I remember cruising in my challenger listening to Steely Dan on my modern high tech in-dash 8- Track player lol they would change tracks in the middle of the song and pick up where it left off, good times!!
I remember back in the day, when discarded 8 Track carts were a common sight in the street. Thrown out the window in rage because it stopped playing. Only to be run over by some bias ply tires, and shattered. Freeing the formerly jammed tape to spill off its reel, magnetic tape blowing out to scores of feet long tendrils reaching out to get tangled in what it could find.
Scythes benefited from the hammering in a process know as work hardening. The steel used for these tools was quite low in carbon, allowing them to be straightened if they should bend. Since the tool might encounter rocks and other hard things, low carbon steel was used as it will bend, high carbon steel would chip or crack.
I wanted to let you know that I appreciate the additional information that you provide about an object. I didn't know most of the history regarding the condom. I find it fascinating that a law was passed against them.
Recognised the "tailor tacker" at 4:05 immediately - I still have the same one (though mine is red) that belonged to my Nan; and I used it in the past when making shirts.
Commercial radio stations used 8-track cartridges for pre-recorded advertisements. The cartridges could be inserted against the play head by the D.J. at the scheduled time with no need for cueing up.
I worked in record stores in the '80's, and we sold and repaired 8-tracks. That loop led to a tightening of the tape to the point they wouldn't play any more. We would open the cartridge, cut the tape, loosen it up, and then re-splice it back together...for $2. They were created by Lear to store autopilot destination directions for Lear jets, until someone realized you could put music on them, instead of just computer tones. I still have a Radio Shack 'Realistic' 8-track home unit, and a few old tapes that belonged to my mother. Does anybody remember the Elcaset? It was like a cassette tape, but worked more like a VHS type tape, where the tape was moved to the head, rather than the head moving to the tape. It was short lived.
The last item looks like a roaster. In the 1930's a man would come by the family lumber mill with one. In the morning he sold freshly roasted coffee. In the afternoon he sold freshly roasted peanuts (same roaster). My father said it was the best coffee he ever had !
You're all wrong. This is D3 T0x, who is the great, great...great grand nephew of R2D2, from a branch of the family who moved away and fell on hard times.
I am a retired A&P aircraft mechanic. The glass vial with the ball is from a aircraft turn and bank indicator. I keep one in my tool box to show and explain to pilots how to get the little air bubble out, you perform an un-coordinated turn and the bubble rises into the part of the glass that rises off one end and is captured there until another very un-coordinated turn is made.
This is also occasionally called a "ball bank indicator" because of the ball. Without the turn indicator, it can be used to measure the neutral (non-skidding) vehicle speed of a curved road or highway exit ramp.
I thought so. In England we used to have a chain of coffee shops, that roasted their own coffees. It used to be vented in the street, and there was one bus stop that was right next to one of these loose coffee and tea shops. I love roasting my own beans, preferably over a wood fire.
@@hackbritton3233 I think it would've had a small steam engine driving it. There was an old tea and coffee shop in the older part of my town that had a similar device, driven by an old small steam engine. When that broke, they repaired it with one of those Westinghouse one third horsepower electric motor. I now feel old, also I knew what the 8-Track was, and I own an eight track player! I've a copy of The Beatles, White Album on 8-Track! Endless versions of Van The Man's classic seventies albums. Sometimes I drown in my memories.
Knew the 8-track tape right away. Never had them, which is just as well, as they died out rather quickly. Cassette tapes were more popular and lasted longer.
My College house mate had an 8 track recorder. Pre recorded 8 tracks faded out as they switched channels, then faded in again. It took 10 - 20 seconds and ruined your enjoyment of that particular song. W a self recorded 8 track, there was a click that hardly mattered at all. I don't know why that wasn't the standard. They were primarily used in cars so you had a lot of noises going on anyway.
Wow, I knew them all except the coffee carafe lid. That almost never happens. On the bank the design makes it so that you _can't_ open the bank until its full. The idea was to encourage saving by making you have to fill the bank before you could get any money you'd already put in back out. Parents would sometimes give them to kids with a few coins already inside but the kid would have to fill the bank before they could get those coins. Mom and Dad tried that with me but I figured out washers work just as well so long as you put a real coin on the top for the screw to push against ;) Last item I'm sure is a coffee roaster, as others have said.
I knew what the Taylor tack was for but not the name . My grandma used chalk to mark her patterns all the time. I loved watching her sew and taking what looked like just scraps of fabric and turn it into clothing. Memories.
Amazing how quickly something that was ubiquitous at one time can be totally baffling to someone a generation or so later. 8-track tapes were very common in my youth, now they’re just a weird, useless object.
My son was about 12 when he found an old 35mm film roll and was totally baffled by my explanation. He was born in 1999. In just a decade, "ubiquitous " had become an unknown, historical novelty. It was the first time I understood my own mortality too!
When I was in the German Air Force in 1963 every plane had one of these, it was called a "Turn and Bank Indicator" . When you where flying a coordinated turn the ball stayed in the middle, when the ball was sliding up or down you where sliding out of the coordinated turn and the rule to correct it was to step on the ball as far I remember. I might be wrong, since it was over 60 years ago since I was in flight school.
the last item i would say is a coffee or nut roaster, the large wheel on the right is to attach to a motive power source (treadle, bicycle, or engine/electric motor) to automate the tumbling of the inner drum.
I am surprised that the 8 track tape was not recognized. I had a player in my bed room and art studio for at least 8 or 9 years growing up and in college. Then came cassettes. Finally back to records. I skipped all the mp3 and such. I do like spotify.
I feel old. 8 tracks are before my time but I was aware of them growing up. I remember seeing them at thrift stores as a kid and I think an uncle had one in his car.
WATE A SECOND , 8-TRACKS WERE POPULAR BECAUSE YOU COULD NOW TAKE YOUR MUSIC MOBILE ! ! ! A RECORD PLAYER IN THE CAR OR CAMPING ECT. WAS NOT AN OPTION !
Blank 8-track cartridges were readily available, and recorders to use them in were also very available. They however, WERE less common than the play-only units.
I've head it answered before as, click on OutlookDaily's name here and there are links or e-mail, never tried it myself but I have an item of curiosity too.
Click on More.. in the description section under the video then click on 'About' near the bottom of that expanded bit. Click on the ...more link in the channel description to get to the About popup. Click on email address and jump through the couple of 'I am not a robot' tests to get the email address.
Ahh, the ignorance of youth. " What the HELL is this cassette thing?" ROTFLMAOAOTP....... Kids. I agree with some of the other commenters below about them jamming & breaking, switching tracks in the middle of a song. Also slowly fading out & in for no apparent reason. The tapes were bulky and difficult to transport. I had a 8 track player that looked like an old dynamite charging device with the plunger handle. If memory serves, it was red. I also remember as a kid walking between points A & B seeing the tape cartridges on the side of the road because people just tossed them out the car windows because of the above mentioned problems.
I kind of wonder if some items are a bit of a set up, besides the story is that he was mud larking, and may have had tons of other stuff to look through, so just started posting questions without looking anything up.
@@Ferd414 😂 Please dont show them my childhood rotary phone that was hanging up in the kitchen wall with a 20 foot long cord on it... They would freak out.... LOL
Wanna feel old really quickly? Have someone ask you to identify an 8-track tape. 👵🏻🤦🏻♀️🤣
I never liked 8-tracks. They alway had a habit of jamming and breaking.
@@susanwahl6322 And cutting off mid song for the track change.
I remember cruising in my challenger listening to Steely Dan on my modern high tech in-dash 8- Track player lol they would change tracks in the middle of the song and pick up where it left off, good times!!
@@jim1407 Pink Floyd Shine On had a few extra parts.
@@Ron-d2s Hell yeah!!
"What's this? Eight track tape..that was adorable😅
True I feel old when I knew what that 8- track was but just show a kid a floppy disc and draw a blank also. Peace love & stardust. TomCat
Show them an 8" disk and they're really confused.
I remember back in the day, when discarded 8 Track carts were a common sight in the street. Thrown out the window in rage because it stopped playing. Only to be run over by some bias ply tires, and shattered. Freeing the formerly jammed tape to spill off its reel, magnetic tape blowing out to scores of feet long tendrils reaching out to get tangled in what it could find.
Scythes benefited from the hammering in a process know as work hardening.
The steel used for these tools was quite low in carbon, allowing them to be straightened if they should bend.
Since the tool might encounter rocks and other hard things, low carbon steel was used as it will bend, high carbon steel would chip or crack.
So sorry to hear they can cry lol
I wanted to let you know that I appreciate the additional information that you provide about an object. I didn't know most of the history regarding the condom. I find it fascinating that a law was passed against them.
8 track tapes. Watched them come and go. It's amazing the technologies that have evolved and died 😢out. God , I feel old .
Recognised the "tailor tacker" at 4:05 immediately - I still have the same one (though mine is red) that belonged to my Nan; and I used it in the past when making shirts.
Commercial radio stations used 8-track cartridges for pre-recorded advertisements. The cartridges could be inserted against the play head by the D.J. at the scheduled time with no need for cueing up.
6:50 Damn, I better sit down. I suddenly feel VERY old.
I worked in record stores in the '80's, and we sold and repaired 8-tracks. That loop led to a tightening of the tape to the point they wouldn't play any more. We would open the cartridge, cut the tape, loosen it up, and then re-splice it back together...for $2. They were created by Lear to store autopilot destination directions for Lear jets, until someone realized you could put music on them, instead of just computer tones. I still have a Radio Shack 'Realistic' 8-track home unit, and a few old tapes that belonged to my mother. Does anybody remember the Elcaset? It was like a cassette tape, but worked more like a VHS type tape, where the tape was moved to the head, rather than the head moving to the tape. It was short lived.
I repaired 8 track cartridges in the 80s as a side hustle.
Fond memories
The last item looks like a roaster. In the 1930's a man would come by the family lumber mill with one. In the morning he sold freshly roasted coffee. In the afternoon he sold freshly roasted peanuts (same roaster). My father said it was the best coffee he ever had !
There was a brand of coffee called "Chock full o nuts" or something I thought, might be the same process.
@@davidsauls9542 the crank also indicates a built-in manual grinder.
@@Ron-d2s that was the name of the store that the company sprang from. Originally sold nuts, added coffee, then got out of the nut business
@@terryenglish7132 cool TY.
You're all wrong. This is D3 T0x, who is the great, great...great grand nephew of R2D2, from a branch of the family who moved away and fell on hard times.
I thought the cigarette box dispenser was for reusing grocery bags. It COULD be re purposed for that!
The cigarette dispenser was around long before plastic grocery bags.
Was probably a high school woodshop project.
Did not know what an 8-track was had me ROTFLMAO. Then I guess I am getting old.
SAME.
“Condom production ballooned…” 😂
Selected Tested, tough occupation, leaves some discrepancy on the quality control though, does not leak, empty, wash, package, approved, mount next.😅
I am a retired A&P aircraft mechanic. The glass vial with the ball is from a aircraft turn and bank indicator. I keep one in my tool box to show and explain to pilots how to get the little air bubble out, you perform an un-coordinated turn and the bubble rises into the part of the glass that rises off one end and is captured there until another very un-coordinated turn is made.
This is also occasionally called a "ball bank indicator" because of the ball. Without the turn indicator, it can be used to measure the neutral (non-skidding) vehicle speed of a curved road or highway exit ramp.
Last item = coffee roaster
I was thinking that. Or nut roaster.
I was hoping for early popcorn popper.
I was thinking a roaster of some kind but didn't think of coffee.
I thought so. In England we used to have a chain of coffee shops, that roasted their own coffees. It used to be vented in the street, and there was one bus stop that was right next to one of these loose coffee and tea shops. I love roasting my own beans, preferably over a wood fire.
@@hackbritton3233 I think it would've had a small steam engine driving it. There was an old tea and coffee shop in the older part of my town that had a similar device, driven by an old small steam engine. When that broke, they repaired it with one of those Westinghouse one third horsepower electric motor. I now feel old, also I knew what the 8-Track was, and I own an eight track player! I've a copy of The Beatles, White Album on 8-Track! Endless versions of Van The Man's classic seventies albums. Sometimes I drown in my memories.
Knew the 8-track tape right away. Never had them, which is just as well, as they died out rather quickly. Cassette tapes were more popular and lasted longer.
And you didn't need a player the size of a window air con unit...
I really enjoy the history you give of these objects. Your explanations make each object more interesting. Love the Merry Maid history! Thanks!
Glad you like them!
At barbers in my youth, "Something for the weekend, sir?"
My College house mate had an 8 track recorder. Pre recorded 8 tracks faded out as they switched channels, then faded in again. It took 10 - 20 seconds and ruined your enjoyment of that particular song. W a self recorded 8 track, there was a click that hardly mattered at all. I don't know why that wasn't the standard. They were primarily used in cars so you had a lot of noises going on anyway.
Wow, I knew them all except the coffee carafe lid. That almost never happens. On the bank the design makes it so that you _can't_ open the bank until its full. The idea was to encourage saving by making you have to fill the bank before you could get any money you'd already put in back out. Parents would sometimes give them to kids with a few coins already inside but the kid would have to fill the bank before they could get those coins. Mom and Dad tried that with me but I figured out washers work just as well so long as you put a real coin on the top for the screw to push against ;) Last item I'm sure is a coffee roaster, as others have said.
I knew what the Taylor tack was for but not the name . My grandma used chalk to mark her patterns all the time. I loved watching her sew and taking what looked like just scraps of fabric and turn it into clothing. Memories.
I still have one. It is great for marking darts.
Amazing how quickly something that was ubiquitous at one time can be totally baffling to someone a generation or so later. 8-track tapes were very common in my youth, now they’re just a weird, useless object.
My son was about 12 when he found an old 35mm film roll and was totally baffled by my explanation. He was born in 1999. In just a decade, "ubiquitous " had become an unknown, historical novelty. It was the first time I understood my own mortality too!
Not useless if you have an 8 Track player!
"What's this shiny round thing that says AOL"
"That is a coaster."
@@danielulz1640 congratulations if you have one!
Slide Rules & Hollerith/Computer Punch cards - from everywhere to no where
When I was in the German Air Force in 1963 every plane had one of these, it was called a "Turn and Bank Indicator" . When you where flying a coordinated turn the ball stayed in the middle, when the ball was sliding up or down you where sliding out of the coordinated turn and the rule to correct it was to step on the ball as far I remember. I might be wrong, since it was over 60 years ago since I was in flight school.
the last item i would say is a coffee or nut roaster, the large wheel on the right is to attach to a motive power source (treadle, bicycle, or engine/electric motor) to automate the tumbling of the inner drum.
it's either a popcorn maker or coffee roaster.
Waiting for someone to ask what's this weird disc looking thing with the letters CD-R on it...
Bottom comes off the coin bank to full a coin roll
I am surprised that the 8 track tape was not recognized. I had a player in my bed room and art studio for at least 8 or 9 years growing up and in college. Then came cassettes. Finally back to records. I skipped all the mp3 and such. I do like spotify.
I feel old. 8 tracks are before my time but I was aware of them growing up. I remember seeing them at thrift stores as a kid and I think an uncle had one in his car.
omg what's an 8 track cartridge? I'm feeling old now
I see I'm not the only one
Last item is a coffee roaster.
I had that very 8 track
=^) I didn't know any of them until the 8 track! But that's ok, I still enjoy your videos.
I still enjoy 8-tracks, Alice Cooper Schools Out!!!!!
Thanks!
My parents still have their 8-tracks and player. The player still works. They also have their 45s and LP records too.
Last item. Coffee or chestnut roaster.
A coffee or chestnut roaster ?
The 8 track had 4 lines of music recorded on the tape. The music was recorded in stereo hence you get 8 tracks=8-track.
Great video, thank you! Actually cool😊
Thanks! 😃
Anybody remember 4 track tapes? Like 8 but mono.
The weird thing with the orb, I'm guessing at a popcorn maker or a coffee roaster.
I am betting that device is a coffee roaster.🤔😁🤔
I'm officially old. I had eight track tapes.
i think the last one might be a chestnut roaster.
The weird thing in Wyoming, looks to me like a coffee roaster.
not sure but i think it is an old school coffee roaster
1:53 After the first item (Merry Widow) I was thinking "Ewwww he is holding it in his bare hands..."
Fortunately I was wrong.
Get me some soup and tell those kids to get off my lawn! I still OWN 8 tracks and a player!
The last item in this video is R2D2's great grandpa.
the last one is imho for roasting green coffee beans
👁👁 Always a pleasure
Thanks always @joniangelsrreal6262!
WATE A SECOND , 8-TRACKS WERE POPULAR BECAUSE YOU COULD NOW TAKE YOUR MUSIC MOBILE ! ! ! A RECORD PLAYER IN THE CAR OR CAMPING ECT. WAS NOT AN OPTION !
the last item is a roaster for coffee beans or nuts
The last item is R2D2's poor cousin.
I am old, and I have never seen an 8 track cartridge.
What’s your definition of OLD then ? Had players tapes and in a Ford new in 1968 first taped music system we had
@@heartland96a I am 64. I think that these were just not a thing in
...looks like a coffee grinder
8 tracks did not have the option of recording, as the narrator said. Also, that kid's father failed in not teaching him what an 8 track was.
Blank 8-track cartridges were readily available, and recorders to use them in were also very available.
They however, WERE less common than the play-only units.
I’ve asked several times: How do you submit something?
I've head it answered before as, click on OutlookDaily's name here and there are links or e-mail, never tried it myself but I have an item of curiosity too.
Click on More.. in the description section under the video then click on 'About' near the bottom of that expanded bit. Click on the ...more link in the channel description to get to the About popup. Click on email address and jump through the couple of 'I am not a robot' tests to get the email address.
I tried before, thx, will try again.
You can send it to us at: flenchcalvin0310@gmail.com.
Last item coffee grinder
Before the 8 track, the actually produced a four track. Same great sound, but only half the music. Short lived.
Ahh, the ignorance of youth. " What the HELL is this cassette thing?" ROTFLMAOAOTP....... Kids. I agree with some of the other commenters below about them jamming & breaking, switching tracks in the middle of a song. Also slowly fading out & in for no apparent reason. The tapes were bulky and difficult to transport. I had a 8 track player that looked like an old dynamite charging device with the plunger handle. If memory serves, it was red. I also remember as a kid walking between points A & B seeing the tape cartridges on the side of the road because people just tossed them out the car windows because of the above mentioned problems.
first one that guy was obviously lazy, as there are loads of results when searching.
I kind of wonder if some items are a bit of a set up, besides the story is that he was mud larking, and may have had tons of other stuff to look through, so just started posting questions without looking anything up.
Really? people don't know what 8-track is?!?
Who in the heck dont know what an 8-track tape is?????
Pretty much anybody under 30.
@@Ferd414 😂 Please dont show them my childhood rotary phone that was hanging up in the kitchen wall with a 20 foot long cord on it... They would freak out.... LOL
@@ShanesHobbyShop Ours was a cream/off-white. What color was yours? :)
@@Ferd414 same
coffee roaster
Final item is a bondage and discipline equipment designed especially for assplay.
I told you 😂😂😂
Wash your hands after picking that up!
Seriously?. Didn't know what an 8-track was?. Wow!. Poor clueless yungins.
The old 8 track tspes...they sucked
Crack pipe 😂😂😂