Frontal view of 1960 Smith-Corona Skyriter typewriter. It has a cream colored keys with a brown spacebar and a silver name plate with the brand written on it. The front left "chin" of the machine has a small dent with some paint missing.
Acquired 1960 Smith-Corona Skyriter ultraportable typewriter (Smith-Corona)
Serial Number: 3Y 2279770
Brown crinkle paint; white plastic keys; SCM Elite No. 66 typeface; US keyboard
Acquired for a song and a dance on 2025-04-14; Seems to be in relatively solid shape; nothing huge out of place; need a full COA, but seems fully restorable; the case is a bit dirty and has a light smell, but should be cleanable; came with the original manual and warranty card stub. The dried out 18 feet of black ribbon was replaced on 2025-04-30.

A brown crinkle painted 1960 Smith-Corona Skyriter typewriter sitting at an angle on a wooden card catalog Close up angle on 1960 Smith-Corona Skyriter typewriter with the front right corner facing us. Side view of a 1960 Smith-Corona Skyriter typewriter. In the foreground we see a gleaming chromed return lever on the left. Angle onto the left rear corner of a 1960 Smith-Corona Skyriter typewriter with a view into the typebasket An opened soft typewriter case with a manual for a 1960 Smith-Corona Skyriter typewriter and the original warranty card sitting on them. View into the basket of a 1960 Smith-Corona Skyriter typewriter from the back. We clearly see all the silver slugs featuring a standard elite typeface Angle on a brown leather soft case for a 1960 Smith-Corona Skyriter typewriter. It's obviously dirty and grimy and sitting on a wooden table top. View down onto the right hand side of the carriage section of a 1960 Smith-Corona Skyriter typewriter. On the side of the chassis inside of it we see the serial number scratched into the frame. The left 1 5/8" diameter spool of a typewriter sitting next to a friction fit "C"-shaped clamp that is meant to hold the ribbon onto the spools hub. Side view of a 1 5/8 inch black metal typewriter spool. On the left side of the hub in the middle is a hinged curved piece of metal that when opened will allow one to lock the end of a 1/2 inch wide typewriter ribbon in

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Chris Aldrich

I'm a biomedical and electrical engineer with interests in information theory, complexity, evolution, genetics, signal processing, IndieWeb, theoretical mathematics, and big history. I'm also a talent manager-producer-publisher in the entertainment industry with expertise in representation, distribution, finance, production, content delivery, and new media.

2 thoughts on “”

  1. Historically, this machine is important, because it could be called the precurser to the modern ‘laptop’ computer. Designed to be used on airplanes, it has a great leather case and low profile. The metal construction makes it feels really solid, as opposed to the ultra light plastic bodied Hermes (rocket) etc.

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