What is the oldest keyboard in your collection?

What is the oldest keyboard in your collection?

Poll ended at 30 Aug 2016, 17:43

Before 1970
3
8%
Before 1980
12
31%
1981
1
3%
1982
3
8%
1983
2
5%
1984
9
23%
1985
3
8%
1986
1
3%
1987
0
No votes
1988
2
5%
1989
2
5%
1990
0
No votes
1991
1
3%
1992
0
No votes
1993
0
No votes
1994
0
No votes
 
Total votes: 39

User avatar
elecplus

23 Aug 2016, 17:43

Some really old keyboards are starting to pop up. What is the oldest one in your collection?

User avatar
Chyros

23 Aug 2016, 18:16

The Fujitsu tactile magnetic reed N860 from 1979 :) .

User avatar
seebart
Offtopicthority Instigator

23 Aug 2016, 18:16

Micro Switch Magnetic Reed 1970.

photos-videos-f64/honeywell-micro-switc ... o%20switch
IMGP1755.JPG
IMGP1755.JPG (974.01 KiB) Viewed 5859 times

User avatar
elecplus

23 Aug 2016, 18:22

Chyros wrote: The Fujitsu tactile magnetic reed N860 from 1979 :) .
Pictures please :mrgreen:

User avatar
XMIT
[ XMIT ]

23 Aug 2016, 18:37


User avatar
jerue

23 Aug 2016, 18:44

I had some older stuff but sold it. Now the oldest in my lineup would go to my '88 SSK that is now over 25 creeping up on 30 years old :o

Image

User avatar
zslane

23 Aug 2016, 18:45

A Model M from 1993.

But once that is gone, my oldest keyboard will be a Filco Majestouch-2 from last year (though it might have been manufactured in 2014, I'm not sure).

User avatar
elecplus

23 Aug 2016, 18:56

zslane wrote: A Model M from 1993.

But once that is gone, my oldest keyboard will be a Filco Majestouch-2 from last year (though it might have been manufactured in 2014, I'm not sure).
Not into vintage keyboards?

User avatar
Wodan
ISO Advocate

23 Aug 2016, 18:56

My 1980 IBM Beamspring is the only keyboard older than me. Finished it on my 35th birthday :)

User avatar
fohat
Elder Messenger

23 Aug 2016, 18:56

I had a 1978 Heath Stackpole but I sold it to hwood34 a year or 2 ago.
Attachments
Model-F-122-14MAR84-6110688.JPG
Model-F-122-14MAR84-6110688.JPG (158.11 KiB) Viewed 5816 times

User avatar
elecplus

23 Aug 2016, 18:58

Wodan wrote: My 1980 IBM Beamspring is the only keyboard older than me. Finished it on my 35th birthday :)
I am afraid they did not make keyboards older than I am! :lol:

User avatar
Wodan
ISO Advocate

23 Aug 2016, 19:12

I'm sure they did. you just have to do a little smash'n'grab in a museum to get one :)

User avatar
E3E

23 Aug 2016, 19:20

I'd say my keyboards don't go beyond the early-mid 80s.

User avatar
emdude
Model M Apologist

23 Aug 2016, 19:21

My IBM 3277 model 2 beam spring keyboard, I think from the early to mid-1970s.

Actually, I'm not sure what the exact date of manufacture is, I'll have to take another look at it. It does have a label printed on the bottom of the keyboard that is similar in format to the labels on the backside of Model M/F plates:
Spoiler:
Image
Versus...
Spoiler:
Image
But the shop date doesn't make any sense. :?

User avatar
fohat
Elder Messenger

23 Aug 2016, 19:42

elecplus wrote:
I am afraid they did not make keyboards older than I am!
Don't be silly:
Attachments
1952-IBM-b.jpg
1952-IBM-b.jpg (88.19 KiB) Viewed 5729 times
1952-IBM-a.JPG
1952-IBM-a.JPG (36.71 KiB) Viewed 5729 times

User avatar
seebart
Offtopicthority Instigator

23 Aug 2016, 19:49

Right fohat, and these are even older:

photos-f62/typewriters-galore-t14437.ht ... ypewriters

User avatar
fohat
Elder Messenger

23 Aug 2016, 19:56

seebart wrote:
Right fohat, and these are even older:
I was choosing my own birth year. I think that Cindy is maybe somewhat younger than me.

User avatar
elecplus

23 Aug 2016, 19:59

Well, I was referring to computer keyboards, specifically :mrgreen: Although I believe 2 computers were built before I was born, so maybe I am mistaken. ENIAC used punched cards for input though, not a keyboard. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ENIAC No fohat, I don't think I am younger than you are.

User avatar
zslane

23 Aug 2016, 20:01

elecplus wrote:
zslane wrote: A Model M from 1993.

But once that is gone, my oldest keyboard will be a Filco Majestouch-2 from last year (though it might have been manufactured in 2014, I'm not sure).
Not into vintage keyboards?
I love looking at them. I have no desire to collect/own them. That's why I love the photo threads around here.

However, if I were to have a collection, it would consist of a single keyboard: an authentic Tom Knight Space Cadet.

User avatar
Chyros

23 Aug 2016, 20:10

elecplus wrote:
Chyros wrote: The Fujitsu tactile magnetic reed N860 from 1979 :) .
Pictures please :mrgreen:
I'll do even better :D .

User avatar
XMIT
[ XMIT ]

23 Aug 2016, 20:49

I don't know what year my Correcting Selectric II was made but it *might* be older. I'll see if I can find out...

My typewriter repair guy believes it to be a 1978 model, and notes that the correction feature debuted in 1976.

User avatar
zslane

23 Aug 2016, 21:21

Is there a standard way to determine the year of manufacture of a Selectric?

User avatar
lancre

23 Aug 2016, 21:35

Chyros wrote: The Fujitsu tactile magnetic reed N860 from 1979 :) .
Are your Honeywell and your weird Soviet keyboard from the 80's? 'cos they look reeeeeeeeally old.

User avatar
Khers

23 Aug 2016, 22:23

My oldest keyboard is from 1985:
Image
About a year and a half older than I am (±5 days). Interestingly about the same vintage as the first keyboard I ever used, which was also made in 1985. Bummer my parents threw it away.

I've got a Selectric as well, but that's neither a computer keyboard, nor do I know when it's from ;)

User avatar
XMIT
[ XMIT ]

23 Aug 2016, 22:40

zslane wrote: Is there a standard way to determine the year of manufacture of a Selectric?
Sure. Find a retired IBM guy who fixes Selectrics, pay him a bunch of money and wait a long time for him to fix your Selectric (twice, if FedEx drops your insured package along the way), and then just ask. :lol:

(To be fair, he did an excellent job. That's for another post.)

It might be possible to get this from the serial number stamped just under the platen roller but I don't know how to translate this.

User avatar
chzel

23 Aug 2016, 22:43

My oldest is my 3101, early May (18th week) of 1982 and almost 6 months older than me!
And I somehow managed to misplace that label after I removed it carefully to preserve it... :oops: :evil:
Image

User avatar
y11971alex

24 Aug 2016, 02:43

My oldest computer keyboard dates from Jun. 15th 1984, which is an IBM 3101 keyboard. The Wiki suggests that Model F variants of the 3101 keyboard appeared circa 1983, but at least the case of my beam spring was manufactured a year after the Model Fs were supposed to have replaced them. Perhaps they had some overlap?

Image

The oldest keyboard in my collection is on an IBM Selectric, the case dating from Sept. 1970. I also know that it was made about 30 minutes by car away from my apartment, and installed in the Toronto Stock Exchange on Nov. 26th 1970. It received its last recorded maintenance in 1971, so I don't know what happened there. Perhaps they bought it and forgot about it? :shock:

The typewriter technician said it was probably regularly maintained, only lazy Toronto technicians omitted filling out the record sticker under the case.

Image

User avatar
y11971alex

24 Aug 2016, 02:48

elecplus wrote: Well, I was referring to computer keyboards, specifically :mrgreen: Although I believe 2 computers were built before I was born, so maybe I am mistaken. ENIAC used punched cards for input though, not a keyboard. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ENIAC No fohat, I don't think I am younger than you are.
Before the advent of electric computers, there were mechanical computers.

Image

User avatar
fohat
Elder Messenger

24 Aug 2016, 04:33

elecplus wrote:
Although I believe 2 computers were built before I was born, so maybe I am mistaken. ENIAC used punched cards for input though, not a keyboard. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ENIAC No fohat, I don't think I am younger than you are.
Apparently there were a number of electronic computers built in the 1930s and 1940s, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Computer but ENIAC was the first in the US. Great book, too: http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/720730.Eniac

But there were no punch cards. Programming literally meant plugging and unplugging literally hundreds (thousands?) of patch cables for each new computing run.

I was born in mid-1952.

User avatar
vometia
irritant

24 Aug 2016, 04:43

In my case, probably whatever it is in my Dragon 32 from 1982: "whatever it is" I suspect being Alps switches with nice doubleshots, but I've never actually verified what they actually are. The oldest thing I can actually practically use with my desktop computer is an SSK.

Post Reply

Return to “Keyboards”