-40%
FREE SHIPPING! 1912 RARE ANTIQUE TYPEWRITER " KLEIN ADLER MODEL 1 " GERMANY
$ 194.83
- Description
- Size Guide
Description
SAFE FREE SHIPPING!ANTIQUE, LOVELY, FULLY COMPLETE,
STEAMPUNK LOOK TYPEWRITER
"KLEIN ADLER MODEL 1"
IN NORMAL ANTIQUE CONDITION.
WORKING, BUT MAY BE NEED SOME
REGULATION,
BECAUSE SOME PARTS GETS CAUGHT.
SOME GLASS KEYS HAVE LITTLE CRACKS.
MADE IN GERMANY.
MODEL APPROXIMATELY FROM YEAR 1912.
REAL PIECE OF TYPEWRITERS HISTORY.
HAVE SERIAL NUMBER 270380 ADLER.
AS YOU CAN SEE HAVE INTERESTING,
UNUSUAL
CONSTRUCTION.
DECORATIVE AND PRACTICAL ITEM IN
NORMAL ANTIQUE CONDITION
(ALL, LIKE YOU SEE IN PICTURES).
ALL PARTS MOVE, BUT NOT POSSIBLE TO GIVE
ANY WARRANTY ABOUT FULLY WORKING CONDITION.
ALL LAST TIME IT WAS USED
AS INTERESTING DECORATION IN A BOOK STORE.
WILL BE SEND IN SAFE, DOUBLE BOX PACKAGING.
SIZE:
LENGTH - 11.5"
WIDTH - 10.5"
HEIGHT - 4.5
"
YOU STRAIGHTL
Y WILL BUY THE ITEM,
WHAT YOU SEE IN THOSE PICTURES.
I HAVE SOME OTHERS INTERESTING ANTIQUE,
ART NOUVEAU,
MILITARY, SCIENCE AND
ENGINEERING EQUIPMENT.
PLEASE SEE MY PROPOSALS.
WILL BE SEND WITH VERY STRONG,
SAFE, DOUBLE BOX PACKAGING.
I WILL BE GLAD ANSWER ALL YOUR QUESTIONS.
HISTORY:
Adler typewriters are among the most famous in the business. Known for their antique looks and good functioning properties, Adler typewriters have formed and shaped the typewriting industry for several generations. The Adler Company was started in 1896 and began with a focus in making bicycles, auto mobiles, and motorcycles. Adler began a design that would eventually yield the thrust-action typewriter. They introduced the Klein Adler and Klein Adler 2 versions of the typewriter. These machines were much lighter and more portable than the original Model 7. The Adler 8 was the company's next product and was a full-sized office machine. This typewriter was a prototype for the much more common Adler 11, which featured two double shifts and contained six characters on each of the machine's type bars. This allowed the user to write in two entirely distinct typefaces. In 1909, the company began working on the Adler 15. Although research and development had begun, the machine was not built until 1923, fourteen years after the original development began. The Adler 15 begins to replicate many of the more modern versions of the typewriter, and even our modern computer keyboards. The model 15 contained four rows of keys and a single shift. The machine was really only one step away from introducing the regular font strike typewriters that the company would produce for the remainder of its lifetime. The final model that Adler produced was extremely successful, and was produced until the company was forced out of business in 1995.