- 63
- 18 524
Forgotten Era
เข้าร่วมเมื่อ 12 ต.ค. 2011
If it's vintage, one of a kind, or simply invaluable but uncommon, it's probably here!
Revell Corvette slot car and track
I finally finished restoring the Corvette! I know, it's not perfect. But it still looks amazing considering the previous condition. I will upload pictures of the previous condition later.
มุมมอง: 58
วีดีโอ
1930's H&R Young America revolver restoration
มุมมอง 9872 หลายเดือนก่อน
1930's H&R Young America revolver restoration
1954-1955 AMF Roadmaster (Rare Model!)
มุมมอง 782 หลายเดือนก่อน
1954-1955 AMF Roadmaster (Rare Model!)
My custom-built British Schwinn BelAir
มุมมอง 1552 หลายเดือนก่อน
My custom-built British Schwinn BelAir
WWII Japanese bayonet memorabilia plaque is complete!
มุมมอง 153 หลายเดือนก่อน
WWII Japanese bayonet memorabilia plaque is complete!
(you don't see this every day) H. G. Co. Petticoat glass insulator!
มุมมอง 333 หลายเดือนก่อน
(you don't see this every day) H. G. Co. Petticoat glass insulator!
1857 Zulu shotgun fired for the first time in 100 years! (please read the description below)
มุมมอง 684 หลายเดือนก่อน
1857 Zulu shotgun fired for the first time in 100 years! (please read the description below)
My name is not Christian, but I can do different voices. Good guess, though!
Is that christian from the movie christian
my videos are very poor but i have a lot of likes and i have 114 subscribers by the way happy birthday 🎂🎂🎂🎈 cool i want those 🥳
I'll take that as a compliment. Thank you!
Happy Birthday 🎉👍
Thank you!
I will show you guys the final result on December 7th... Thank you!
Join the Republican party! Elon Musk did, why not you?
I printed out someone's pencil sketch, and I added color with colored pencils. But good guess!
Is this print making? Or ink?
Bros videos are actually underrated good editing👍
Appreciate that
For a pewter railroad lantern
It is really pretty
mom:aww so cute hes playing lego outside me outside:
Cool vid
Literally bought the exact same typewriter! Thanks for uploading this.
No problem!
Old typewriters are mechanical marvels.
Good wrench that now has many years of service left in it.🔧
Sviđa mi se ovaj prikaz i ima se što naučiti iz toga! Zahvaljujem na tome !
Thank you!!! I hope you enjoy my newest changes to my channel.
Try some dark colored jeans and high top leather boots they will go reat with the coat
Oh, it runs. This is not a joke. I rode in it.
I made this video after I detailed it.
"does 185" When it runs. ;) Cool car nonetheless.
Wire wheel would have done the job in 60 seconds!!
I have had bad experiences with wire wheel tools... let's just leave it at that! lol
Nice clean up Barcalo is a good tool. . A dash of Blaster goes a long way and you're lucky the screw came out pretty easy. Looks like it's working fine now. Good job!
H.G. CO. was Hemingray & Gill Co which later was renamed just Hemingray. Definitely telegraph and dates around 1890ish to 1900 based upon the prism embossing. The aqua color is still fairly common, but find on in true green and you've got a very scarce piece. The May 2 1893 is the patent date for drip points. Nice looking piece!
I figured it was a unique piece... I also have a Hemingray No. 9 insulator, which I believe is a telegraph insulator. Very narrow for a high voltage insulator.
@@Forgotten-Era The Hemingray No 9 and 12s were my specialty. They are a low voltage insulator that was indeed telegraph used which was low voltage as well as used on rural farm lines later on post 1900 for electrification and phone lines. They were inadequate for high voltage use because of their small size and having no inner skirt. The inner skirt was designed to give more distance from the wire to grounding out on the pin and arm. The Hemingray No 12 could also be used as a transposition insulator to break cross talk, hence the lower wire groove. They could cross the wires at one pole instead of using drop brackets and crossing the wires between 2 poles. The drip points were intended to hasten the moisture from rain, snow and fog to drip off the insulator faster, but in the end they were found to really not have any effect and were eliminated.
I learned something more... I also have recovered a clear glass Hemingray 42 from a toppled pole at the abandoned Kingsbury ordinance plant in Indiana. I'm pretty sure it carried the voltage that helped manufacture ammunition during WWII. A very unique piece.
@@Forgotten-Era What is the date code on the rear skirt? Should have a number, a dash, and numbers and possibly dots (periods). E.g. 9-40. This would equate to mold #9 which was made in 1940 and each subsequent dot (period) represents each year afterwards that the mold was used, hence 9-40. = mold #9 and this specific insulator was made in 1941.
not sure right now because it is currently in a display case at my local library. by the way what kind of German gun uses 8mm. rounds with a full rim, like a shotgun shell would have. the bullets I have were manufactured in 1938, odd year to have Third Reich symbols... I was thinking an old Mauser Karabiner 98. but the striper clips are designed to allow one bullet to be removed at a time, so I was thinking a sniper rifle.
My grandfather has one in his shop
I'm just curious: Does it have a patent date?
@@Forgotten-Erai'll have to look sometime
@@Forgotten-Era I took a DNA test and found out I am 43% German
I have been thinking about doing videos on my antique bicycles...
are you into WWII artifacts?
Le meuh beautifica
yes it is indeed a penny, a wheat penny to be exact. minted in 1935, this example of mine has a very serious error. notice the word "Liberty".
Not going to lie it kind of looks like a penny
its a 1935 wheat penny, with an odd error. notice the word "Liberty"