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Mid-Week Challenge: What Is This Device?

04/08/2009 10:57 AM

What is this device?

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#1

Re: Mid week Challenge: 4Iz4u2

04/08/2009 11:00 AM

It looks expensive...

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#2

Re: Mid week Challenge: 4Iz4u2

04/08/2009 11:05 AM

It looks kind of like an astrolabe. But I'm thinking it's some kind of early theodolite.

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#5
In reply to #2

Re: Mid week Challenge: 4Iz4u2

04/08/2009 11:15 AM

I'm going to revise my guess. And by "revise" I mean "utterly change".

It's an equinoctical sundial.

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#3

Re: Mid week Challenge: 4Iz4u2

04/08/2009 11:10 AM

It's for measuring the stretch of chewing gum...

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#4

Re: Mid week Challenge: 4Iz4u2

04/08/2009 11:13 AM

Is it an Antikytheran Astrolabe?

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#6

Re: Mid week Challenge: 4Iz4u2

04/08/2009 11:24 AM

It is for weighing letters and post pieces to determine the postage.

I have seen a less elaborate (broken) one long ago but did not dare to ask for a demonstration. (I was in trouble with the post office for running an illegal transmitter)

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#13
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Re: Mid week Challenge: 4Iz4u2

04/08/2009 2:39 PM

I'd like to hear the story behind the illegal transmitter!

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#14
In reply to #13

Re: Mid week Challenge: 4Iz4u2

04/08/2009 2:45 PM

Me too!

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#32
In reply to #13

Re: Mid week Challenge: 4Iz4u2

04/09/2009 3:17 AM

Hi DAG and Bricktop

Way back in 1959 (still in school) I got hold of a broken Wire Recorder. After some serious opening and closing and knotting (recording wire) it was working again.

It was quite a machine and it even had a record player and a broadcasting mode.

Because I could I started a radio station.

I think a teacher tipped the authorities after I broadcasted a fictitious message to him from a secret admirer.

The post office people eventually searched my room and looked at the recorder (and crystal set and single valve radio) but could not find the transmitter.

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#7

Re: Mid week Challenge: 4Iz4u2

04/08/2009 11:33 AM

Relate to astrology and time?

its an early form of a solar powered pocketwatch.

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#8

Re: Mid-Week Challenge: What Is This Device?

04/08/2009 11:57 AM
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#9

Re: Mid-Week Challenge: What Is This Device?

04/08/2009 12:10 PM

It's a PlbMak annoyer.

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#10
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Re: Mid-Week Challenge: What Is This Device?

04/08/2009 12:44 PM

Ohhh... I must get one then

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#11

Re: Mid-Week Challenge: What Is This Device?

04/08/2009 1:13 PM

pocketwatch?

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#12

Re: Mid-Week Challenge: What Is This Device?

04/08/2009 1:44 PM

OK. It has what looks like a compass, and what looks like a pendulum.

I'd say that this is used on a ship to see pitch and roll, thereby being able to determine direction of non-wind induced waves like sea currents or tsunamis.

Mike

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#15
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Re: Mid-Week Challenge: What Is This Device?

04/08/2009 3:50 PM

Yes, a pendulum held captive, to assure the leveling screws in the four corners are adjusted correctly. Appears to be a compass, indicating magnetic north. Base size approx 8-1/2" square. The vertical scale allows 180 degree swing, measured 1-6 Up, and 1-6 Down from horizontal. The horizontal scale allows 180 degree swing, measured 1-6 clockwise, and 1-6 counterclockwise from (machine?) center.

I've got it... It is a 'Device 44'

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#16

Re: Mid-Week Challenge: What Is This Device?

04/08/2009 4:47 PM

It an earlier, and girlier, version of Capt'n Jack Sparrow's compass.

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#17

Re: Mid-Week Challenge: What Is This Device?

04/08/2009 9:13 PM

To calculate true north deviation from magnetic north in different latitudes.

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#25
In reply to #17

Re: Mid-Week Challenge: What Is This Device?

04/08/2009 11:56 PM

I'm gonna give you a conditional GA. It just depends on how many other deviants there are here.

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#18

Re: Mid-Week Challenge: What Is This Device?

04/08/2009 9:18 PM

If some of the mechanism is hidden in the base, it may be a weight driven seasonably adjustable, clock.

More pictures please?

Can we see it move?

Does it?

Is there a spring involved?

Since even if it was a Lat and Long compass determined thing to look at, it does not seem to have stood the test of time as far as any utility.

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#19
In reply to #18

Re: Mid-Week Challenge: What Is This Device?

04/08/2009 9:30 PM

Hi TS,

You said: "it may be a weight driven seasonably adjustable, clock."

OK - I have to ask the question: how would a weight driven seasonably adjustable, clock work?

Mike

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#20
In reply to #19

Re: Mid-Week Challenge: What Is This Device?

04/08/2009 9:59 PM

Well, like an hourglass sundial combo?

WAG method employed= Wild Ass Guess.

There are vertical and horizontal planes, both with line slide arms to be set.

No detail to the photo, and no gears seen.

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#23
In reply to #20

Re: Mid-Week Challenge: What Is This Device?

04/08/2009 11:11 PM

Wow, I'm a huge fan of the WAG method, I just never realized there was a name for it...

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#45
In reply to #23

Re: Mid-Week Challenge: What Is This Device?

04/09/2009 4:07 PM

Add scientific at the start and it becomes SWAG.

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#21

Re: Mid-Week Challenge: What Is This Device?

04/08/2009 10:25 PM

Looks like some form of wind gage, measuring direction and force.

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#22

Re: Mid-Week Challenge: What Is This Device?

04/08/2009 10:27 PM

It looks like a navigational instrument for sailors. There seems to be a compass, a sundial, a device for measuring latitude, etc. I hope you will tell us how it all works together.

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#33
In reply to #22

Re: Mid-Week Challenge: What Is This Device?

04/09/2009 3:27 AM

It looks like a navigational instrument for sailors.

Nah... it's a navigational device for people who sit at their desk all day long

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#35
In reply to #22

Re: Mid-Week Challenge: What Is This Device?

04/09/2009 6:25 AM

I'm with you.....

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#24

Re: Mid-Week Challenge: What Is This Device?

04/08/2009 11:46 PM

Its original name is unknown, but it was discovered in the Canary Islands and is believed to have been used by the people from Atlantis to discover that the world is round about 5000B.C.

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#26

Re: Mid-Week Challenge: What Is This Device?

04/09/2009 12:02 AM

I reckon you're all wrong.

It's a Sibling Pizza Divider.

You rest it on the table on one egde of the base, & lay it down over the pizza so that the vertical disk now lays horizontal & is centered exactly in the middle of the pizza (& yes, i know "centered exactly in the middle " is a redundant statement), you then place the knife against the centre straight edge to form the start of the cut to exactly divide the pizza in half. This way the kids cannot fight over who got the biggest piece! Hence the sibling bit. Simple!

Tony

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#27

Re: Mid-Week Challenge: What Is This Device?

04/09/2009 12:06 AM

it is an ancient GPS system to check your longitude and latitude

or just a (swiss)sextant with too many functions?

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#28

Re: Mid-Week Challenge: What Is This Device?

04/09/2009 12:07 AM

It's a device for surveying. Something like an ancient surveyor's transit?

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#29

Re: Mid-Week Challenge: What Is This Device?

04/09/2009 1:22 AM

Some observations after transferring the picture in photo editing software and enlarging:

Obviously, the vertical disk and the counterweight rotate around the spindle. But it appears the dark spot in the base is an indentation that matches the counterweight because its diameter appears to be just a bit larger than the diameter of the counterweight. The counterweight slides up and down the spindle, and can be placed in the indentation to "zero" the instrument. A number circle is evident, with 0 placed on a line from the spindle to the centerpoint of the side closest to the indentation.

An arc of numbers from 1 to 6 is in the upper right quadrant, 0 is not marked, so probably assumed to be in the usual position.

A screw appears to be missing from the hook assembly, thus reducing the value of the piece at auction.

The item probably dates after 1200. The numbers are Arabic numerals, and Fibonacci popularized their use with a book published in 1202.

I hope this information helps someone figure out what this is. I know it's not a thistlewick...

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#30

Re: Mid-Week Challenge: What Is This Device?

04/09/2009 1:26 AM

Astrolabe with sundial - pre-metric of course!

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#31

Re: Mid-Week Challenge: What Is This Device?

04/09/2009 2:27 AM

an early ship's clock, that is adjusted based on solar or lunar risings and settings. I believe there was a competetion for the design, to see who could design and manufacture the most accurate clock, as compared to a base clock left at home.

Chris

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#34

Re: Mid-Week Challenge: What Is This Device?

04/09/2009 6:01 AM

Its something you bought from this store.

And where did you get all those cool toys from? And why are there no over-unity devices or HHO generators sold there, since the store claims to sell suppressed technology? http://www.espionage-store.com/secret/index.html

But since it Actually does do something useful they no longer sell it.

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#36

Re: Mid-Week Challenge: What Is This Device?

04/09/2009 10:48 AM

It is clearly a thingamajig.

Jokes apart, I can't figure exactly what it is, but I have some ideas to share.

First, I don't believe that thing was intended for nautical use, because it has clearly a leveling device (Did you ever try to level something aboard a ship?). The apparatus was made to stand on a steady surface, or to be bolted to it. Astronomical devices for nautical use were handheld, like a sextant.

What really puzzles me is the hand on the vertical disk. It is definitely not an alidade (thru which you could aim to a point, such as a star): There is no pointer to help set a sight line. Moreover, the center column would block that sight line. This rules out the possibility of being an astrolabe, a cosmolab or any other astronomical device.

The hand ends in a hook. I think the couple of screws on the hand (one of them is missing) serves to the purpose of fastening it at a desired position. This would make sense if a cord were to be tied to the hook. In this case, one can expect that this device worked as a theodolite, but measuring angles between two positions of a cord instead of sight lines.

Following those ideas, I finally found what it is!!!!! (anyhow, I decided to keep my previous comments). This device is a surveying instrument dated 1583. You can find it at:

http://www.mhs.ox.ac.uk/EPACT/catalogue.php?ENumber=41531&Sort=MedianDate

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#37
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Re: Mid-Week Challenge: What Is This Device?

04/09/2009 10:52 AM

Nice going Fernando! However, it's really a:

nulgravium

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#38
In reply to #37

Re: Mid-Week Challenge: What Is This Device?

04/09/2009 11:09 AM

Hi, Bricktop,

The only nulgravium I know (and that's founded on a scientific basis) is made by sticking a toast on a cat's back. Some marmalade is spread over the toast, and then the cat is dropped from a certain height. Now, two Fundamental Laws of Nature come into collision.

On one hand, Felines Freefall Law states that a cat always will reach the ground on her four feet, no matter what.

On the other side, Murphy's Law prevents this, because the toast has to touch down on the marmalade side.

So, Nature gets absolutely confused, and the cat+toast assembly will never fall at all! Most state-of-the art anti-gravitational devices rely on this principle.

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#39
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Re: Mid-Week Challenge: What Is This Device?

04/09/2009 11:15 AM

fernando, welcome to CR4. Your going to fit in real well around here!

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#40
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Re: Mid-Week Challenge: What Is This Device?

04/09/2009 11:27 AM

Like it

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#41
In reply to #36

Re: Mid-Week Challenge: What Is This Device?

04/09/2009 12:14 PM

Crud! I was *so* very close with theodolite back up at response #2.

But then I went and changed it.

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#42

Re: Mid-Week Challenge: What Is This Device?

04/09/2009 12:48 PM

Are we sure that web site is correct? One of the other descripions of an item looks like a pisstake, it's not a joke site is it?
Del

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#43
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Re: Mid-Week Challenge: What Is This Device?

04/09/2009 1:00 PM

Does this photo from the site answer you question?

http://www.dearauntnettie.com/gallery/index.htm

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#44
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Re: Mid-Week Challenge: What Is This Device?

04/09/2009 1:40 PM

I used to be gullible...but now I believe anything you tell me

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#46
In reply to #43

Re: Mid-Week Challenge: What Is This Device?

04/12/2009 4:34 PM

Takes about 3 to 4 seconds of checking out the link to realize it's sloolkcb.

But it's loverly (the nullgravium force enhancer - not the 'thing' in your photo) - I want one!

(Cool site!)

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