Pages

Tuesday, 9 April 2013

Imperial Portable Typewriters 1908-1978: Part II – Good Companions 1, Model T, 3 and 4

Will Davis and the late Tilman Elster say on their European Typewriter Project webpage on Imperial that mechanically the Imperial Good Companion portable typewriter changed very little between the first model of 1932 and the Model 6 of 1961. Will and Tilman say of the Model 4, for example, "[it] displays the fact that little had changed on these machines over some number of years. Most of the alteration is cosmetic." And of the 6T, " ... again [the mask] encloses essentially the same machine."
The first Imperial Good Companion (1932)
What Will and Tilman did NOT look at, however, were the odd-numbered Imperial Good Companions, the Models 3, 5 and 7. These are completely different mechanically, yet their mechanics are enclosed in familiar masks - the 3 in the boxy Model T shape, and the 5 and the 7 in the lower, sleeker styling of the 4 and 6.
The IGC Model T (1938)
While the first Imperial Good Companion, the Model T and Models 4 and 6 are carriage-shifted with identical segment-typebaskets, the Models 3, 5 and 7 are segment-or basket-shifted. The segments and typebaskets on the odd-numbered models are totally different to those on the even-numbered models.
The IGC Model 3 (1951)
It would probably be fair to say the majority of Imperial Good Companions are carriage-shifted and have very much the same mechanics.
The image below, from the late Tilman Elster's Collection, is of an Imperial model called a "Briton", serial number FC709. Ernst Martins says this was a brand name used by Imperial in Argentine.
Like the Briton, another first model IGC in matte black was marketed as a Regent, which was Torpedo's export tradename.
Below, yet another variation from the late Tilman Elster's Collection is decalled an "Imperial Good Companion 1", but it is clearly a boxy Model T with carriage-shift. Serial number JS596. I have seen just a model owned by a young collector here in Canberra. Bear in mind the first Good Companion did not have a model number. 
Yet the more conventional-looking segment and typebasket arrangement, with segment-shift, once more underlines Imperial's close association with Torpedo in Frankfurt, Germany - one which extended to either side of World War II. 
The IGC Model 3, with segment-shift
This segment-shift design was patented in Germany in February 1930 by Englishman Herbert Etheridge, assigned to Torpedo (Etheridge filed an application for a US patent one year later). Etheridge later worked for Imperial in England, but died in 1940, leaving all his worldly goods to fellow Imperial mechanical designer Arthur Pateman. After the War, in 1947, Pateman filed for a British patent for Etheridge's segment-shift design, saying he was acting as a "representative" for the late Etheridge.
The Torpedo Modell 15
Meanwhile, Torpedo had adopted Etheridge's segment design for its portables, starting with the Modell 15 (aka Blue Bird) in 1931 and carrying on through all of its subsequent portable models. The Torpedo Modell 20 and the Imperial Good Companion 5 could, for example, be almost described as close cousins:
So in part two of our series on Imperial portable typewriters, let's look at some of these differences between the first model Good Companion and the Models T, 3 and 4:
From the Typewriter Age Guide (December 1973):
From Wilfred A. Beeching's
Century of the Typewriter (1974):
Some of the Imperial
Good Companions
from my collection:
IMPERIAL GOOD COMPANION
FIRST MODEL
Serial number B0812

Serial number BR121
IMPERIAL GOOD COMPANION
MODEL T
Serial number 2G185
 

Serial number 2B123L
IMPERIAL GOOD COMPANION
MODEL 3
Serial number 3V312
IMPERIAL GOOD COMPANION
MODEL 4
Serial number 4AC640
TOMORROW: The Imperial Good Companion Models 5, 6 and 7 and the Imperial Messenger, the last portable made by Imperial itself.



35 comments:

  1. Thanks for this post, Robert -- my dear British friend Caroline is about to come visit me here in The Woods of Northern California, and she is bringing me an Imperial Good Companion 4!

    She won the auction on eBay.uk awhile back and picked up the IGC personally. I am so excited about getting this machine.

    Your post will help me identify the year this IGC 4 was made. Greatly appreciated!

    ReplyDelete
  2. Thanks for helping us sort out the IGCs. I have corrected the date for my earliest Good Companion (#AC273) to 1935.

    So the wonderful segment shift design was the brainchild of an Englishman! Hats off to Mr Etheridge.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Great compendium of good companions! I have a '53 GC 3 and a '58 de luxe 5 (the name of the GC 5 in the US). The shift is super-soft on both, but I prefer the boxy style and outlying tab controls of the 3. Understated but sexy.
    Rob in NY

    ReplyDelete
  4. That's really useful stuf. Thanks Robert. I'd heard, but never seen the Torpedo forerunner of the luscious IGC5. Nor did I realise the 3 was a basket shift too.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Great work Rob. These machines look like remarkably excellent typewriters.

    That said, I really can't get my head around the bulky structure on these machines. On an aesthetic level, I have to be honest, I find these machines to be a bit... ugly.

    I'd love to get my hands on one and try them out, but I just could never see myself owning one, because of the distinctive styling.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Pretty much exactly what the others said; really useful stuff here, thanks!

    ReplyDelete
  7. Found your blog very interesting and helpful. I have a Model T with a Johannesburg (South Africa) company logo/stamp and would like to sell it - so I was trying to get an idea of what they are worth.... Still not too sure of that, but thank you for your blog... I reckon mine is like the 1938 one you have... or maybe in the 1950's... Ah well - live and learn every day - I would never have known there are collectors out there for these machines... Enjoy!

    ReplyDelete
  8. Just bought an Imperial Good Companion 4 at a garage sale - near perfect condition. I'm so excited I could bite! Thanks for this post, Robert - helps to understand a bit about the background to the machine.

    ReplyDelete
  9. Hi,

    I have just received an imperial model T in the mat tone but the only number I can see that resembles a serial number is 2HE 063

    Would you know anything about this model??

    Thanks

    ReplyDelete
  10. Can you help me with year of manufacture of A Good Companion with serial number FV769. Many thanks.

    ReplyDelete
  11. Thanks so much your information was very helpful. I'm so glad I rescued my mums Model T Serial number BN097. She was going to throw it out! Am I right in thinking this is one of the earliest models from 1932?

    ReplyDelete
  12. Oops sorry I think it's 1937 actually

    ReplyDelete
  13. Good info here, thanks. I have an odd model T that I think is from 1942. Its serial no (to right of space bar) is 2X183. There's also a serial no under the left spool 2AAP16. What is unusual is that every pic I've seen of this model has various fractions on the penultimate right column keys. Yet this one has french and german accents instead (acute, umlaut etc).

    Thought it may be a french/german model, but the shift lock, margin release, backspace etc are all in english as usual.

    Have done a lot of digging online but no luck. Any ideas please? Thought maybe it was adapted for translation use somehow.

    ReplyDelete
  14. Hi, I came across an Imperial Good Companion with serial starting AO. However, the royal coat of arms on the top right is in gold colour instead of the multi-coloured one (gold, blue, red, white) that we usually see. Is this a different version as this is the first time I've come across the royal coat of arms in all gold? Thanks in advance.

    ReplyDelete
  15. Robert

    I have an Imperial Good Companion Model T Serial No: 2 GS 076. Can you tell what what year it would have been manufactured?
    Many Thanks

    ReplyDelete
  16. Robert

    I have an Imperial The Good Companion Model T Serial no 2GS 076
    Can you please tell me what year it was manufactured and possibly a value?
    Many thanks
    Jan

    ReplyDelete
  17. Andrea Mendoza1 April 2017 at 19:14

    Hi
    I have an Imperial Typewriter "The Good Companion Model T " with Serial Number 2M125, would you kindly tell me what year was this manufactured ?

    Thanking you in advance
    andrea

    ReplyDelete
  18. Hi there, hoping you can help. I've just bought what seems to be the early Good Companion (no tab key, only 12 keys on top row.) I'm loving it but wondered if you know where I can find a manual? As I'm unable to carriage shift, and it needs a new ribbon. Thanks in advance! M

    ReplyDelete
  19. I have a Good Companion model F524, with the original case that appears to be stamped with a stenciled number, the type that is usually military issue. Would like to know how to research

    ReplyDelete
  20. i have a model T with the serial number: 2HZ 638

    ReplyDelete
  21. I have an IGC model T, the serial number is: 2HZ 638

    ReplyDelete
  22. I have an IGC model T, I have no idea what year
    it is from, the serial number is: 2HZ 638

    ReplyDelete
  23. I have just acquired one and the serial number is 2A0272. Which year is this?

    ReplyDelete
  24. A fabulous, informative blog!
    I just bought a Good Companion "Portable 3" at a charity shop. It is in beautiful condition and has its original manual, cleaning brush and oil. There is also a Pitman exercise book and a spare Hermes ribbon!
    I have been looking up the serial number on the typewriter database but can't find this one - 3C 028 - so I'm not sure of the date.
    Can you help at all?
    Michael

    ReplyDelete
  25. I was very fortunate to find a Good Companion 4 in its original, hard case with two keys in a Scarborough Charity shop three years ago. At £8, I simply could not resist it, it was love at first sight. Didn’t seem to need a new ribbon and back at our holiday flat I was looking round for something to type on. Then I remembered the Filofax in my camera bag, super. When I got back to my old cottage in the Derbyshire Peak District, I popped a new ribbon on by re~spooling the metal spools, not losing them I thought. I already had a good portable typewriter, a Corona from 1924, again in a charity shop, this time Cleethorpes, at £2.50 with wooden case covered in black fabric. That worked fine too but better with a new ribbon. That one occupies a table in the French windows of my cottage next to the Candlestick telephone that has also been dated to 1924. It works too, connected by a long wire to the (much bigger) house next door. A wooden bell box on the wall has the bell and a handle to turn to ring the bell in next doors telephone, an old Bakelite one. Power is by two large 6v batteries under my table. Not connected to the exchange line, I don’t have one, too poor. I love old technology items, telephones, wirelesses, typewriters, cameras and model railways. British is best.

    ReplyDelete
  26. Hi. I have the good companion model T serial number 20273 are you able to advise on the circa please.

    ReplyDelete
  27. Hello,


    I have a Imperial The Good Companion Model T typewriter. It is in a nice and worked fine, but I have a problem. The carriage return stoped rolling the plate. On the left side there is a line height setting (No 2), which is connected to a stepper (No 3). (Sorry my english, this is not my mother tongue and I do not really talk about this kind of topic.). This stepper have stopped moved back to its position after the carriage return. There is a spiral spring (No 3) inside, which I have not noticed before but somehow it is not looking right. It is just moving around. So I think this spring broken or moved out from the right position.
    I have taken out the platen, to have a look, and I made a picture https://sajozsattilahome.files.wordpress.com/2020/11/img_0658.png

    It looks like you are know a lot about these machine , so I have thought probably you have idea if it is broken or not. If not, do you have any sans a picture what is the right position? If broken, do you know where I can get a replacement, or at least how is looking a right one?

    ReplyDelete
  28. Hello. I have an imperial good companion typewriter with George V crest on the casing. Original box with wire brush. It has a serial number BV963. I am having trouble dating the machine. Could you possibly help?

    ReplyDelete
  29. Goodness me, Jane, have you actually read the post? The date is right there in black and white: 1938

    ReplyDelete
  30. Great post! I just bought a companion 5 unfortunately the drawband is detached and I was wondering if was possible to post a picture of the attachment since I haven't figured out yet where and how was secured. Thanks in advance

    ReplyDelete
  31. Hello, my father has an old imperial typewriter in the garage and we are trying to identify the year and model number - there seems to be no serial number, can anyone help?
    Images can be seen at:
    https://imgur.com/a/e7kzEBx
    Thank you in advance!
    Claire

    ReplyDelete
  32. Thank you for your very helpful information on Imperial Good Companion Model T typewriters - l have recently purchased one myself and it has a original company invoice dated November 1944 and citing a typewriter serial number of “2X 079” however l cannot seem to locate any confirmation of this as an accurate verification of this being the correct serial number which leaves me to question whether l have been sold a typewriter with the correct box cover? Could you please confirm ? Kind regards and thanks Richard Polkinghorn (richardpolkinghorn@yahoo.Com.au)

    ReplyDelete

I do not accept anonymous comments.
I only allow comments under User IDs provided I know who that person is.
Do not ask me to evaluate typewriters.
Comments must be relevant to the post.
As the author of these posts, I make the decisions about what they contain - it is not open to discussion.