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Post a Comment On: Sipsey Street Irregulars

"Praxis: Written Communication in a Grid-Down Environment."

9 Comments -

1 – 9 of 9
Anonymous 1Lt. Taylor Holmes, ret. said...

So long as PackRatizm is accompanied by OCD-Organizationalizm. (Was that a word?) You will be buried by "stuff" after they "bust a cap in yo dome", because yer stuff tangled yer feet on the way to your piece.

I know, man. You gotz it all together. Just yankin yo chain, bro. We keep manual typers on inventory. My pride and joy is a 50's era Underwood Corespondent unit of the kind later used by military reporters. This one was a civie, but I'll give it a pass. Seen its brethren. They do good work.

You must remember one thing. A manual typer has a fingerprint to one degree or another. They can sometimes identified by damage to a striker, or a vertical misalignment when the punch is made. Matching page to unit was a Hollywood thing, until I saw a brother show me how it was done. You never know.

It pays to be aware of your weaknesses, and your enemy's.

July 18, 2010 at 11:29 PM

Blogger MD Bryant said...

Speaking of grid down: ran across this emt's story of Katrina experience. I'm only a third of the way through this long piece, but I can tell I won't sleep until I'm done.

http://www.doomers.us/forum2/index.php/topic,46497.0.html

July 18, 2010 at 11:42 PM

Anonymous Russell said...

I remember, and oh the strange smell too.

July 19, 2010 at 1:21 AM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

I volunteer a few days a week at a local thrift store, and you should see some of the old manual beauties that come through. It pays to dumpster dive there, too. Lots of useful things get thrown out simply because they were in need of only a thorough cleaning or a simple repair, but would "take too much time" (or nobody else there had the necessary skill for the repairs needed). Thrift stores are great (but often overlooked) resources.

A recent prize: an old leather saddle scabbard for an M-14. A little Feibing's soap and it will be clean and supple again.
-JRM III

July 19, 2010 at 5:29 AM

Anonymous JR said...

"Freedom of the press belongs to the man who owns one."

An excellent reference book for those interested in the manual printing arts is "The Alternative Printing Handbook," (ISBN 014046509X), published by Penguin, but now out of print. Used copies are available on Amazon, though it's listed there as "The Art of Printing by Hand." It covers multiple printing methods for the do-it-yourself, small-scale printer.

July 19, 2010 at 7:23 AM

Blogger ranamacar said...

I guess going to a rural school means I'm behind the times. I'm ten years younger than Mike and I learned to type on a manual typewriter. Our "Media" class used a mimeograph machine to produce a "paper" for the other students.
Keep an eye out for replacement ribbons, they're about the only thing that you'll need other than paper, for a manual machine. Cheap copy paper goes for less than $20 a case- ten reams of 500 sheets each. I have two cases set aside for "emergencies". Never know when you might want to send a note or post a notice somewhere.

ranamacar

July 19, 2010 at 10:59 AM

Blogger JoeFromSidney said...

ARMY FM 31-20, Special Forces Operational Techniques, has a chapter on "Field Expedient Printing Methods." silk screen, mimeograph, etc.

July 19, 2010 at 3:35 PM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

What about ribbons for your manual typewriters? A dry ribbon is miserable to use, I learned that in the 1960's.

RSR

July 19, 2010 at 7:06 PM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Source for new ribbons for old typewriters:

http://www.fjaproducts.com/showallbrands.asp

Sorry, no dumpster shopping cart :-(

RSR

July 20, 2010 at 7:52 PM

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