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The Break Room F.A.Q (Last Updated: 2024 Nov 02 3:18 am)
Deecey posted at 3:29PM Mon, 14 December 2020 - #4407461
Frankensteining is right! LOL
As soon as you mentioned hairdresser, I realized what it was. I was only perming my hair during the 1980s, and then only because my hair was so unruly and wild, I had to do something to tame it. Once we got to the 1990s, I didn't do it anymore. I don't think I've ever seen anything like that all the years I was perming my hair. ~cringe~
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OK . . . Where's my chocolate?
EClark1894 posted at 3:09AM Tue, 15 December 2020 - #4407518
Aww, you're probably older than God, Sam. You probably know everything he doesn't. :)
Hehehe.
Coppula eam se non posit acceptera jocularum.
I got the swing away can opener ... the clothes wringer ... but not the middle one. And the first ... I had one in my bedroom as a teen (Grand-parents weren't into stereos) and I recall that called a stereo cabinet. Mine looked very much like this one. I recall sitting in front of it just right to get the balance of stereo!! The hand mixer also called an egg-beater ... I've actually been looking for a new one cuz sometimes they work better than the electric ones.
Boni
"Be Hero to Yourself" -- Peter Tork
Boni posted at 6:10AM Tue, 15 December 2020 - #4407591
I got the swing away can opener ... the clothes wringer ... but not the middle one. And the first ... I had one in my bedroom as a teen (Grand-parents weren't into stereos) and I recall that called a stereo cabinet. Mine looked very much like this one. I recall sitting in front of it just right to get the balance of stereo!! The hand mixer also called an egg-beater ... I've actually been looking for a new one cuz sometimes they work better than the electric ones.
I agree. I hand one when I was a teen and I used to bake cakes all the time. My brothers thought there was something wrong with me, but I noticed they all ate the cakes. :)
EClark1894 posted at 7:25AM Tue, 15 December 2020 - #4407602
Let's leave this one for the youngsters. I want see if anyone under thirty knows what it is.
Extra point if you know WHAT it was used FOR.
I know this one. I never needed it. My pair was the next newer model that didn't need it. They had wingnuts instead.
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EClark1894 posted at 7:27AM Tue, 15 December 2020 - #4407603
A thirty year old might know this one. 15 to 20 years, forget it! :)
we had one of these on our house until a few years ago when the wind bent the piping it was on. It didn't work. We still have a modern digital version because it beats adjusting rabbit ears. I'm not saying a lot of these answers because hubby and I are older and we had a lot of contact with those who were seniors when we were young. If we didn't own these growing up, they did. But I figure anyone who knows what rabbit ears are, know this thing too.
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A nut chopper
A shoe "spoon" for guiding one's heel into footwear
A key to manually tighten "adjustable" roller skates that 'clamped" upon one's regular footwear
A rooftop TV aerial for VHF and UHF signals (no longer used)
a home "bonnet" hair dryer
In case anybody is wondering, I'm 58 years old.
Tempt the Hand of Fate and it'll give you the "finger"!
EClark1894 posted at 7:32AM Tue, 15 December 2020 - #4407604
Final one for today.
This one I'm going to guess on because hubby and I are in disagreement on it. I think it's a hairdryer, hubby thinks it's a table lamp.
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I wanted to add a picture. The egg beater reminded me of it. In my mind, they sort of go together, one for the Mrs., one for the Mr, at least for most back at the time both were the common option
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I was about to identify it, but then I remembered EClark wants the younger member to try guessing.
Again, my grandmother had one (which i believe just her husband used), but it wasn't really needed when I moved in with all my father's stuff which included a 1960s electric model (which i still use).
Sincerely,
Bill
Tempt the Hand of Fate and it'll give you the "finger"!
Redfern posted at 8:25AM Tue, 15 December 2020 - #4407608
A nut chopper
Food Chopper.
A rooftop TV aerial for VHF and UHF signals (no longer used)
Actually, they are in rural or mountain areas.
In case anybody is wondering, I'm 58 years old.
And RP posted a pic of a drill. I think we had one in our wood shop class in high school.
Btw, tell your hubby, you were right about the hair dryer.
I meant the signals. Haven't the VHF and UHF bands been reassigned by the FCC to other functions, meaning if one does not want to deal with 'cable" or "satellite", one now needs a special "convertor" box connected to the VHF screws to get an "over the air" or "rabbit ear" signal?
Tempt the Hand of Fate and it'll give you the "finger"!
Redfern posted at 8:40AM Tue, 15 December 2020 - #4407620
I meant the signals. Haven't the VHF and UHF bands been reassigned by the FCC to other functions, meaning if one does not want to deal with 'cable" or "satellite", one now needs a special "convertor" box connected to the VHF screws to get an "over the air" or "rabbit ear" signal?
No. They're still used mostly by television stations, most of whom still broadcast signals using those frequencies. But they ALSO broadcast using digital signals. It was these signals that the FCC mandated that all TV stations had to broadcast in by a certain date.
RedPhantom posted at 12:05PM Tue, 15 December 2020 - #4407611
I wanted to add a picture. The egg beater reminded me of it. In my mind, they sort of go together, one for the Mrs., one for the Mr, at least for most back at the time both were the common option
My dad had one of those, and AFAIK, my stepmom still has it.
Coppula eam se non posit acceptera jocularum.
We still have an aerial antenna. They have digital ones now so you don’t need a converter box. We can pick up channels from cities a couple of hours away. The signal is usually good. There’s not much on, but I find the same thing with cable and this is free.
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Today I break my own personal record for the number of days for being alive.
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My dad had one of those, and AFAIK, my stepmom still has it.
Well I'm not ashamed to admit to grumpy old fart status :)
I bought a new one of those, also got the 1st one above. Plus I'd love to own a vintage (not modern) 2nd one. The 3rd, complete with original 1942 "Big Dick" logo, (the name of a dog, honest guv) is currently in a tub of oil as it was rusted solid.
Pinky - you left the lens cap of your mind on again.
To replace @4407600, I recommend a Trumpeter Paint Mixer, through that doesn't squeeze the teabag and I've never figured out why my tea tastes of Humbrol enamel.
And for @4407601, I trust an erstwhile gentleman would get his manservant to pull his boots on and not resort to such modern frippery:)
Pinky - you left the lens cap of your mind on again.
EClark1894 posted at 8:34AM Sun, 13 December 2020
When I was just a kid, my mom bought one of these things. We had it until just before she died. It was always in the living Room/ It was also my first exposure to FM radio and an eight-track cassette player. It's so wierd to had little kids and young folks look at stuff that was so common back when I was a kid and not even know what it is. So, watch this thread over the next few days. I'm going to post pics of common household appliances from back in the day, and see if anyone can tell me what is.
Blimey, I remember these but completely forgot about them until now. Amazing how much has changed, where electrical appliances were more hidden away and discrete. Now electrical appliances are in your face every corner you turn.
What a cool idea for a thread, so many things here jogging memories of different times now gone.
Poser scripts by Snarlygribbly
I figure everybody knows what this is, an stove and oven. Yes, youngsters, before the microwave, even before the toaster oven, there was the full size model. All electric. I didn't remember before I saw this pic. but the oven was Huge. You could literally climb inside if you were stupid and a child. There were four electric burners on the oven. Two large and two small. I don't remember why, I DO remember that I burned myself on one of those burners when I was small. I still have the burn mark on my wrist but I don't remember HOW I burned myself or when.
EClark1894 posted at 4:40PM Wed, 16 December 2020 - #4407667
I figure everybody knows what this is, an stove and oven. Yes, youngsters, before the microwave, even before the toaster oven, there was the full size model. All electric. I didn't remember before I saw this pic. but the oven was Huge. You could literally climb inside if you were stupid and a child. There were four electric burners on the oven. Two large and two small. I don't remember why, I DO remember that I burned myself on one of those burners when I was small. I still have the burn mark on my wrist but I don't remember HOW I burned myself or when.
Ha! That's nowt! When I were a lad, there were 150 of us in a cardboard box in t' middle o t' road.
But anyway, we moved into a place that still had an old Yorkshire range fitted. They were once the primary cooking appliance, particularly in the north of England, hence their name. Most people took them out - as did my dad - but they're fashionable again.
They were basically an oven and hob system built into and around a coal fireplace. Common in cottages, country houses and working class homes in the 19th and early 20th century. Many survived in poor areas until the 1960s.
Coppula eam se non posit acceptera jocularum.
EClark1894 posted at 10:28AM Fri, 18 December 2020 - #4407880
Remember these? They may look a little different from the ones in your country.
Can't even see what they are, other than teeny, tiny pictures. Some kind of ad for car stuff, but that's all.
Coppula eam se non posit acceptera jocularum.
SamTherapy posted at 11:42AM Fri, 18 December 2020 - #4407890
EClark1894 posted at 10:28AM Fri, 18 December 2020 - #4407880
Remember these? They may look a little different from the ones in your country.
Can't even see what they are, other than teeny, tiny pictures. Some kind of ad for car stuff, but that's all.
It's the inside of a certain book. I didn't want to show the outside because you'd get it for sure. I don't know if you had them in the UK. You probably did, though. Hint: It might be inside a fake TARDIS. :)
EClark1894 posted at 1:59PM Fri, 18 December 2020 - #4407877
Here's a more modern one. Anyone over thirty may have actually used one in the last twenty or twenty five years.
Geeze, does that bring back memories, especially the ones in the outdoor phone booths. The phone booths went out of style when everyone started getting cellphones, and didn't need them anymore.
_______________
OK . . . Where's my chocolate?
Miss B posted at 4:25PM Fri, 18 December 2020 - #4407900
EClark1894 posted at 1:59PM Fri, 18 December 2020 - #4407877
Here's a more modern one. Anyone over thirty may have actually used one in the last twenty or twenty five years.
Geeze, does that bring back memories, especially the ones in the outdoor phone booths. The phone booths went out of style when everyone started getting cellphones, and didn't need them anymore.
Speaking of phone booths. This one's on sale for $3,800. I'm nostalgic, not rich or crazy. :)
I liked the look of our old red phone boxes. The handsets inside were cool, until they changed to a really drab utilitarian design in the 1970s.
I'd show one but for some reason, uploads are misbehaving.
Coppula eam se non posit acceptera jocularum.
EClark1894 posted at 9:55AM Sat, 19 December 2020 - #4407927
I tried to find one like this before. Our console had an eight track cassette tape player in it..
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Looks like pic uploads are broken for you, too.
Coppula eam se non posit acceptera jocularum.
How many have seen one of these...
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The Wisdom of bagginsbill:
"Oh - the manual says that? I have never read the manual - this must be why."Remember these? They may look a little different from the ones in your country.
Hard to tell from pic, but could be the US equivalent of a Hayne's "manual". Which for those less blessed was "officially" a book that showed you how to dissemble/reassamble your vehicle. such as by year, model number etc. Reality? despite owning several an oil and blood stained copies you'd never manage to get all the bits back into the gearbox.
In the 21st century they do versions for anything from the USS Enterprise to Tardis's. Which probably explains why my Tardis never works :)
Pinky - you left the lens cap of your mind on again.
The picture I posted above I took in The Dalles, Oregon last summer. It is a Sears Silvertone wire recorder from around 1948. Wire recorders were the predecessor to tape recorders...
http://www.antiqueradio.com/May10_Curiale_Silvertone.html
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The Wisdom of bagginsbill:
"Oh - the manual says that? I have never read the manual - this must be why."This site uses cookies to deliver the best experience. Our own cookies make user accounts and other features possible. Third-party cookies are used to display relevant ads and to analyze how Renderosity is used. By using our site, you acknowledge that you have read and understood our Terms of Service, including our Cookie Policy and our Privacy Policy.
EClark1894 posted at 11:29AM Mon, 14 December 2020 - #4407505
I wouldn't want to bet but it looks very much like a vintage guitar amp. Gibson used to make them in a similar style. Then again, it could be an old radio.
Coppula eam se non posit acceptera jocularum.
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