What Is This Mysterious Antique Metal Thing At A Thrift Store And This Oval Apparatus With Spike?
HTML-код
- Опубликовано: 12 июн 2024
- What Is This Mysterious Antique Metal Thing At A Thrift Store And This Oval Apparatus With Spike?
Please Don't Forget To Like, Subscribe And Press The Bell Button To Get A Notification Whenever We Have A New Video.
Make Life Fun!
Music by:
MUSIC4VIDEO: bit.ly/2Ep1LVb
Pictures by:
Joaquim Alves Gaspar, CC BY-SA 3.0 creativecommons.org/licenses/b..., via Wikimedia Commons
Sam Sailor, CC BY-SA 4.0 creativecommons.org/licenses/..., via Wikimedia Commons
HeatherFSmith, CC BY-SA 3.0 creativecommons.org/licenses/..., via Wikimedia Commons
Hunini, CC BY-SA 4.0 creativecommons.org/licenses/..., via Wikimedia Commons
Tim Felce (Airwolfhound), CC BY-SA 2.0 creativecommons.org/licenses/..., via Wikimedia Commons
Photo: Corporal Scott Robertson/MOD, OGL v1.0OGL v1.0, via Wikimedia Commons
Airwolfhound, CC BY-SA 2.0 creativecommons.org/licenses/..., via Wikimedia Commons
Auckland Museum, CC BY 4.0 creativecommons.org/licenses/..., via Wikimedia Commons
#viral
#viralvideo
#viralshorts
#video
#reels
#education
#knowledge
#facts
#history
#learning
#funny
#funnyvideo
#shorts
#short
#shortvideo
#trending
#trendingshorts Развлечения
Last item is a laboratory still. It attaches to a condenser to make various distillates, such as distilled water.
Might be, although the tilting mechanism does suggest that atleast one function is decantering liquid part from solids/heavier fraction.
@@anonplayer8529 Just watch... it'll be for measuring syrup for soda jerks 100+ years ago🤣🤣🤣
The "K" and stretched hexagon on the last item are trademarks of the Kimble glass company and were used on items made from "Kimax", Kimble's trademarked borosilicate glass (very similar to Corning glass's "Pyrex"). Not sure what it was used for, beyond delivering a measured dose of some reagent - tip the bottle to fill the side arm to the line and then open the stopcock to deliver the reagent solution to whatever was being tested.
I knew the item at 4:59 was a part for a helicopters tail rotor just as i saw it 😁.
As soon as I saw the spike in the first object, I figured out what it was. My mother had some 'baking nails' (aluminum spikes patterned after ten-penny nails) that she used when baking potatoes. The potatoes cooked faster because the nails allowed them cook from the inside out as well as from the outside in. I think I still have them, more from nostalgia than anything else.
I also recognized the hanging clipboard item, as I've seen similar ones occasionally.
But wow, sixty minutes on the stove top... that's a long time for one potato.
And if you don't have 'baking nails' just use basic metal meat skewers. That's what I've used for donkey's years.
I always stick an all metal knife in my spuds when backing
My mom hated throwing anything away... I still have the original packing the tater spikes came in.
Also somewhere she had a kitchen gadget I think I've seen here that was a basket to melt butter over cobs of corn... a bit of a pain but I'd love to find it again and try it to coat freshly baked bread sticks with butter.
I guessed the potato cooker - it seemed obvious to me. Also the Bayonets on the Soldiers. I have 2 of those Lee Enfield Spike Bayonets here.
I wish I had that piece of the helicopter tail finnestron. I would carefully clean it but preserve the "danger" letters and damage. I would put a mirror in the round part and make it into wall art! Very cool, especially since he said it was big but not heavy.
I got the one that's meant to hold loose leaf papers on a clipboard. 😊
Yep, if you are old, you recognize the spikes to be sort of similar as in those awkward binders with that spring loaded mechanism that pinched your fingers everytime you closed it. Nowadays brats have trouble to understand the concept of writing on paper.😅
There was a punch that you could buy to make holes or you could use an adjustable punch. I worked at an print shop where I used these to hang work orders on as jobs progressed through the shop to completion. As orders were picked up or delivered the order would then come off and go to a file box. Worked great. I think you can still get these.?
I worked in print shops in the 80s and 90s, I remember we had a handpunch with two holes at the top of the page, it was always called an ACCO punch, which was inaccurate because ACCO was the brand name, not the actual standard.
Their two hole standard punch was the most popular, so "ACCO" became synonymous with two-holed, top of page standard punch. It's like how "Jello" became synonymous with "gelatine", "BandAids" for "bandages".
We didn't use the punch very much, it was usually faster and easier to use the drill press that could drill holes through big stacks of paper.
I bake my potatoes with a 8" so gutter nail, works on any size potato. As for nutrients, cooking doesn't matter with potatoes, if you like you can get a resin potato pot or put the potatoes in a bag with olive oil or plain vegetable oil, then let the sit for a while at room temp, drain and bake, the oil seals the skin and gives you a richer potato flavor.😮😊❤
Thanks for the great show.
We've got taters around here that are 7-8-9+ inches long and proportional... might need two spikes from the gutter.
5:09 Too bad the person arrived in that spot too early in the growing season. It looks like those vines would produce a lot of wild black raspberries!
I got the collar and cuff box right. I had seen a few years back a documentary on clothing of different era and just happened to remember they used pretty decorated boxes to help protect and keep the shape. Also they used nice hat boxes for men’s dress hats as well as women’s hats.
re the last item, it does look like some form of lab equipment, and the K marking could possibly be the chemical symbol for potasium?
Last item could be a dispensing device for acids or strong bases.
Re: 3:05 He forgot to say the star wire is for putting pots on while cooking, so the food won't burn. Have no idea why it would be in the box lol.
#1 Ostrich egg cooker.
👁👁 always a pleasure
Amazing how you always seem to be in in the right place to find all this old rubbish!! Haha only joking, love your videos, thank you, greetings from the UK, be lucky
Glad you enjoyed!
♥♥♥♥
That gazelle tail looks like it is laying in poison ivy.... just saying.
Final item is a spittoon and distiller once full with discarded saliva, it was then heated, sugar added and the spit was distilled into liquor.
Is the last object some form of milk / cream separator? It reminds me of a weird looking lab separatory funnel
The second one was obvious as was the bayonet frog.
what the heck is a bayonet frog? Why is it called a frog? I saw nothing that looked like a frog so i'm confused.
@@Marialla. The closures often found on Asian-style jackets with decorative braiding. There's a little knot on one side which pushes into a little loop on the other to hold the sides together. I guess this device is called a frog because it has the shiny brass knob which slips into the slot you see hanging from the soldier's belts.
@@Marialla. its the webbing on the belt for hanging the scabbard from,,, :)
@@Marialla. this is what I found on line, so probably true, but,,, :)
Frog is derived from the Middle English frogge and from Old English frogga. It is a loop fastened to a belt to hold a tool or weapon. A very ancient word that goes back before the invention of the bayonette.
I'm familiar with "frog" as a sewing/tailoring term. Frog closures, also known as frog knots, Chinese frog closures, or decorative toggles, are a type of ornamental braiding closure used in sewing to fasten the front of garments. They consist of a button or knot and a loop that the button passes through.
They were first used in ancient China, but frog closures were very popularly used on 17th century military uniforms. They were really into the fancy brocades and braids and tassels and more frou-frou.