What Is This Mysterious Rectangular Ceramic Container And Orange Metal Tube With Parachute Inside?
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- Опубликовано: 1 авг 2023
- What Is This Rectangular Ceramic Container With A Handle And This Orange Metal Tube With Parachute Inside?
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The last thing is a drum stick. The brass cap with a square hole is for tightening the drum head screws.
Wow I had always wondered where they kept the dial tones when they weren't in use ...now I know ;-)
The "Silent Butler" was made in post-WW2 Japan for "Arnart Creations, New York".
Last item looks like a drumstick with a drum key built into it.
👁👁 brilliant… 9:13
The wooden object described as a fishnet tool could also be a weaving shuttle
just acquired a 'silent butler' myself. My grandmother has one and we made good use of it back in the day when almost everyone smoked. No smokers here but still very handy. I use mine for my keys, phone, coins, lipstick....
Re: Silent butler. My aunt married in the late twenties, early thirties and was given one shaped like a crab.
I think thats a drumstick for a "photoplayer"
They were basically player pianos with extra instruments and sound effects for silent movies.
At 8:26 my guess a drumstick, or a pointer for chalkboard?
My parents kept a cast aluminum silent butler on our bookcase. We used it to hold everything but ashes.
The nitrogen bottles may need some explanation, please allow me. I spent over 4 decades in that industry. Old underground telecom cables were originally 'lead sheathed', meaning the outer layer was lead, inside was wrapped with a thick layer of paper around inner bundles of paper insulated 'pairs' of wires of 25. Later on lead started to be replaced with plastic sheathing. Other that these were basically hollow. If water seeped into these cables all that paper would short out the entire toll cable (large, important cables). To prevent this, at the CO (Central Office) was a air pressure unit that continually pumped dried air through those cables. That way the pressure inside them was greater than the outside pressure. This prevented leaks under ground or inside of manholes, which would fill with water.
Over time, due to damage, weak splice joints etc, those cables would leak. It caused great problems in the old PSTN world. In order to help lessen this damage those nitrogen bottles would be placed along the route to increase that pressure.
Nowadays, most of those old cables have been AIP, or 'abandoned in place'. Due to fiber optic tech and VoIP.
Long winded explaintaion I'm sure. But it was what I loved for 45 years.
I'm having fun trying to guess what these items are. Sometimes I know outright, like the silent butler (though I've never seen one with plates included before), and sometimes I'm able to deduce what an item is.
The idea of the elephant thingies briefly flashed through my mind. Glad to know I was correct.
Love the lineman's quip about the bottles storing the dial tone!!
2:58 One possiibility could be a very worn out lace makers bobbin.
That square thing, mom had a round one!! Silent butler, you use it for emptying the ashtrays in the house.
I dont think thats from a V1 rocket, the writing is English.
I wondered about that.
I say screw driver with female instead of male and my husband says something to do with a sewing machine.