345. Not seen one like this, but appears to be a calculator; "slide
rule" style"
346. Leather punch?
347. ??
348. Drill chuck - end on?
349. electric motor?
350. Almost a "blunt" horse spur; although not seen one with flat
'spur' like this.
giovani
345 Stop watch with scales for speed measurement.
346 Tool for making square holes
347 Valve handle
348 Kitchen machine (mix master) chunk (or whatever)
349 Funny magnetic experiment. However, I cannot see that there is
really a spool. Might be some sort of magnetic cannon.
350 Your son's mischief tool. Needs a leather patch, a rubber
string and ammunition. (What is this called in English.)
--
Jon Haugsand
Dept. of Informatics, Univ. of Oslo, Norway, mailto:jon...@ifi.uio.no
http://www.ifi.uio.no/~jonhaug/, Phone: +47 22 85 24 92
345. A device for determining the circumference of a circle by measuring the
diameter?
346. A square punch, probably for leather.
348. Drill chuck key.
349. Electric motor?
350. OB-GYN stirrup?
> Just posted another set:
>
> http://puzzlephotos.blogspot.com/
>
346 is half of a mortise & tenion drill, minus the drill.
--
Anthony
You can't 'idiot proof' anything....every time you try, they just make
better idiots.
Remove sp to reply via email
346 C'mon, this is a ww'ing group! Mortiser drill/chisel
347 Some kind of little adjusting jack?
348 Part of a can opener.
349 Electric motor.
--
Nahmie
The greatest headaches are those we cause ourselves.
>http://puzzlephotos.blogspot.com/
Isn't 349 a galvanometer ? I can se how I'd like it to be a motor, but
what's acting as the commutator ?
346. A power mortising chisel (lacking the drill bit)
348. Drill chuck key.
349. Electric motor -- only one side of the insulation is stripped on the
"axles" of the coil.
I think the watchmaker's term is "tachymetre". An old Omega catalog I
have says that it is a shortened version of (get this)
"tacho-productometer" ! I personally believe this to be a
reverse-acronymics example, the original term makes perfect sense in
French.
Tim.
345: Circular slide rule
346: Specialty wrench attachment (a cop-out, I know)
347: Brass gas valve
348: Faucet, business end
349: Electric motor
350: Another specialty wrench (and another cop-out)
--
There's no such thing as a free lunch, but certain accounting practices can
result in a fully-depreciated one.
345. A calculator that functions in a similar fashion to a circular
slide-rule.
346. The chisel part of a mortising tool. A drill bit goes down the
center. It is used to make square holes.
347. A puzzle. The objective is to remove the nut with the four handles.
348. A drill chuck key.
349. An electric motor. When I first made one of these, I was surprised
that the motor would still function even if the insulation was completely
stripped off of the coil's axle, rather than stripped only half way around
the axle.
350. A sling-shot handle.
Carl G.
--
Sal D'Ambra
Blue Ridge Summit, PA
"R.H." <rhv...@cinci.rr.com> wrote in message
news:NnDge.24693$9n1....@tornado.ohiordc.rr.com...
Btw, I was just kidding about that last one. It looks like a pin wrench to
me.
345. No clue
346. Woodworkers mortising chisel
347. Machinist's puzzle
348. End of a drill chuck
349. Minature electric motor
350. FIreplace kettle hooks
RCM
Gary Brady
Austin, TX
O.K. from rec.crafts.metalworking again:
345) Not fair for me to guess, since I submitted the photos.
346) Used with an appropriate sized wood-cutting drill bit to cut
square holes. The drill bit cuts out wood at the center
(ejecting it through the slots up higher), and the hollow chisel
bends wood from around the drill hole into the path of the drill
bit, resulting in a square hole. (Usually used for mortising in
things like a door lockset.
347) Used for adjusting the height of something -- such as perhaps
the rear of a cannon barrel to adjust the range.
348) The business end of a Jacobs style chuck key.
349) An electric motor. The coil is suspended in the two loops
at the ends of the battery, and current through the wires
produces a magnetic field which interacts with th field from the
permanent magnet(s) on the side of the battery.
It looks as though the wires coming off from the coil are just a
bit off center, so as the coil twists, it will probably lift
clear of contact at at least one end, allowing it to flip around
and repeat the cycle when it next makes contact (probably near
the end of a revolution.)
Even if the wires were perfectly centered, if the enamel were
scraped off of only one side of the wire, it would work pretty
much the same, with the enamel acting to interrupt the current.
350) "Slingshot" handle (not truly a slingshot, but the only term I
knew for this as a kid is most certainly quite politically
incorrect, so I won't mention it here. :-)
It looks as though it is designed for the rubber bands (perhaps
surgical rubber tubing) to fit through the two holes near the
ends of the fork.
Now to see what others have figured out.
Enjoy,
DoN.
--
Email: <dnic...@d-and-d.com> | 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 ---
My Dad still has several of these.
They're labeled from a maker of aviation charts, so it probably saw
application with manual navigation methods.
One is attached to strap-on knee boards. I don't recall what was on the
other knee.
Actually -- it is only *partially* a woodworking group. Look at
the "Newsgroups: " header. It is cross-posted to the following
newgroups:
rec.antiques
rec.crafts.metalworking
rec.puzzles
rec.woodworking
and I'm reading/posting in the second group of the four. :-)
As I see it, either the off-center weight of the coil, or the
enamel is scraped off the contact wires only on one side. (I haven't
bothered saving the images and zooming in to see whether there is
sufficient detail to tell about the enamel.)
Bingo! Very Russian. Acquired from an eBay auction a few years ago.
> In article <fqd681pfk4usok2tc...@4ax.com>,
> Andy Dingley <din...@codesmiths.com> wrote:
>
>>On Thu, 12 May 2005 07:14:53 GMT, "R.H." <rhv...@cinci.rr.com> wrote:
>>
>>
>>>http://puzzlephotos.blogspot.com/
>>
>>Isn't 349 a galvanometer ? I can se how I'd like it to be a motor, but
>>what's acting as the commutator ?
>
>
> As I see it, either the off-center weight of the coil, or the
> enamel is scraped off the contact wires only on one side. (I haven't
> bothered saving the images and zooming in to see whether there is
> sufficient detail to tell about the enamel.)
>
> Enjoy,
> DoN.
>
I'd say a motor myself. DC naturally.
Martin
--
Martin Eastburn
@ home at Lion's Lair with our computer lionslair at consolidated dot net
NRA LOH, NRA Life
NRA Second Amendment Task Force Charter Founder
----== 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 =----
OK, my face is properly red! I only read ww'ing, and don't(generally) check
the header unless it looks like spam or trolls.
What is /really/ puzzling with this picture is why the battery isn't
rolling over.
340. Russian circular slide rule
341. Mortise chisel
342. Puzzle, remove the nut
343. Drill chuck key
344. An electric motor
345. Slingshot
I'll have to try and find a stumper for next week, you guys make this look
too easy. One more photo and two links can be found on the answer page:
http://pzphotosan64n.blogspot.com/
Rob
Don's guess is correct, the coil is made from varnish coated magnet wire,
each of the two axles has had half of this insulating varnish scraped off,
making them function as primitive commutators. I tried Carl's idea of
scraping off all of the varnish and got the same results he did, it still
worked.
If anybody wants to make one, it works best with very thin wire.
Rob
I should probably make a puzzle out of it, but I'll go ahead and answer it,
I put two small wires on either side to keep it upright. Not much gets by
this crew, I didn't expect to have to anwer this question.
Rob
Amazing! This /is/ something to impress today's kids with, because
they are used to that you have to buy things from the computer store
or whatever. But here you can pretend to just find some wire, a used
battery and so on. Need to try this. The wire is something I don't
have in-house, so I'll need to figure out which store stocks such
items.
[ ... ]
>> If anybody wants to make one, it works best with very thin wire.
>
>Amazing! This /is/ something to impress today's kids with, because
>they are used to that you have to buy things from the computer store
>or whatever. But here you can pretend to just find some wire, a used
>battery and so on. Need to try this. The wire is something I don't
>have in-house, so I'll need to figure out which store stocks such
>items.
If you have an old (and preferably dead) wall wart (the
oversized lump on the end of power cords for lots of portable things
which plugs directly into the wall), they normally have a small power
transformer inside. You can recover a lot of wire from one of those --
in two gauges. The finer wire would be wound closer to the center, and
connected to the power line, while the slightly coarser wire (probably
better for this task) is wound on the outside to produce a low-voltage
secondary to power the device -- whatever is is.
I forgot to mention that it works best if you use a very strong rare earth
magnet, and for the coil wrap the wire around a C battery ten times.
Rob
Grandsons had a ball with stuff like this when I got them an electric hobby
kit from Radio Shack a few years back. Lots of neat learning stuff,
including simple motor similar to this.
The problem with such kits is that it is "bought magic" and impressive
as it may be, it does not make the kids wonder after the show. If you
just find a few items around the house and put them together, it may
very well make the kids feel that the workings of todays environment
is within their own grasp. (Or whatever it should be described.)
I'd already showed them some things. Had an old Erector® set with a small
electro magnet in it, so made a simple one from a bolt, battery & wire. Did
some other things until I got past what I could remember, then moved to the
kits with them.
> DoN. Nichols wrote:
>
>> In article <fqd681pfk4usok2tc...@4ax.com>,
>> Andy Dingley <din...@codesmiths.com> wrote:
>>
>>>On Thu, 12 May 2005 07:14:53 GMT, "R.H." <rhv...@cinci.rr.com> wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>>>http://puzzlephotos.blogspot.com/
>>>
>>>Isn't 349 a galvanometer ? I can se how I'd like it to be a motor, but
>>>what's acting as the commutator ?
>>
>>
>> As I see it, either the off-center weight of the coil, or the
>> enamel is scraped off the contact wires only on one side. (I haven't
>> bothered saving the images and zooming in to see whether there is
>> sufficient detail to tell about the enamel.)
>>
>> Enjoy,
>> DoN.
>>
> I'd say a motor myself. DC naturally.
> Martin
Very much like one of these:
http://www.flinnsci.com/Documents/demoPDFs/PhysicalSci/PS10405.pdf
Cheers!
Rich
> * R. H.
>> Don's guess is correct, the coil is made from varnish coated magnet wire,
>> each of the two axles has had half of this insulating varnish scraped off,
>> making them function as primitive commutators. I tried Carl's idea of
>> scraping off all of the varnish and got the same results he did, it still
>> worked.
>>
>> If anybody wants to make one, it works best with very thin wire.
>
> Amazing! This /is/ something to impress today's kids with, because
> they are used to that you have to buy things from the computer store
> or whatever. But here you can pretend to just find some wire, a used
> battery and so on. Need to try this. The wire is something I don't
> have in-house, so I'll need to figure out which store stocks such
> items.
In the US, Radio Shack. They sell a pack of 3 sizes on small spools.
It's called "magnet wire", just in case nobody's mentioned that yet.
http://www.radioshack.com/search.asp?cookie%5Ftest=1&find=magnet+wire&hp=search&image1.x=0&image1.y=0&SRC=1
278-1345
Cheers!
Rich
That's what I used for the coil wire, the heaviest gauge wire that came in
the pack didn't work for some reason, but the next size worked great.
Rob
>* Norman D. Crow
>> Grandsons had a ball with stuff like this when I got them an electric hobby
>> kit from Radio Shack a few years back. Lots of neat learning stuff,
>> including simple motor similar to this.
>The problem with such kits is that it is "bought magic" and impressive
>as it may be, it does not make the kids wonder after the show.
Depends on how pre-packaged the kit is. I'm an electrical
engineer, and when I was young my dad bought me one of the
electronic kits with a couple of transistors, resistors, and
capacitors, complete with a peg-board affair where you could
assemble circuits with a type of Fahnestock clip.
I had a blast with this kit, and the components later became
my first parts stash. :) However, there was a contemporary kit
where the components were enclosed in lucite cubes with metal
ends and a schematic on top. The idea was to build circuits
by joining the cubes together. Somehow this kit struck me as
just Not Right. I don't think it would have held my interest
as long not being able to handle the actual components themselves.
I also had one of those little motor kits where you wound
your own armature. I have to say I think this home-made battery
bazinga tops that. :)
>If you
>just find a few items around the house and put them together, it may
>very well make the kids feel that the workings of todays environment
>is within their own grasp. (Or whatever it should be described.)
Certainly not for the very young, but a great book for
kitchen table experiments is the collection(s) of Amateur
Scientist articles from Scientific American magazine. One
of these articles got me building Van de Graafs as a kid.
--
Tim Mullen
------------------------------------------------------------------
Am I in your basement? Looking for antique televisions, fans, etc.
------ finger this account or call anytime: (212)-463-0552 -------
Good picture. My Galvanometer (it is older) model used a Horseshoe magnet that is
set and the coil is very long with a pointer. It is a very, very low current device
and was used to measure charge storage (flow) thus current. It was built by GR -
General Radio and mounted in a Fine wood case with a black plastic-like top.
Lab grade. The box is now on display at Department of Energy as an instrument
to measure the current delivered by a Hydrogen Fuel Cell that I did the tech work
for a local group (My wife was the Primary Teacher at a private school that had a grant!).