collapsed.
Nevertheless, between about 1905 and 1929 there seems a robust set of numbers; both for Underwood 5 serials and for all Underwood frames (on that typewriter-frame line, at least). This means an estimate can be made of the volumes and volume-share of the ubiquitous Underwood 5 for the company:
This shows the fluctuations of the overall sales, and also that the share of Underwood 5 (and 4) machines is more than 90% of machines in 1905, but by the end of the 1920s has dropped to about 60% of sales. It has become a less dominant product for the company - typewriter sales have become more diversified; the business market perhaps becoming more receptive to special features such as wider (and more costly) carriages.
Thursday, January 15, 2026
Marchant carriage shifting mechanism repair
The carriage shifting mechanism of the early Marchant calculators is very recognisable, it gives these machines a distinct profile. This mechanism is subject of a 1916 Marchant patent and is quite exposed on the front of the machine - putting it at increased risk of damage.
One of the levers was indeed broken on the target machine, the broken-off piece fortunately still held inside the mechanism.
To try fixing this, the lever was taken out. Fortunately the rod that holds it all in place was freely movable, so slid over to the left and the parts taken out (hold the spring as you slide the rod, to prevent it shooting off into the distance).
The right shifting lever was indeed broken, and actually had an old repair that had failed!
The original steel lever arm (rocker arm) had originally broken where it's weakened by the hole for the connecting rod.
To repair it, some time long ago a brass plate had been soldered to the side and two drilled/pins were added. The solder connection of the brass to the rocker arm had however failed and the part again broke.
After very thorough cleaning of the part, the old repair was re-soldered. The pins could now also be embedded in solder and extra care was taken (flux, much flux) that the solder reached the entire contacting surface of the brass plate with the lever. Hopefully the solder will hold, to be able to keep the original levers on this machine; they are stamped with the last digits of the serial number - parts of machine 70049.
The whole carriage shifter design seems a bit 'out of character' with the rest of the calculator. Even though it works well and is easy to use, it looks (overly?) complicated in its parts design. Even the lever is assembled from three separate parts; three stampings (needing multiple tools!) and a turned rod. Below shown as loose parts; the two different (!) rocker arms and the keypad - these need assembling and 'riveting' together.
That's not even mentioning the complex locking-pin, the swaying gear assembly and complicated casting details of the base. Quite a few parts to be assembled, with a few very tricky springs to insert as well. Here in in the factory; assembly of the full-size Marchant A, not the Pony:
It does however work very well, is surprisingly easy to use and is an (the) original Marchant-specific part of the calculator.
Comparing to the donor-machine, there are again multiple small differences also in this mechanism. These machines are probably very close together in time; the donor machine (shown on right) will date to late 1919 (November?) and the target machine (shown on left) probably is an early 1920 machine.
Monday, January 12, 2026
Pinwheel drum of a Marchant Pony B - cleaning and its manufacturing
The pinwheel drum of the donor-machine was blocked - that is, no column would operate all pin-positions, pins were rusted solid in retracted position. Part as a rehearsal for overhauling the drum of the target-machine, partially to see if this drum could be better and partially just out of curiosity; taken apart for a cleaning and overhaul.
To take the drum out of a pinwheel calculator, one of the sidewalls has to be removed (i.e. a 'bracket', in Marchant-parlance). Then the drum itself can be taken out and apart. First step for that is to remove the pinned gear at the counter-side (the left in image below). Second is to remove the holding nut (red arrow).
The biggest challenge in cleaning this drum was the loosening of the holding-nut. This needed heat (soldering iron) and even some carefully-aimed hammerblows to start moving. (Clamp shaft in vise with protection, eg copper, don't apply any force to the disks!) The taper-pin of the counter-gear on the other hand came out easily. With the counter-gear and holding nut removed, all the sections of the drum simply slide off. Then a collection of 9 pinwheel disks, 3 carry-segments, clearing-arm, clreaing-arm-ring, a collar, one holding-nut, counter-gear, locking-comb, comb-pushpin, comb-spring and of course the main shaft:
The steel cams that reset the ten-carry levers are most clearly different; shown in this below drawing - these cams are all stamped with their position number.
Dial parts were cleaned individually: steelwool to de-rust the plate and metal-polish for the pins and ring. A very small amount of light, clean mineral oil (sewing machine oil) in assembly and some vaseline rubbed on the retaining plate against rust. When put together again, all pins move - although perhaps not quite as smoothly yet as they would have when new.
Dials were first assembled and stacked per dial-number onto a stake on a wooden plate. There are even photographs of this in the Marchant factory around that time. A store of assembled dials in a 'vault' cabinet from a 1918 article and stacks on a workbench in a cropped detail of a 1920 photo captioned "service department" (?):
The set of drum and shaft from 70049 now out of the machine, to get the same deep-cleaning and rebuild - no scratched-in date, but a stamped A-number instead. Maybe there are some hidden markings on the internals yet to be found :)
Friday, January 9, 2026
Carriage rebuilding of Marchant Pony B
The carriage of both Marchant Pony calculators were partially seized - multiple positions completely unmovable. Additionally, the 18th position of the result-register of the restoration-machine was missing (!), and mangled wingnuts.
At some moment in its past, this machine was radically repaired - repaired from a 'catastrophic event', e.g. being dropped, being hammered. That event is probably also when the main crank was bent, levers broken and the 18th a wheel lost (how??). Not just the numeral-wheel, also its ten-carry lever plus gear was taken out. A small piece of brass was soldered in its viewing aperture in the cover. This was then neatly painted black, making it a 17-digit machine.
As a start, the target-carriage was completely emptied of all parts - the usual stubborn screws and hardened old oil, but also the counter numeral-wheels were jammed solid between the carriage sidewalls. In the end, an empty and clean carriage; a brass casting with a simple steel strip screwed to the bottom as the sliding surface.
No pictures of rebuilding the counter register - this was hard! to do and was assembled and taken apart at least ten times! One surprising feature and difference with the donor-machine were brass plates or shims between all the numeral wheels.
These very thin brass plates were all somewhat mangled, probably from brute-force clearing attempts or perhaps a botched assembly. When this shim is not aligned with the main rod, the clearing-pins would 'notch' the brass as the rod is pushed in - this makes extra thickness and pressure on the stack - causing it to be blocked. It is doubtful that all positions of the counter would have worked well after the old repair.
These shims also made it impossible to exchange some wheels with the donor. To accomodate for the brass shim, the wheels are about 6.75 mm wide, whereas on the donor all wheels are 7 mm wide. Well, they really are just under 6.985 mm. This is an American machine; the pitch of the columns is not 7 mm as they would be on a Continental machine, but on the drawings is given as 0.275". Inches and fractions...
(The making of many parts of the Marchant Pony are shown with good explanations, drawings and photographs of the actual tooling in a great 1919 book on Punches & Dies. The book also shows several stamped parts for the Noiseless Typewriter and some Smith Premier typewriter parts. The book can be found in full on The Archive.)
From both donor and target machine, a glut of numeral-wheels. A total of 35 specimens in various states of wear - cleaned and to be sorted on quality.
Again small differences, the target machine wheels are about 24.5 mm diameter, the donor-wheels are 24.0 mm on average. Probably simply batch-to-batch variation.
Many wheels - a 35 digit register; that'd be a 116-bit register - the actual 18-digit Pony B is already not bad as a ~60-bits computing device :-)
Cleaning, fitting and filing of the the tens-carry levers, then on their rod and screwed in-place. The left-most levers have extra prongs to trigger the overflow-bell (carriage here seen from behind).
After these levers are fitted, the springs and tiny plungers have to be cleaned and fitted to every lever as a rod is pushed in from the left to lock things in-place with an intermediate gear next to every lever.
These are the little spring-loaded pins that keep the tens-carry levers in the out- or in-position. The parts of the target machines are not original - these springs are offcuts of a different size, and the plungers are rounded bits of varying length. Good replacement/repair effort, but not original. The circled three are original Marchant pins with a bevel.
As the rod is pushed in one lever at a time, the springs and pins are selected to give an even, reasonable force needed to flip the lever between positions. Some spring shortened, lengths of pin and springs matched. (Below picture is of a test-fitting, gear-wheel for column 17 needs to be added still.)
Also here the 18th wheel was given a test-fitting - to check if there was something wrong in the carriage-frame, causing the 18th position to be removed. No problems, all works fine. Likely that one numeral wheel or other part was broken, then leaving off the 18th position is the way to solve a lack of parts. The repairer decades ago won't have had a donor machine :)
After the gears-rod is fully inserted and all the intermediate-gears plus all carry-levers are in place, the register can be filled. Starting from the right one position at a time.
To test, first placed on the machine with the first two digits only. The holes vsible on the register main-rod shows that several clearing pins are likely replacements, only few original pins remained. So many pins needing replacement does suggest mis-use; excessive force on the clearing wingnut is needed to shear off these pins - or forcing wheels (perhaps breaking a wheel). The scoring of the numeral wheels also hints at brute-force attempts to move blocked numeral-wheels. This machine really needed to be seriously rebuilt!
The springs for the overshoot-prevention rockers need to be placed with care. When simply pressing everything in place, springs don't enter their pocket and will be mangled and the rocker will be very stiff (blocking?). Several springs were indeed mangled - now replaced with good springs from the donor.
When everything is in place, the front rack-bar can be screwed in-place. The entire carriage is now clean and functional - well, mostly functional.
The clearing-flange of the counter is mounted upside-down; that vane should be at the bottom. With the new wing-nut and the pins being what they are, I simply cannot find a position where all wheels clear and no wheels are fouling when zero. In comparison, the 18-digit result register was easy to get to work.
The gear surfaces that slide over the detents are still rough (hard to polish); excercising the digits hopefully will make things smoother. For now the result is one basically functional carriage of a Marchant Pony B calculator :-)
Friday, January 2, 2026
Another Pony to attempt repair of the Pony
It was local pick-up, but last year's purchase of a Marchant Pony B Special was a mistake. Had already seen on the listing that the machine was in cosmetic bad shape (fixable), but had not realised quite how many parts were missing. Too many parts to be recoverable, so first put away in a box.
Just recently however, luck would have it that another badly-damaged Pony B appeared for sale online! The bidding interest in this incomplete and blocked machine may have been puzzling, but it looked to contain just the bits needed to attempt a repair of my Pony number 70049, frame nr. A1007. (The actual meaning and reason for these extra numbers is another thing to be explored.)
So now here a team of Ponies:
The target machine (top in photo above) already partially dismantled and both carriage registers taken out. The bottom machine will be the donor - serial number unknown (no back-plate), but frame number 1828. This donor-machine is a regular Pony B; so no input control-registers as with a 'Special'. The frame and housing of both calculators is mostly identical; to convert a regular Pony to a Special would only (?) require adding the control-register sub-frame (mounting holes are present in the base) and changing the left side-frame and top-cover.
Comparing the two, there are several small design changes visible. The (overly-complex) carriage indexing mechanisms are e.g. subtly different between the two and the revolution-counter is different too. Many/most parts should however be identical (fingers crossed).
Surprisingly the carriages are not interchangeable. The carriage base-rail of one machine is about 0.3 mm wider than the other - carriage 1007 will only fit on machine base 1007 and carriage 1828 will only fit on base 1828. That might be from a small change in the design, but may also be simply variations in size of steel-strip used for the carriage-base - or damage sustained over the past century.
Similarly the carriage indexing/holding pawl looks filed-down to fit its specific carriage - and stamped.
Another hint that this calculator really has seen mis-use; about half of the clearing-pins on the register shafts are 'new', so something caused all these original pins to be broken or needing replacement. Evidence that it was pretty bad is that the whole carriage is actually bent! See the offset against a straight steel ruler:
Now with an extra parts machine, a repair will be attempted of 70049. To start with, a full dis-assembly of the machine and cleaning of all the bits. One sub-assembly at a time, starting with all the carriage bits.
Finding out how the first American manufacturer of Odhner-lineage pinwheel calculators evolved its design :-)

























































