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« Restoring an SP-20 (i.e. hunting for parts)
SP-15 Ink Drum Issue »

Hacker No. 4 Proof Press

Posted April 19, 2009 by John Jenkins   1,219 views    6 Comments    Print Print   

Does anyone know of any surviving examples of the Hacker No. 4 proof press, as pictured in the “Other Brands” link – in museums, private collections, or in use? Thanks, John

Post Details

    Post Title: Hacker No. 4 Proof Press
    Author: John Jenkins
    Filed As: Hacker
    Tags: Hacker No. 4


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SP-15 Ink Drum Issue »

6 comments have been posted on “Hacker No. 4 Proof Press”.

  1. Paul Moxon, Moderator commented:
    September 23, 2009 at 12:21 pm

    Thanks Casey. Funny how, they keep popping up. It seems like every month I hear of another press in a barn or basement.

  2. Casey McGarr commented:
    September 21, 2009 at 11:30 am

    I met with a friend this weekend and she said the University of Dallas has a Vandercook 17 and a Hacker Press I’m going to meet with the gentleman that teaches there and will report back here what I find.

    Casey
    iLP

  3. Paul Moxon, Moderator commented:
    April 20, 2009 at 4:54 pm

    It took more effort because it had a reciprocating bed and stationary carriage like an etching press.

  4. Eric Holub commented:
    April 20, 2009 at 10:39 am

    Well, my Hacker didn’t have all the features you see in the pictures, nor on the later Hackers I’ve seen; it looked like a Challenge/Potter with simple pedestal base, fixed headstops (they could be shimmed for slight adjustements), and gripper fingers over the packing. Still, it had a Horace Hacker plate on it, stamped No. 4.
    There was some problem with the inking system (it seized up regularly), so I inked by hand. But the impression was good, perhaps better than the SP-20 that replaced this Hacker. And it was great for a small basement shop, since it had a small at-rest footprint.
    The cranking motion was also harder than a Vandercook. As I recall it 25 years later, the crank did not drive the cylinder directly. Instead, the handle pushed on a radial coil spring, and when that tightened, then the cylinder moved. A bit of body english was needed to start and especially stop the cylinder.

  5. John Jenkins commented:
    April 19, 2009 at 9:47 pm

    Thanks Eric,
    It must be disappointing that your donated Hacker proof press disappeared. Maybe it will turn up again someday. The No. 4 is a good looking proof press – was it good to print on?

  6. Eric Holub commented:
    April 19, 2009 at 12:48 pm

    I know of three no. 4 Hackers, one in use at a fine press in Santa Cruz, one in storage in the South Bay Area, and another that has moved to somewhere in the Northwest. There is also a larger power Hacker at a fine press in Berkeley.
    I had an earlier version of the Hacker no. 4 (17×22 sheet size, not 18×24) and donated it to a local art school when I got my first Vandercook in 1984. That school has no idea what happened to the press, but it isn’t there any more.

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