Grrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr. My lifelong ambition of restoring a Linotype machine just slipped through my fingers. For months I have been in conversation with a guy in Medicine Hat who owns one that has been in storage for 20+ years. He wanted to sell it as the museum that originally wanted it no longer does. I think he was close to selling it to me, but with the pandemic I suspect lots of guys wanting a long term restoration hobby are now forcing prices of things up. Someone offered him way more than I could pay.
I was SOOOO close. There was even a slim chance the machine could have belonged to my uncles’s print shop in Lethbridge as I know at least one of his machines ended up in Medicine Hat in the 1980’s. There were only a handful of them in Alberta left.
The machines revolutionized printing around the globe, but took a machinist to keep them running. All the old guys who worked in my uncle’s shop in Lethbridge until it closed in the 1980s were hobby machinists as well as printers. Linotypes have been called the 8th Wonder of the World and the “most complicated machine ever built.” Each machine had its own lead furnace built into it.
On the practical side I had no place to work on it. I would have had to build a illegal shed in the backyard to store and work on it. I’d been acquiring manuals and restoration materials for ages in hope that I would one day get my hands on one.
As sad as I am over this, it may be one of those childhood dreams best left unfulfilled. If ever there were a metal restoration project that looked like fun to me, this was it.
Oh well. At least someone made a movie out of it for iTunes before they disappeared altogether. Here’s the trailer:
I was SOOOO close. There was even a slim chance the machine could have belonged to my uncles’s print shop in Lethbridge as I know at least one of his machines ended up in Medicine Hat in the 1980’s. There were only a handful of them in Alberta left.
The machines revolutionized printing around the globe, but took a machinist to keep them running. All the old guys who worked in my uncle’s shop in Lethbridge until it closed in the 1980s were hobby machinists as well as printers. Linotypes have been called the 8th Wonder of the World and the “most complicated machine ever built.” Each machine had its own lead furnace built into it.
On the practical side I had no place to work on it. I would have had to build a illegal shed in the backyard to store and work on it. I’d been acquiring manuals and restoration materials for ages in hope that I would one day get my hands on one.
As sad as I am over this, it may be one of those childhood dreams best left unfulfilled. If ever there were a metal restoration project that looked like fun to me, this was it.
Oh well. At least someone made a movie out of it for iTunes before they disappeared altogether. Here’s the trailer: