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Re: MYSTERY OBJECTS

Posted: 02 Oct 2012, 17:36
by Whyperion
More fixings of some kind here , but anyone got anymore info on them , and would anyone find them useful , I have no idea why I have them ! ( re post below , The Hilti Anchors I think are of different sizes , probably for fitting into concrete ? PM me if you would find them useful and I will get them to Barnoldswick at the end of the month (or sooner )

Re: MYSTERY OBJECTS

Posted: 02 Oct 2012, 18:31
by Steeplejerk
The fixings on the right are Hilti fixings,a 20mm hole is drilled and the sleeve is knocked into it which contains a bullet that is driven in with a punch to open the split ends to secure it.

Re: MYSTERY OBJECTS

Posted: 03 Oct 2012, 03:48
by Stanley
Kev. I think you are right but don't know for sure. I got them when I bought a workshop and suspect that they are for watch/clock makers to use on brass. The three-sided one would be ideal for putting the conical oil well round the hole in a plate for an arbor and the flat one for removing burrs from the plate after drilling.
Tom, is dog wood still legal for laddering? I still clearly remember going up Mons when Ronnie Goggins was dropping it. He had used the old dog holes when he was laddering and the ladders went all over the place! Definitely not your standard!

Try this one..... A blast from the past. What's special about it?

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Re: MYSTERY OBJECTS

Posted: 03 Oct 2012, 09:54
by Steeplejerk
Not sure about the legality Stanley with plug wood,but we still use it :wink: ,its ok to use the same dog hole as long as ya put fresh wood in t'hole.

Re: MYSTERY OBJECTS

Posted: 04 Oct 2012, 07:09
by Stanley
Young Ronnie didn't bother! There's a pic of you on Forgotten Corners...... It was you with Pater on Butts wasn't it?

Re: MYSTERY OBJECTS

Posted: 05 Oct 2012, 05:26
by Stanley
No takers for the blast from the past? It's one of Johnny Pickles' old lathe tools. In the days before high speed steel in stock sizes, if you wanted a small parting tool like this you got the smith to forge you one out of a piece of cast high carbon steel. It has a big shank because he'd be using it in a large lathe. Once made it would be hardened and tempered. Still a good tool but if you get them hot they need to be tempered again.

Now I'll have to think up another one for you..... This should be easy...

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Re: MYSTERY OBJECTS

Posted: 05 Oct 2012, 07:48
by PostmanPete
Is it a leather strop for sharpening knives? Or possibly a dragons tongue.....? :smile:

Re: MYSTERY OBJECTS

Posted: 06 Oct 2012, 03:34
by Stanley
Imaginative Pete but unfortunately a long way off the truth. Have another think.

Re: MYSTERY OBJECTS

Posted: 07 Oct 2012, 05:15
by Stanley
I thought that one was easy..... I'll come clean tomorrow.

Re: MYSTERY OBJECTS

Posted: 08 Oct 2012, 04:10
by Stanley
Image

Here's the answer. The replica nameplates for the Ellenroad engines. These are the rough castings.
Try this one....

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Re: MYSTERY OBJECTS

Posted: 08 Oct 2012, 08:09
by EileenDavid
Looks like a fancy wet stone for sharpening tools. Eileen

Re: MYSTERY OBJECTS

Posted: 08 Oct 2012, 08:31
by Bodger
This is'nt criticism, just a query, should ,
EileenDavid wrote:wet
read Whet ?

Re: MYSTERY OBJECTS

Posted: 09 Oct 2012, 06:09
by Stanley
He's picky Eileen but correct. You are also near enough correct. It's a piece of best butt leather stuck onto a perfectly flat Keruing block and impregnated with salt-free mutton fat. It's for stropping a very fine edge on a cutting tool, the last stage of really fine sharpening. If you look at a sharp edge under a strong magnifying glass it looks like corrugated iron. Stropping the edge straightens the kinks out. If you mix a bit of jeweller's rouge with the fat it works even better. I use the very finest lapping paste, does the same job. I reckon it took me forty years to crack sharpening and edge and the funny thing was that I also learned that there are times when a coarse edge cuts better than a fine one. Like many other small matters, more to it than meets the eye! Now I'll have to think up another one!

Re: MYSTERY OBJECTS

Posted: 09 Oct 2012, 07:32
by EileenDavid
Sorry Sir but spelling has never been my strong point. Only know about Whet stone's as my father was a master carpenter served his time as a wheelwright and my other half is a retired joiner so both use to sharpening tools. Eileen

Re: MYSTERY OBJECTS

Posted: 09 Oct 2012, 07:59
by Gloria
That makes you an honourary engineer also Eileen.

Re: MYSTERY OBJECTS

Posted: 10 Oct 2012, 05:39
by Stanley
Or even honorary! All right, I'm as bad as Bodge....

Am racking my brains, finding new objects gets harder. Try this one. All right it's a very fine brass bolt, the very best door furniture, but what is it that is different? What was it for?

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Re: MYSTERY OBJECTS

Posted: 10 Oct 2012, 08:37
by Tripps
Re spelling -

I got an email yesterday from a chap who called me mate when we had barely been introduced :smile: and spelled tomorrow as 2moz! I felt like a dinosaur.

Re: MYSTERY OBJECTS

Posted: 10 Oct 2012, 08:56
by Gloria
Right Stanley I shall do my lines
honorary
honorary
honorary
honorary
honorary
honorary
honorary
honorary
honorary
honorary
that's your lot.

Re: MYSTERY OBJECTS

Posted: 10 Oct 2012, 12:38
by EileenDavid
Which ever way it is spelled thank you Gloria for the award. Eileen

Re: MYSTERY OBJECTS

Posted: 11 Oct 2012, 03:43
by Stanley
I think you're taking this a bit too seriously..... :grin: Now then, how about the bolt?

Re: MYSTERY OBJECTS

Posted: 11 Oct 2012, 08:07
by Bodger
It locks back in the open position, i e the door door cannot lock by accident, it also has a protrusion that could be used as an actuator ?, Toilet door ?

Re: MYSTERY OBJECTS

Posted: 11 Oct 2012, 20:27
by StoneRoad
works in the vertical orientation, so needs the retaining stop and loop to pull open?

Re: MYSTERY OBJECTS

Posted: 12 Oct 2012, 03:36
by Stanley
Both accurate but not a full explanation. The extension to the side is the clue.....

Re: MYSTERY OBJECTS

Posted: 13 Oct 2012, 06:01
by Stanley
Time I put you out of your misery. It's one of two bolts, top and bottom, on one side of a double door set. If the tab wasn't on the bolt the free door wouldn't be restrained by the locked half. very high class door furniture and thin on the ground. Not surprising nobody spotted it. Now then, what next....?

Re: MYSTERY OBJECTS

Posted: 14 Oct 2012, 05:48
by Stanley
Image

Dead easy!