What's This Mysterious Thing Dad Found Buried In The Yard And This Antique Tool From My Grandfather?
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- Опубликовано: 25 июн 2024
- What's This Mysterious Thing Dad Found Buried In The Yard And This Antique Tool From My Grandfather?
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cc-by-sa/2.0 - © Alan Murray-Rust - geograph.org.uk/p/3408912
cc-by-sa/2.0 - © Alan Murray-Rust - geograph.org.uk/p/3408914
Michael Coghlan from Adelaide, Australia, CC BY-SA 2.0 creativecommons.org/licenses/..., via Wikimedia Commons
Chimney pots by Mick Garratt, CC BY-SA 2.0 creativecommons.org/licenses/..., via Wikimedia Commons
Chimney pots, nos 95-107 North Street, Belfast (February 2016) by Albert Bridge, CC BY-SA 2.0 creativecommons.org/licenses/..., via Wikimedia Commons
Scarborough: cricket fans and chimney pots by John Sutton, CC BY-SA 2.0 creativecommons.org/licenses/..., via Wikimedia Commons
Bundesarchiv, Bild 146-2005-0163 / Tellgmann, Oscar / CC-BY-SA, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons
Bundesarchiv, Bild 101I-768-0147-15 / Friedrich / CC-BY-SA 3.0, CC BY-SA 3.0 DE creativecommons.org/licenses/..., via Wikimedia Commons
Bundesarchiv, Bild 183-H04436 / CC-BY-SA 3.0, CC BY-SA 3.0 DE creativecommons.org/licenses/..., via Wikimedia Commons
Federal Archives, Image 101I-768-0147-15 / Friedrich / CC-BY-SA 3.0, CC BY-SA 3.0 BY creativecommons.org/licenses/..., via Wikimedia Commons
Auckland Museum Collections (CC BY 2.0), www.flickr.com/photos/aucklan...
Photo: Emir Curt / Anno Glomdalsmuseet, Elverum, Norway 2020, CC BY-SA 4.0 creativecommons.org/licenses/..., via Wikimedia Commons
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The last one is a Ruhmkorff coil. Used to create high voltages for early transmitters or science experiments.
4:07 - I was thinking that you were going to say it was a dreidel. I looked it up and the betting game of Put and Take is related to the Jewish game of dreidel. 😊
that was my thought too, if I am not too mistaken the Dreidel game had the same put & take bets. Used by Jewish children (sometimes) against Roman soldiers to garner coins. (? I think)
I thought dreidel as well. Do I get to count it as correct? That would make 2 I got correct. (Got the pocket shrine)
I thought a Dreidel too as it’s shape looks like a small dreidel
If you say yes it counts for me I’ll say the same for you lol, I mean we were so close!
I am a Catholic and thought the pocket shrine was for a priest giving final blessings.
The last object is an Induction Coil for producing high voltages from a lower one. The pointed rod of the spark gap is missing from the top right. This size of induction coil was normally used in lectures or a Laboratory setting. Also I would like to correct the section about Chimney pots, what you have is a chimney pot "Bonnet" that is dropped in the top of a cylindrical chimney pot. If you look closely you can se the stop ring moulding to limit how far it drops into the chimney. It has two main uses first to stop rain dropping down the chimney the other is to stop prevailing wind from blowing down the chimney by placing it side on the the wind.
Oh, I'm familiar with that chain tool. Those old roller chains were still in use on farm equipment in the 60's and 70's and probably still today in places. The usual routine was there would be a chain idler slide that you'd adjust to take up slack as the chain wore or stretched. Then when that reached the end of it's travel you'd take a link out of the chain using that tool, a hammer, and some of your second best swear words, then put the chain back on, adjust the tension with the idler, and be back in business for another year or three. (When a chain broke out in the field was when you used your best swear words).
My friend has two old planters with the chains he still uses.
Year or three. Yeah.
@@chaunceyfeatherstone6209 Well, on average. Depending how much stress was on the chain and how frequently the machine was used. Roller chains didn't tend to be used in high speed or high torque situations so it usually took them a fair while to wear or stretch to the point where you had to take out another link. It also depended on how well the equipment was maintained. I remember oiling those chains daily. With a can of oil and a small paint brush.
@@xlerb2286 Actually, I was just commenting on getting "a year or three" out of ANY piece of equipment. That was our our entire farm fleet: 5 years past year 3! We had two combines with this style of chain in the mid sixties. Fortunately for me, I was young enough not to be concerned about repairing those. But I had my share of mowers, swathers, rakes, balers, etc. Even a gangly old hand-cranked Allis Chalmers, which was handy for raking but you didn't dare stall it or you couldn't start it again before it cooled down completely. Dad did buy a brand new David Brown 990 in '69, and in keeping with the family tradition, I'll be out there tomorrow... Thanks for tripping me down memory lane.
@@chaunceyfeatherstone6209 Oh I hear that. It was a good trip down memory lane for me as well. Yeah, a lot of that equipment had short lifespans. Dad took great care of equipment and we had a smaller farm so we could usually get ~20 years out of most equipment. A lot of beautiful summer days were spent tearing equipment apart to get it ready before harvest.
The last one is a Ruhmkorff coil at stated above. Our teacher used it to demonstrate Geissler tubes. The input voltage is as low as 6V while the output is at several thousand Volts.
A guess on the last object: parts from a elementary transmitter. Large part looks like a coil and could be part of a spark gap on top. I think I have a tool like the John Deere tool somewhere.
It's a spark gap transmitter, normally used for morse code, one of the plates at the top looks to be mising
A small contact 'buzzes' inducing a hign voltage in the secondary coil
Be awarew if you aapply voltage to this, you will get a very high voltage at the top !
The last one is a Ruhmkorf induction coil, an apparatus to produce electrical sparks.
My school had one in their physics collection.
Not true, we have one and it holds toilet paper.
I found this episode to be especially interesting. We have a multipurpose lap sized pinball game from the 1940s which includes put n take. I never knew how to play until now. Interesting history as well.
A locket is a small piece of jewelry that is hinged with a clasping device, a locker is the thing that smells bad in May/June...........
I dunno, I remember our high school locker room smelling bad Sept-May ;)
@@xlerb2286 We didn't keep our janitor in a drum.........🤣😂🤣.................
good thing you weren't there in August!!!!!
Lmao ew socks😊
That style of chimney pot (?) top cut back on downdrafts. I remember the (later version of the) asbestos shingle cutter, nick-named "the pig" because of its shape.
That is an induction coil used to create high voltages like a car ignition coil.
The last item looks like it might be part of a crystal radio. Its an AM radio that uses no electricity.
The last object appears to be a crystal set👍🇦🇺🐈⬛😎
Made my own crystal set as a kid , never worked out how it drew radio waves from the air 😢
I think that last item was Ruhmkoorff coil:)
I would guess the last one to be an early radio receiver.
I knew the asbestoses cutter because I have one.
👁👁 Happy to drop by
Love your videos, your family seem to be and endless source of curios, mine only have a few bits of furniture! Thanks for posting, keep 'em coming and stay lucky
Glad you like them!
Keep in mind by increasing the velocity of the air/smoke going up the chimney also increases the amount of cold air in this case, entering the structure to replace the volume going up the chimney. The volume up to chimney has already been heated so you are wasting heated air.. It would be better if there was an outdoor source of air for the combustion of the product used for heating such as coal..
You're born a century and half late.
@@ryanjohnson3615
If you have a fireplace, a wood burner, a pellet stove just to name a few if you don’t have an outside air source it’s the same thing .
@@ryanjohnson3615
I recently saw an ad for an expensive tent . It had a hole in the bottom with a silicone bushing. I investigated what it was and the manufacturer said it’s an outside air source (for a pipe) for a wood burner inside the tent.. physics, learn it.
♥♥♥♥
Pump handle, branding iron (thumbnail)
?
Last item is a crystal radio.
No suggestions yet for the last object? I'll come back later.
4;10 That is a DREDEL a jewish toy typicaly played at the time of chanuka. usually around the time of christmas. commerates the macabees who revolted aginst rome..
First of all, a dreidel has FOUR sides, not 6. Also, on a dreidel, each side is marked with a letter from the Hebrew alphabet; נ (nun), ג (gimel), ה (hei), ש (shin).
If you don't know what you are talking about, please refrain from posting; otherwise everybody will know that you are an ignoramus.