View Full Version : what is it can any one tell me
coppertop 1958
24-Sep-09, 15:58
http://i206.photobucket.com/albums/bb309/copperetop/24092009105.jpg
http://i206.photobucket.com/albums/bb309/copperetop/24092009107.jpg
the wood base is only about 14ins long
im behind you
24-Sep-09, 16:00
milk churn possibly
glenniepup
24-Sep-09, 16:10
Note the ratchet mech at base of 'bowl' that turns it around ???
Probably a butter or cheese urn.
Green_not_greed
24-Sep-09, 16:32
I'd agree Jox - you beat me to it
I'd agree Jox - you beat me to it
Are you churning inside because I did. :)
teddybear1873
24-Sep-09, 17:01
A cement mixer lol.
Probably a butter or cheese urn.
Thats what i thought also:)
tonkatojo
24-Sep-09, 17:08
Naah, the blade in the middle goes up n down, I think it is a neep chopper upera
Unusual for me but I could be wrong....aren't old butter and cheese urns sort of 'barrel-like'?
It could be an early type of dough kneader.
teddybear1873
24-Sep-09, 17:15
Unusual for me but I could be wrong....aren't old butter and cheese urns sort of 'barrel-like'?
As far as I'm aware of it. I say It's Hotpoints first prototype washing machine. :-)
It looks like the Prototype of the Kenwood Chef Food Mixer to me. :D
riggerboy
24-Sep-09, 17:36
the first pics is definately a plastic waste water pipe with a rusty thing beside it and the second pic someone has stole the plastic waste pipe and left the rusty thing
ciderally
24-Sep-09, 17:50
http://www.oldandinteresting.com/images/paddlechurn.jpg (http://www.oldandinteresting.com/photocredit.aspx#Dairy) A wooden box or earthenware crock had a paddle inside attached to a rod, which was turned by a handle on the top or side. These contraptions, which could also be metal, were widely sold as small, convenient household churns in 19th century America, like the wooden one in the photo (right), or this early 20th century glass one (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Butter1web.jpg) in use in the US in the 1940s. This sort of churn was also used for domestic butter-making in New Zealand.
could be?
Small domestic churn. The winding handle cranks via the cog/s and the untoothed wheel turns using bare hand as and when required...
Ours was fixed to a box to give it height. We also had a similar gadget for hand cranking coffee beans... looked like a sort of gramaphone that Picasso would have built!
Angel...
Invisible
24-Sep-09, 20:28
It's the prototype of the Tardis. Dr Who was going through some hard time.
George Brims
25-Sep-09, 02:09
http://www.oldandinteresting.com/images/paddlechurn.jpg (http://www.oldandinteresting.com/photocredit.aspx#Dairy) A wooden box or earthenware crock had a paddle inside attached to a rod, which was turned by a handle on the top or side. These contraptions, which could also be metal, were widely sold as small, convenient household churns in 19th century America, like the wooden one in the photo (right), or this early 20th century glass one (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Butter1web.jpg) in use in the US in the 1940s. This sort of churn was also used for domestic butter-making in New Zealand.
could be?
We used to have a glass one, but it was a taller oval-shaped jar, and the gearbox bit at the top was encased in aluminium and red plastic - very 50s style. Paddles were wooden though. It was a horrible thing to work, as it really needed to be bolted down. You had to stabilize it with one hand while you worked the handle with the other.
if the arm does not lift out of the barrel thus making it easy to emply/wash out, then its an early washing machine. if it does hinge out then its a churn.
dx
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