People Are Sharing Mysterious Photos And Ask The Internet ‘What Is This Thing?
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 20 พ.ค. 2024
- People Are Sharing Mysterious Photos And Ask The Internet ‘What Is This Thing?’
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“S teeth O Scope”? Jezzus I wish we could get rid of computer voice=-overs
Kway crane (QUAY???????) FFS - its pronounced KEY!!!!!
It’s terrible…just give us captions
Last photo is a cistern. Very common method of harvesting water back-in-the-day. Water was run from the gutters to the cistern for storage. Could be used for cleaning, watering plants or animals and such. An older brother of mine lived in a house that had a couple of them in in the back yard very much like the photo.
2:05 - those steeth-o-scopes, lol
not to mention bouwies
I always wear my steeth-o-scope when I visit the kway
You've created an attractive concept for YT videos but paired it with an off-putting text reader. I can see this blowing up for you if the reader sounded more authentic.
Good Luck in the future. - paul
So that's why it can't pronounce words correctly..and sounds soulless..
Part of what's off-putting about it--it mispronounces many words, which you could fix. The text-to-speech engine can be tricked into pronouncing things correctly by tweaking the spelling. Not a difficult thing to do, and plenty of people would thank you for it.
Call out the septic guy, you've had a septic failure @ the last person.
It's too shallow to be a bunker for cold war era homes. usually, those were dug deeper.
old, probably no longer used septic tank or cistern for water. completely buried most likely the septic tank though.
The narration says the patio area adjacent is lower than this structure. If this was an old septic tank, wouldn’t that require the sewage to go uphill? Assuming the house level is the same as the patio area. So all speculation, of course.
@@jesseostone386no necessarily. The tank would be fairly deep and that would just be the lid for access. Although it could as easily be an old cistern.
That last one is, most likely, a dry-well used to catch excessive rain water and disperse it slowly. The guideline for these are generally 5 feet down and 5 feet round. Sometimes left hollow, sometimes filled with loose porus rock.
Yep old cesspool
Oh my ears are now bleeding.
4:00 - Polishing compound.
The speedometer cables hit me kind of weird, because I knew I was looking at something that was very familiar to me when I was a child but just couldn't get my neurons to link up and tell me what it was!
Old age is cruel. Not only are my looks gone, the few brain cells I have left quit talking to each other.
The crooked used car salesmen back when loved mechanical speedo cables. They could use a power drill to magically erase thousands of miles from a tired ol' piece-o-crap car and sell it for way more than it was worth.
An acquaintance who once had a used car lot would buy junk cars from police auctions, clean them up and do minimum repairs and sell to unsuspecting buyers.
"A little Bondo, a little paint, I'm gonna make it what it ain't!"
I'm so glad we have Carfax and other ways to find out if a car had a history of abuse, or lived a life of crime previously. I'm glad it's become easier to do background checks on people too for the same reasons!
The sunken hole in the back yard could be a dry well / cistern used in the old days for a place to drain water from the roof of the house. The water would be used during dry seasons for watering gardens. I had one in the back yard of a property that I once owned. They often had a cover made of wood. I filled it in with rocks as recommended by the village hall. So no one would fall into it, for safety reasons !
I think you're right. It reminds me of the well at my grandparents' farm from the late 1800s. It was made of stones that were cut into blocks so they were like bricks. It had a thick, heavy wooden cover as well so we dumb kids wouldn't open it and fall in!
I was thinking old septic tank but you’re probably right.
Thank you!
Definitely a cistern. The last house I rented, before buying my house, had one, but I was never sure whether it was filled in or not, so I was leery of walking over it. Certainly was a hollow sound to that region of the yard.
Dry well or cistern, esp with the rotted wood on top. We had one that collapsed under my garden. Thought it was a sinkhole at first
The diff colored blocks looked like polishing compound to me, they’re held against a bench buffer wheel which before they dried out they would transfer to on the spin and then polish metal with the grit.
livestock guardian dog collar's are still in common use.
Relating to your pronunciation of quay, as in quay-crane..does any person in the USA say 'quay' as quay,? We in England say that word as key.
In the USA, we usually say "kway".
Only idiots say "QWAY." It's "KEY"
@@pfadiva You ever hear of
"Key" West? It's actually "QUAY" West. Also, Florida QUAYS would have been the original spelling!
And sometimes cay
It's proper pronunciation is key. I did spelling bees as a kid.
The item at 6:30 is a mobile microwave link for radio or TV. My guess is the driver is a news cameraman. The latest link they are using is cellphone towers.
On the last item, if the house is older or used to be more “rural” then it’s probably an abandoned septic tank that should have been filled with gravel.
The muffineer is very pretty. I have a repro one made of pewter. They're also known as sugar casters.
Quay = KEY
The underground structure at approximately 8:30 is a dry well. My 1850s house in Boston has one just like it. It is just outside the kitchen sink, that originally had a hand water pump before the house had indoor plumbing.
The 1”x1” sticks of different colors are blocks of polishing compounds. Each color is a different grade of grit. For loading onto a buffing wheel and then polishing whatever metal object you have.
I need that Odyssey 2 Case.
cistern, for catching and storing rainwater to use later for bathing and watering plants
00:08:26 This appears to be an old hand dug well that was filled in and the fill dirt has settled over time exposing the top of the well once more.
Get over it people. Great channel, I just get used to it. Its not that bad. ❤😁
I love it when someone creates something in photo shop. posts it then asks you what it is! “Trix are for kids!” silly rabbit! 🤣🤣🤣
So many underground structures, septic tank or dry well.
It’s an old filled in well. I have one in my back yard from before city water was connected up to our home. When you got connected up you had to fill in the old well or cover it up permanently. This one was not filled in well enough and the old wooden cover rotted. You need to add more fill into it.
There's a mystery object that I'm curious about. Can you tell me anything about a drink labeled as a Sparkling Pomelo? It was being sold by the can in a grocery store.
Pomelos are essentially a large grapefruit. Very thick skin and the segments also have thick skin you don't eat. Lots of peeling... Grapefruit.😅
yes it is, a large grapefruit.mostly grown in asian countries.
@@coppervixen33
Pomelo is less bitter than grapefruit.
Definitely it's a cistern.
Speedometer cable: my partner and I had a couple of classic cars ,we were on a trip one cold winter night in a 1955 Hudson.,and started hearing this loud squealing noise, we thought the engine had spun a bearing. the speedometer needle was bouncing up and down, we pulled over, and disconnected the cable from the transmission .and the sound stopped. it turned out that the coldness made the speedometer cables grease harden up, and that was the source of the squealing. we just drove very carefully the rest of the way as we had no speed indicator, luckily we just only had to go a block or two to the hotel.
1955 isn't really a Hudson - more of a Rambler with Hudson nameplates on it... and PLENTY of them!
@@MileyonDisney Hudson joined forces with Nash at one point, and then the two of them joined with Packard. all because the big 3 Bully's tried to run each of them out of business individually. they lasted until 1958 I believe and then were no more.
my friend and I had a 1947 and a 49 Hudson. a 54 Packard, and a 55 Nash Ambassador. and also belonged to the Hudson, Essex Terraplane club here in Ca.
FYI…. it is NOT a “steeth-o-scope” !!!!! Do you even speak English???
The bricked hole is a septic tank or a cess pool.
Yeah, voice to speech voice is a bane on the human race. Not finishing the video even though I"m interested in the subject.
Brick underground caved in top ......can be a dry well. With the lid caved in after wood rot.....
Makes sense Rebecca, Thanks!
Always a pleasure 9:37
old septic?
Thank you!
Love some of the pronunciations in the commentaries!!
Lol. Doesn’t anyone actually check how it sounds when they release it…. My. Bad. Says producer! Lol.
@@patsquach4080 AI reader
@@machendave Resistance is futile…. Lol.
@@machendave Bad AI reader.
I hate it. It's robot AI, and I'd much rather hear a real live human being.
We are becoming too used to this tech, and I swear I've heard young people speak with this dull robotic dialect. It makes me sad.
We are losing one of the more charming effects of living in a "melting pot" country. I love hearing different dialects and trying to guess where they are from.
I live in California now, for the last 22 years, and even here there are some very distinctly different dialects.
I especially love how "chola women" speak, not just an accent but with a whole body attitude so you never have to wonder what they are thinking! Cholas make wonderful, loyal friends but you never want to get on their bad side (but why would you?). "Valley speak" is real, not just a funny Zappa song, and I adore the "surfer dude" dialect that I find with mostly boomer-age dudes. My favorite neighbor talks like that and sounds just like Tommy Chong. The guy is a brilliant architect/engineer, so his voice is a bit deceiving to some folks who don't realize that Tommy Chong is a very smart guy. As a long time fan of Cheech and Chong, I keep expecting him to say something like, "Dave's not here".
I get ridiculed sometimes because I have a "Southern accent" that is peculiar to how people used to speak in part of NE. Texas and SE Oklahoma. Some older people recognize it and smile, because they say I sound like one of their relatives... or Reba McEntire. I've heard that I sound like Reba so much, I was puzzled because I thought she was from Tennessee. Nope! She grew up in OK, about 60 miles from my momma's birthplace. Now I know why I sound like her. I'm happy to be compared to such a funny, kind, talented lady (even though I don't listen to much country music).
Septic poop tank. fill it in for safety.
What is this small salt shaker shaped object marked with an S with holes in the top?