Damn the Torpedo
Oh, the perils of eBay. Not long ago, I fell to the tempation of a rather scarce specimen, a Deutsche Remington. (A little background: the Deutsche Remington is really a Torpedo. Remington partially owned Torpedo Buromaschinenwerke, and so in the European market some Torpedos were marketed as the Deutsche Remington. Remington had a habit of slapping different names on the same machine, possibly to obscure the actual numbers being manufactured. So far as I’m aware, this particular machine is one of the only ones to have turned up in the United States.)
We’ve all heard the tragedies of typewriters being destroyed in the mail. I’ve received postally-damaged typers myself a few times, though nothing too severe. I’ve even had a couple of what I call “miracle typewriters” that somehow arrived in perfect condition despite shockingly irresponsible packaging. Well, this one takes the cake. And oh, yeah, I got burned big-time.
Here is what the machine looked like before the seller shipped it:

(You like the barrel full of crushed Diet Rite cans? Classy, huh?)
And here’s what it looked like when I got it:

It was crammed into an undersized box, upside down, with no packing material. The seller obviously didn’t give a damn whether it arrived undamaged. It arrived with the right end of the carriage sticking out of a hole in the box. In one way, the typer being wedged in so tightly was a blessing because it likely saved the carriage from being ripped from the chassis. The aluminum front frame, however, is mangled. The space bar has been pushed in and shoved to the side. The shift key levers, which rest in guides attached to the frame, are bent.
I can probably reshape the frame into a semblance of its original self, and repair the mechanical damage, but it will never be the same. I’m afraid this may end up being a display-only typer.
That’s the way it is with eBay. Yous takes you chances.
Update: I’ve done the best I can with it for the time being and spiffed it up a bit. A brief writeup is now available on Machines of Loving Grace.
Further update: more prying, bending, degunking, and futzing with it after the Spawn Process went to bed last night resulted in making it mostly functional. The spacebar still doesn’t work quite right–it needs a hard whack to register, and only if it’s on the left side–the right shift key tends to stick in the down position, and the feed roller has an incapacitating flat. I’ve pulled out the platen and feed roller and am going to attempt a DIY recovering using automotive hoses before resorting to professional rerubbering.






That’s pretty screwed up. Makes you wonder what kind of person makes absolutely no minimum effort at quality.
I just hope that you didn’t leave positive feedback.
Comment by Mike.Speegle — May 29, 2009 @ 10:49 am
Ouch. That just hurts to look at.
Comment by mpclemens — May 29, 2009 @ 12:18 pm
*&&@#^% ebay. I love the word “Buromaschinenwerke.”
Comment by Strikethru — May 29, 2009 @ 1:49 pm
Positive feedback? Hayl no!
Strikethru: properly, there’s an umlaut over the “u”; I was just too lazy to code it. It literally means, “office machine factory”. Oooh, sexy!
Comment by olivander — May 29, 2009 @ 2:56 pm
Crappy packaging and shifty sellers aside, what you did with that typewriter is nothing short of magic. What do you use to get the shine on that thing?
Bad luck, but excellent revival. Can you type on it?
Comment by monda — May 29, 2009 @ 8:20 pm
Thanks, Monda. Mostly, I just wiped off the dust and accumulated tobacco residue. Immediately before its close-up, I wiped down the exterior with Old English. (See: “How clueless, photography-challenged people can take good typewriter photos in three easy steps“.)
Unfortunately, it’s still unusable, and may remain that way in spite of my best efforts. It’s impossible to say what sort of hidden impact damage might be affecting the works. It is thoroughly frozen up inside. I’ve pulled out everything from animal fur to bits of paper to what look like bits of feather, to a dessicated mayfly. I’ll thoroughly degunk it and see where it goes from there.
Comment by olivander — May 29, 2009 @ 9:12 pm
That’s a d**n shame.
Comment by OtherMichael — May 30, 2009 @ 4:56 pm
I agree that that sucks, and agree that you’ve put a good face on it. Looks like a gorgeous machine.
Interestingly, I’d maybe pay more for the machine pictured in your *after* shot than I would for the original ebay posting. I guess that says a lot about your restoration and photo skillz (and the complete numbskullery of the seller).
Comment by duffymoon — May 31, 2009 @ 1:11 pm