On 1/16/2014 4:45 AM, Rob H. wrote:
> I need some help with 3080 and 3082 in this set:
>
> http://55tools.blogspot.com/
>
> Larger images:
>
> http://imgur.com/a/P1BKy
>
>
> Rob
>
Posting from my desk top PC, as always.
3079, early ammusement park game, or maybe a fire signalling telegraph
from the days of fire boxes.
3080, no clue. Maybe spotting scope for fire watch tower?
3081, I may have seen one before, but can't place this one.
3082, look like a tool a marine merchant might carry.
3083, scale for very tall babies?
3084, meat cutter's pogo stick
--
.
Christopher A. Young
Learn about Jesus
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.
Rob H. <[email protected]> fired this volley in
news:[email protected]:
> I need some help with 3080 and 3082 in this set:
>
> http://55tools.blogspot.com/
>
3079 is an annunciator/call panel. Maybe for a ship. Lights indicate
who's calling, pushbuttons enable you to call them. THEN, you pick up
the phone at your station, which is often a party-line, so that's why the
lights.
3080...
3081 Sure looks like the hub of a two-bladed aircraft propeller.
3082...
3083 a thickness gauge for hot stock... maybe for sheet metal coming out
of a roller mill. The 'cup' affair contains a watch spring. The dial is
screwed out against the spring ALL the way, then locked with the detent.
It's thrust over the edge of the work, then the remote draw handle is
pulled to release the detent. The gauge screws itself down to the work
with the watch spring. The the gauge is again locked by the detent, and
withdrawn to read.
3084 looks like an uptown meat tenderizer or ice chipper
Lloyd
William Bagwell <[email protected]> fired this volley in
news:[email protected]:
> Hanging my head in shame for *not* getting that one! Dad was a propeller
> mechanic from WWII until his retirement in the early 80s... Though the
> only two blade fixed prop I was ever around was wooden, and the only
> aluminum ones were variable pitch.
Well, I've never seen one from that particular perspective, but I have a
number of hours PIC single-engine-land. The roots were what gave it away
for me. All the aircraft I've flown but the Stearman had aluminum props.
Most fixed, but three models variable.
Lloyd
3084 I think this is an ice crusher. It looks like it is a nicer
version of one we (posted on the group, and me personally) had here a
few years ago. If I'm right, the handle can slide down on the shaft,
and has a weak return spring. To use it, you drop an ice-cube into a
glass. Then, you push down sharply a few times on the handle. The
inertia of your hand, when the handle bottoms out on the shaft, drives
the hardened spikes into the cube, shattering it. The one I had worked
well and quickly. It also had the minor problem of making small chips
of glass that you could swallow.
On 1/16/2014 4:45 AM, Rob H. wrote:
3083 I'll make the (unhelpful) guess that this is a thickness gauge.
After all, it says gauge on the side.
I speculate that it is spring loaded, so that you can wind up the
pointer, reach with the handle, and pull the trigger to take a
measurement. I'd expect it to be spring loaded so you can remove it
from the test object. It seems to be calibrated in hundredths of an
inch. I have no idea what it is intended to measure, but will guess: wood.
On 1/16/2014 4:45 AM, Rob H. wrote:
In article <[email protected]>, Alexander Thesoso says...
>
>3084 I think this is an ice crusher. It looks like it is a nicer
>version of one we (posted on the group, and me personally) had here a
>few years ago. If I'm right, the handle can slide down on the shaft,
>and has a weak return spring. To use it, you drop an ice-cube into a
>glass. Then, you push down sharply a few times on the handle. The
>inertia of your hand, when the handle bottoms out on the shaft, drives
>the hardened spikes into the cube, shattering it. The one I had worked
>well and quickly. It also had the minor problem of making small chips
>of glass that you could swallow.
Ice crusher is correct, the handle doesn't slide though there is a sleeve around
it that rotates, and through a slot you can see directions for making a number
of
different mixed drinks so it looks like this tool was meant to be used by a
bartender. There is also a bottle opener on the end.
In article <[email protected]>, Alexander Thesoso says...
>
>3083 I'll make the (unhelpful) guess that this is a thickness gauge.
>After all, it says gauge on the side.
>I speculate that it is spring loaded, so that you can wind up the
>pointer, reach with the handle, and pull the trigger to take a
>measurement. I'd expect it to be spring loaded so you can remove it
>from the test object. It seems to be calibrated in hundredths of an
>inch. I have no idea what it is intended to measure, but will guess: wood.
>
>On 1/16/2014 4:45 AM, Rob H. wrote:
>
Nope, it isn't for wood, it was marked as being for paper but it turns out that
is
not correct.
In article <[email protected]>, Alexander Thesoso says...
>
>3079 Wild guess... Annunciator board for an alarm system.
It was made by Western Electric, based on that I don't think it was for alarms.
>3079 is an annunciator/call panel. Maybe for a ship. Lights indicate
>who's calling, pushbuttons enable you to call them. THEN, you pick up
>the phone at your station, which is often a party-line, so that's why the
>lights.
I think you are right about it being for phones but I don't know if it was for a
ship or not.
>3080...
>
>3081 Sure looks like the hub of a two-bladed aircraft propeller.
Correct
>3082...
>
>3083 a thickness gauge for hot stock... maybe for sheet metal coming out
>of a roller mill. The 'cup' affair contains a watch spring. The dial is
>screwed out against the spring ALL the way, then locked with the detent.
>
>It's thrust over the edge of the work, then the remote draw handle is
>pulled to release the detent. The gauge screws itself down to the work
>with the watch spring. The the gauge is again locked by the detent, and
>withdrawn to read.
Good answer, the patent says it's for hot plates in a rolling mill.
>3079 hmm, maybe something similar to this:
>http://www.wackel3d.de/zeigegross.aspx?art=w3d&bild=37fbb574-de3b-4ce1-86fa-
50f8cf32b678
>a signaling board to a) call your butler, and b) keep controll of open doors or
windows. The shown device can be seen in Villa Waldfrieden:
>http://www.wackel3d.de/gallerienliste.aspx?kategorie=a6f1b442-50c6-4906-b04f-
4af9293fbba0&gallerie=874491ef-5900-46d3-bfed-cdbca42a26a6
>
>greetings from germany
>Chris
Thanks for posting the links, it is similar but it's hard to say for sure, below
is a link to a close-up of the box, I didn't realize until now that two of the
lights are red. If we could figure out the abbreviations that would help but I'm
having no luck so far.
http://i.imgur.com/9FhR2Ll.jpg
Someone suggested that this wooden item (3082) is a wine bottle holder/pourer, I
think that this is correct. I couldn't find one just like it but there are some
similar ones here:
https://www.google.com/search?
q=wine+bottle+holder+pourer+wood&safe=off&espv=210&es_sm=93&source=lnms&tbm=isch&s
a=X&ei=DWvZUrOKEOm0yAGb_YCADg&ved=0CAkQ_AUoAQ&biw=1440&bih=784
On 16 Jan 2014 10:33:24 -0800, Rob H. <[email protected]> wrote:
>>3081 Sure looks like the hub of a two-bladed aircraft propeller.
>
>Correct
Hanging my head in shame for *not* getting that one! Dad was a propeller
mechanic from WWII until his retirement in the early 80s... Though the
only two blade fixed prop I was ever around was wooden, and the only
aluminum ones were variable pitch.
--
William
On 2014-01-16, Rob H <[email protected]> wrote:
> I need some help with 3080 and 3082 in this set:
>
> http://55tools.blogspot.com/
>
> Larger images:
>
> http://imgur.com/a/P1BKy
Posting from usenet newsgroup rec.crafts.metalworking as always.
3079) At first glance, it looks like an old telephone switchboard
such as would be used at say a police station.
*But* -- it does not have jacks, or other provisions for making
connections between the different stations, so it is likely more
a signaling device. Either push buttons to sound buzzers in
various offices, or lights to signal that someone in the offices
has pressed a button, needing service.
It looks as though the bottom left-hand and bottom right-hand
devices are rotary switches -- perhaps to signal everyone, or to
turn on or off buzzers or the like.
3080) Hmm ... lever A likely moves a screw part way into the 'C'
frame -- but it may not move enough to become visible. Or
perhaps it retracts one to allow disconnecting something which I
think slides onto the cylindrical part pointing away in the
first photo.
Or does it perhaps withdraw the click stop allowing free
swinging of the lever?
The function of B and C are obviously to move a precise distance
relative to the frame, and the pin to allow the whole thing to
be tilted relative to the adjustment frame -- but *why* is not
clear.
3081) "Everyone has seen"? Perhaps not often from this side?
It could be something like a hub for a larger vehicle (eight lug
nuts if so),
Or perhaps part of the manifold for a really large carburetor?
Or The injection end for a fairly large rotary lawn sprinkler.
Too large to be an agitator in a washing machine -- either
clothes or dish -- at least not for home use.
Hub of a propeller -- with the apertures used to feed in
hydraulic fluid to change the pitch of the propeller blades,
and/or to expand de-icing boots on the blades. That would
indeed be something that not many younger people have seen
(since the dominance of jets for passenger aircraft.
3082) Hmm ... something like an automatic brake on a sliding rope
or cable? If the cable were threaded through the bobbin, and
then the lever were pressed down to allow it to be threaded
through the U-shaped hasp, rope sliding from upper-left to lower
right would release the hasp and lever when the end passes the
hasp, and that would clamp down on the rope -- though it would
resist more strongly going in the other direction. And is the
bobbin actually wood? Not really strong enough for this kind of
task, I would think.
3083) Aside from the parallel-jaw wood clamp holding it, I think
that the device is for measuring he thickness of something like
sheet metal -- looks like up to 1/4", and down to thinner than
1/64". The alternate markings are some gauge -- not the usual
where the smaller the number the larger the size, but rather the
inverse of that. Certainly not metric units, as you would have
25.4 mm per inch -- not 26 per 1/4"
There is presumably a spring under the plate which rotates it in
the direction of closed (smaller) when the trigger is pulled.
At a guess, I would say that either the workpiece is moving, or
it is too hot to approach with a normal micrometer.
The pointer is set to the desired thickness, so you have an idea
whether you are close to the right setting without having to
pull the dial close enough to read. Probably it would be set to
either point to the stop plate operated by the trigger, or the
ridge out the other side, depending.
I guess not for really hot material, because the operator would
have to pull it back and rotate the dial to re-cock it.
3084) Two possibilities come to mind:
a) For measuring hardness of wood or something similar,
with the narrow window barely visible in the handle a
gauge as to how much pressure is being applied.
b) Injection into meat or something similar (if those tips are
hollow), in which case the window would indicate the
amount injected.
Now to post and see what others have suggested.
Enjoy,
DoN.
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