MYSTERY OBJECTS

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Stanley
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Re: MYSTERY OBJECTS

Post by Stanley »

That's what the manufacturers would have you believe.... Do you know of anyone poisoned by after use by date aspirin? Have a look at THIS.
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Re: MYSTERY OBJECTS

Post by Marilyn »

There is a difference between 3 months out of date and 20 YEARS out of date.
It's the same with food.
Your body is a temple and you should worship it once in a while..
Just quietly, I am horrified that folk feed their toddlers food that was harvested before the child was conceived!.
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Re: MYSTERY OBJECTS

Post by chinatyke »

Stanley wrote:.... Do you know of anyone poisoned by after use by date aspirin?
Use them to clear up your cat problem? :laugh5:
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Re: MYSTERY OBJECTS

Post by Tizer »

...by firing them from a catapult? :grin:

Stanley, open your aspirin bottle and have a sniff at it. If there is any vinegar smell then they have degraded. Aspirin is acetylsalicylic acid and it hydrolyses with time to acetic acid (vinegar) and salicylic acid. Hydrolysis requires water which is why the bottle has silica gel to absorb moisture. Repeated opening and closing of the bottle will allow moisture to enter and the silica will eventually be saturated with water and can't absorb any more. (The tests reported in your link where done on sealed bottles.) Keeping your bottle in a fridge will slow down the hydrolysis - but each time you take it out and open it more water will condense on the tablets than if it were at room temperature and that will accelerate hydrolysis.

I don't believe there's much danger in swallowing aspirin tablets that are beyond their use by date but I agree with Maz that keeping them for such a long time is unnecessary. Someone who can talk about buying the latest computer can afford new aspirins! :smile:
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Re: MYSTERY OBJECTS

Post by Stanley »

I just hate waste Tiz. They are still working ..... Try this oldie....

Image

[Just out of interest, I looked up the price of the small top section..... £118 including VAT!]
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Re: MYSTERY OBJECTS

Post by David Whipp »

Pressure relief valve?
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Re: MYSTERY OBJECTS

Post by Gloria »

Grease nipple??
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Re: MYSTERY OBJECTS

Post by Tizer »

Do all engineers have brass nipples?
That takes me back to that `Reunion' programme about HMS Valiant, the nuclear submarine. When Sue MacGregor asked the chief engineer about the problems of keeping oneself clean in a submarine his reply was: "I'm an engineer, all I need is a rub down with an oily rag".
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Re: MYSTERY OBJECTS

Post by chinatyke »

Boiler plug. Fusible plug?
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Re: MYSTERY OBJECTS

Post by Stanley »

China has got it right. Again! It's a 2" fusible plug for a Lancashire Boiler.

Next one?
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Re: MYSTERY OBJECTS

Post by chinatyke »

Mainly guess work based on why just the tip would cost £118 and the likelihood of you having it in your possession.
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Re: MYSTERY OBJECTS

Post by Stanley »

They are quite complicated little beasties China. They used to be a simple lead plug in the centre but now it is a very sophisticated alloy carefully calibrated to fail at exactly the right temperature. The bronze covering to the centre is very thin and is there to protect the core. I couldn't make one!
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Re: MYSTERY OBJECTS

Post by Stanley »

Image

Try this one....
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Re: MYSTERY OBJECTS

Post by PostmanPete »

Is it a small vegetable peeler...?
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Re: MYSTERY OBJECTS

Post by Tripps »

Parmesan cheese slicer?
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Re: MYSTERY OBJECTS

Post by Marilyn »

For scraping a corn or callous (feet)
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Re: MYSTERY OBJECTS

Post by Stanley »

Maz has it, the Ever-Ready corn trimmer! Try this one....

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Re: MYSTERY OBJECTS

Post by Cathy »

Some sort of weight.
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Re: MYSTERY OBJECTS

Post by Tizer »

Is it a small thermometer within a protective metal case, held in by a screw thread?
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Re: MYSTERY OBJECTS

Post by Stanley »

Sorry, both wrong......
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Re: MYSTERY OBJECTS

Post by chinatyke »

Is it tapered slightly? So you bash it into a hole and it leaves the hexagon end protruding so that you can turn the object. But what? :confused:
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Re: MYSTERY OBJECTS

Post by Stanley »

No its square. Look at the left hand end for a clue......
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Re: MYSTERY OBJECTS

Post by Tizer »

A tyre pressure gauge! Press the right-hand end on the valve and the air pressure in the tyre pushes a cylindrical stem part way out of the left-hand end. The extent to which the stem protrudes is proportional to the pressure in the tyre. The stem is graduated in pressure units and you read off the pressure from that.
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Re: MYSTERY OBJECTS

Post by PanBiker »

Some kind of pressure gauge but for a tyre would it not have to have the valve end at an angle?
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Re: MYSTERY OBJECTS

Post by Tizer »

Not on the old ones. Think about the old wheel rims, before we had all-enclosing wheel covers, there was nothing to stop you pressing the gauge down directly on the valve. Knowing Stanley's background, it could be for use on lorries or tractors where the wheels are bigger.
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