What is it? LXXX
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463. Knee kicker for installing carpet.
"R.H." wrote in message . .. A new set has been posted: http://puzzlephotos.blogspot.com/ Rob |
R.H. wrote:
A new set has been posted: http://puzzlephotos.blogspot.com/ Rob From Rec.woodworking. 460: Dunno 461: Looks like a spreader / stretcher. For "O" rings? I use a similar tool to spread automotive battery terminals over posts?? 462: Dunno 463: Dunno 464: Compound guillotine. Probably for cutting wire. 465: We used to call those PV's ( or maybe pikes) only ours were about 6' long. Lineman use them to help maneuver poles around. Good for beating back bulls when in the cow pastures. |
460 ?
461 ? 462 ? 463 ?(backscratcher for Sasquatch?) 464 Dehorning shear for cattle. 465 Peavey -- Nahmie The greatest headaches are those we cause ourselves. "R.H." wrote in message . .. A new set has been posted: http://puzzlephotos.blogspot.com/ Rob |
is 461 something for making ice-cream cones?
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461 and 462 - Early OB/GYN speculum and curette
-- Fred R ________________ Drop TROU to email. |
Mark and Kim Smith wrote:
R.H. wrote: A new set has been posted: http://puzzlephotos.blogspot.com/ Rob .... 464: Compound guillotine. Probably for cutting wire. Nope--dehorning shears |
Duane Bozarth wrote:
Mark and Kim Smith wrote: R.H. wrote: A new set has been posted: http://puzzlephotos.blogspot.com/ Rob ... 464: Compound guillotine. Probably for cutting wire. Nope--dehorning shears Okay, works for me! |
R.H. wrote: A new set has been posted: http://puzzlephotos.blogspot.com/ Rob 454. Telephone amplifier, sold by Radio Shack Big John |
Mark and Kim Smith wrote:
Duane Bozarth wrote: Mark and Kim Smith wrote: .... 464: Compound guillotine. Probably for cutting wire. Nope--dehorning shears Okay, works for me! I use these far too regularly to be fooled on that one... :) |
"R.H." wrote in message . .. A new set has been posted: http://puzzlephotos.blogspot.com/ Rob 460 - 461 - Looks like a tool used to plant bulbs in the ground. Push the tip in and squeeze the handles to make a hole the correct size. 462 - Skimming ladle? 463 - face of a carpet stretcher head 464 - Dehorning shears, fresh out of the blaster... 465 - Peavy, used to move logs and poles around. AKA cant hook ----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeeds.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 120,000+ Newsgroups ----= East and West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =---- |
465 - Peavy, used to move logs and poles around. AKA cant hook Not quite the same. The photo shows a Peavy; the cant hook is similar but has no point on the end. B. |
On Thu, 22 Sep 2005 19:18:07 -0400, "Steve W."
wrote: "R.H." wrote in message ... A new set has been posted: http://puzzlephotos.blogspot.com/ Rob 460 - 461 - Looks like a tool used to plant bulbs in the ground. Push the tip in and squeeze the handles to make a hole the correct size. 462 - Skimming ladle? 463 - face of a carpet stretcher head 464 - Dehorning shears, fresh out of the blaster... 465 - Peavy, used to move logs and poles around. AKA cant hook I agree with the "peavy" nomenclature, but a "cant hook" has a splay point at right angles to the axis of the handle to assist in the rolling function. You can pull a log with a properly applied cant hook, ----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeeds.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 120,000+ Newsgroups ----= East and West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =---- Gerry :-)} London, Canada |
According to Norman D. Crow :
460 ? 461 ? 462 ? 463 ?(backscratcher for Sasquatch?) 464 Dehorning shear for cattle. 465 Peavey For whatever reason, your original article hasn't arrived here yet, so I will reply to this one. Posting from rec.crafts.metalworking as usual. 460) Device for putting decorative grooves in wood -- parallel to an edge -- thus the wood dowel which extends as a guide. 461) For expanding rings -- either finger rings, or perhaps rings for attaching to the ears or noses of domestic animals. 462) Spoon for reaching deep into a bird when cleaning it prior to adding stuffing? 463) Most people? It looks too aggressive to be a currycomb for pets. Perhaps part of a stretcher to keep fabrics from shrinking as they dry? 464) Obviously some kind of cutoff tool. Not for normal cable, as it would need a way to open at the sides to get to the middle of the wire. Maybe for something like cutting cork to length for bottles? Or maybe for cutting wooden dowels to length? does the other side look like the side shown? 465) This one is a tool used for handling logs -- back in the days when they were all dropped into a river to float down to the mill, and might get tangled up. This is what the guys who climed out to clear the logjam would use. 466) -- nope -- none there yet. :-) Enjoy, DoN. -- Email: | Voice (all times): (703) 938-4564 (too) near Washington D.C. | http://www.d-and-d.com/dnichols/DoN.html --- Black Holes are where God is dividing by zero --- |
"Gerald Miller" wrote in message ... On Thu, 22 Sep 2005 19:18:07 -0400, "Steve W." wrote: "R.H." wrote in message ... A new set has been posted: http://puzzlephotos.blogspot.com/ Rob 460 - 461 - Looks like a tool used to plant bulbs in the ground. Push the tip in and squeeze the handles to make a hole the correct size. 462 - Skimming ladle? 463 - face of a carpet stretcher head 464 - Dehorning shears, fresh out of the blaster... 465 - Peavy, used to move logs and poles around. AKA cant hook I agree with the "peavy" nomenclature, but a "cant hook" has a splay point at right angles to the axis of the handle to assist in the rolling function. You can pull a log with a properly applied cant hook, ----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeeds.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 120,000+ Newsgroups ----= East and West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =---- Gerry :-)} London, Canada Guess it depends on what you were told when you were a kid. Thanks for the corrections. Steve W. ----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeeds.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 120,000+ Newsgroups ----= East and West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =---- |
"DoN. Nichols" wrote:
.... 464) Obviously some kind of cutoff tool. Not for normal cable, as it would need a way to open at the sides to get to the middle of the wire. Maybe for something like cutting cork to length for bottles? Hard cork... :) Or maybe for cutting wooden dowels to length? If you want to consider cattle horns a dowel... :) does the other side look like the side shown? Yes... It's a cattle dehorner shear... |
Disagreed: Buddy is right. A cant hook (or cant dog) is a wooden rod
with a hook connected to it, with or without a splay point. The earliest cant hooks were just a pole with a rigid hook connected to it, looking a lot like a modern nonmechanical can opener. Later, a eyering was added making the hook into a 'swing dingle', but it could not be controlled very well. Joseph Peavey's "improved cant hooks" had a hinge to keep the swing dingle aligned with the rod, but it was the addition of a point that made it a peavey. With a point, its a peavey: without one, its a cant hook, regardless of whether or not it has a crowfoot at the end. http://www.ruralheritage.com/logging_camp/peavey.htm Take it from a Mainer.... :-) --M |
"R.H." wrote in message . .. A new set has been posted: http://puzzlephotos.blogspot.com/ Rob (Apparently this week they are all dog related). 460. Antique tick squisher (brush the fur until a tick is located, then hit the rod with a hammer to squish the tick). 461. Dewormer for French poodles (I hope I don't have to describe how it is used). 462. A "Pooper Scooper" for teacup Chihuahuas. 463. Close-up of a brush for wirehaired terriers. 464. Toenail clippers for Great Danes. 465. Meat hook used to feed pit-bull terriers. -- Dogstar |
On Fri, 23 Sep 2005 19:11:29 +0000, Dogstar wrote:
"R.H." wrote in message . .. A new set has been posted: http://puzzlephotos.blogspot.com/ Rob (Apparently this week they are all dog related). 460. Antique tick squisher (brush the fur until a tick is located, then hit the rod with a hammer to squish the tick). 461. Dewormer for French poodles (I hope I don't have to describe how it is used). 462. A "Pooper Scooper" for teacup Chihuahuas. 463. Close-up of a brush for wirehaired terriers. 463. Bed-of-Nails for Faqirs on steep hillsides. 464. Toenail clippers for Great Danes. 465. Meat hook used to feed pit-bull terriers. -- Dogstar |
Must be a tough set this week, three correct so far: 463. Carpet kicker/stretcher 464. Dehorning shears 465. Peavey The first three have no right answers yet: 460. This tool is somewhat similar to number 463, the rod held up by the spring is made of metal. 461. It is an expander as has been mentioned, I posted a photo of it with the handles compressed, not sure if that will help much. 462. This one has a three word name, with the second word being "dust". http://puzzlephotos.blogspot.com/ Rob |
"humunculus" wrote in message http://www.ruralheritage.com/logging_camp/peavey.htm Take it from a Mainer.... :-) --M Thanks for the interesting link, I knew what it was but not the history. Rob |
On Fri, 23 Sep 2005 21:38:23 GMT, "R.H." wrote:
461. It is an expander as has been mentioned, I posted a photo of it with the handles compressed, not sure if that will help much. Lead pipe expander, used when making a wiped joint |
"R.H." wrote in message . .. A new set has been posted: http://puzzlephotos.blogspot.com/ Rob 462 is what we call a "Marrow Spoon". Used when fly fishing. When you catch your first fish this is put down the fishes throat into its stomach and used to scoop out the contents so they can be examined, so you can determine what the fish have been mainly feeding on. Then you can tie on a suitable fly/lure to enable you to catch more fish. (The difficult bit is catching the first one!) Regards from Glenrothes, Scotland Michael Amateur Woodworker and Part Time Fly Fisherman! |
R.H. wrote:
461. It is an expander as has been mentioned, I posted a photo of it with the handles compressed, not sure if that will help much. Yes, it is a expander. For rubber tubes. Insert it in the tube, expand it, and it's much easier to put the tube on some fitting. Nick -- Motor Modelle // Engine Models http://www.motor-manufaktur.de |
"Andy Dingley" wrote in message ... On Fri, 23 Sep 2005 21:38:23 GMT, "R.H." wrote: 461. It is an expander as has been mentioned, I posted a photo of it with the handles compressed, not sure if that will help much. Lead pipe expander, used when making a wiped joint Correct, this is the answer that I was looking for. Rob |
462 is what we call a "Marrow Spoon". Used when fly fishing.
When you catch your first fish this is put down the fishes throat into its stomach and used to scoop out the contents so they can be examined, so you can determine what the fish have been mainly feeding on. Then you can tie on a suitable fly/lure to enable you to catch more fish. (The difficult bit is catching the first one!) Regards from Glenrothes, Scotland Michael Amateur Woodworker and Part Time Fly Fisherman! It does look similar to a marrow spoon but according to the seller it was used for a different purpose. Rob |
Yes, it is a expander. For rubber tubes. Insert it in the tube, expand it, and it's much easier to put the tube on some fitting. It could be used for rubber tubes but the tool collector who sold it said it was for lead pipes, though I'm still trying to confirm this. Rob |
"R.H." wrote:
462 is what we call a "Marrow Spoon". Used when fly fishing. When you catch your first fish this is put down the fishes throat into its stomach and used to scoop out the contents so they can be examined, so you can determine what the fish have been mainly feeding on. Then you can tie on a suitable fly/lure to enable you to catch more fish. (The difficult bit is catching the first one!) Regards from Glenrothes, Scotland Michael Amateur Woodworker and Part Time Fly Fisherman! It does look similar to a marrow spoon but according to the seller it was used for a different purpose. Gold dust caster. Used by prospectors to cast gold dust into ingots. -- Patrick Hamlyn posting from Perth, Western Australia Windsurfing capital of the Southern Hemisphere Moderator: polyforms group ) |
"Patrick Hamlyn" wrote in message ... "R.H." wrote: 462 is what we call a "Marrow Spoon". Used when fly fishing. When you catch your first fish this is put down the fishes throat into its stomach and used to scoop out the contents so they can be examined, so you can determine what the fish have been mainly feeding on. Then you can tie on a suitable fly/lure to enable you to catch more fish. (The difficult bit is catching the first one!) Regards from Glenrothes, Scotland Michael Amateur Woodworker and Part Time Fly Fisherman! It does look similar to a marrow spoon but according to the seller it was used for a different purpose. Gold dust caster. Used by prospectors to cast gold dust into ingots. Nope, that's not it. Rob |
Is the first one a carpet tack countersink?
--rm |
On Fri, 23 Sep 2005 22:29:21 GMT, "Michael Strefford"
wrote: 462 is what we call a "Marrow Spoon". Used when fly fishing. When you catch your first fish this is put down the fishes throat into its stomach and used to scoop out the contents so they can be examined, Surely that's a piscevomitoscope, or something ? "Marrow spoon" originally just meant a spoon for digging marrow out of cooked long bones and this could well be one. |
"humunculus" wrote in message ups.com... Is the first one a carpet tack countersink? --rm It's not a carpet countersink but there is a tack involved. Rob |
"Andy Dingley" wrote in message ... On Fri, 23 Sep 2005 22:29:21 GMT, "Michael Strefford" wrote: 462 is what we call a "Marrow Spoon". Used when fly fishing. When you catch your first fish this is put down the fishes throat into its stomach and used to scoop out the contents so they can be examined, Surely that's a piscevomitoscope, or something ? "Marrow spoon" originally just meant a spoon for digging marrow out of cooked long bones and this could well be one. This tool was supposedly used for a different purpose than marrow digging. Rob |
"R.H." wrote in message . .. "humunculus" wrote in message ups.com... Is the first one a carpet tack countersink? --rm It's not a carpet countersink but there is a tack involved. Rob Used to tack carpet into the corners of stair treads? ----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeeds.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 120,000+ Newsgroups ----= East and West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =---- |
On Fri, 23 Sep 2005 22:57:22 GMT, "R.H." wrote:
It could be used for rubber tubes but the tool collector who sold it said it was for lead pipes, though I'm still trying to confirm this. It's really quite a rare tool, because it's only used for joining narrow lead pipes onto large ones - such as a bathroom basin outfall onto a large-diameter toilet waste stack. They're used to expand a small radial hole in a large pipe and their function is to make a flange, rather than particularly to make the hole bigger. Those large vertical pipes have generally been cast-iron rather than lead since before the war (in the UK anyway) so this really is going back a bit! These ones might be a Stanley #19 and are illustrated in older Stanley catalogues. The usual joint in lead pipe is a straight butt joint between pipes of equal diameter. One of these pipes needs to be expanded too, so as to fit over the other, but you do this using a greased fixed conical expander, usually turned of boxwood and called a "turnpin", "button" or "acorn". If you try to use this plier-style expander, the pipe will split. |
"Andy Dingley" wrote in message ... On Fri, 23 Sep 2005 22:57:22 GMT, "R.H." wrote: It could be used for rubber tubes but the tool collector who sold it said it was for lead pipes, though I'm still trying to confirm this. It's really quite a rare tool, because it's only used for joining narrow lead pipes onto large ones - such as a bathroom basin outfall onto a large-diameter toilet waste stack. They're used to expand a small radial hole in a large pipe and their function is to make a flange, rather than particularly to make the hole bigger. Those large vertical pipes have generally been cast-iron rather than lead since before the war (in the UK anyway) so this really is going back a bit! These ones might be a Stanley #19 and are illustrated in older Stanley catalogues. The usual joint in lead pipe is a straight butt joint between pipes of equal diameter. One of these pipes needs to be expanded too, so as to fit over the other, but you do this using a greased fixed conical expander, usually turned of boxwood and called a "turnpin", "button" or "acorn". If you try to use this plier-style expander, the pipe will split. Thanks for the info. Rob |
"Steve W." wrote in message ... "R.H." wrote in message . .. "humunculus" wrote in message ups.com... Is the first one a carpet tack countersink? --rm It's not a carpet countersink but there is a tack involved. Rob Used to tack carpet into the corners of stair treads? It could be used for that but I think it's meant to used for something other than carpet. Rob |
"R.H." wrote in message . .. "Steve W." wrote in message ... "R.H." wrote in message . .. "humunculus" wrote in message ups.com... Is the first one a carpet tack countersink? --rm It's not a carpet countersink but there is a tack involved. Rob Used to tack carpet into the corners of stair treads? It could be used for that but I think it's meant to used for something other than carpet. Rob Hide stretcher? ----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeeds.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 120,000+ Newsgroups ----= East and West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =---- |
"R.H." wrote:
"Steve W." wrote in message ... "R.H." wrote in message . .. "humunculus" wrote in message ups.com... Is the first one a carpet tack countersink? --rm It's not a carpet countersink but there is a tack involved. Rob Used to tack carpet into the corners of stair treads? It could be used for that but I think it's meant to used for something other than carpet. Rob Upholstery tool? Tom |
Upholstery tool? Correct, a tack is inserted in the hole, the fabric is stretched and the rod is hit with a mallet, allowing a single person to do what would otherwise take two. Rob |
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