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Need help identifying an object (Read 457 times)
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Posted Nov 19, 2009, 03:47:15 PM
I don't have a pic but it is round and stands on 3 legs, had a small faucet and a ventilated lid, it said "New World Standard Series". Anyone know what this could be?
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ENGLAND
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  • Reply To This Topic #1 Posted Nov 19, 2009, 03:55:28 PM
    I don't have a pic but it is round and stands on 3 legs, had a small faucet and a ventilated lid, it said "New World Standard Series". Anyone know what this could be?

    sounds like someone I know on a bender Cheesy icon_scratch

    TOO BUSY TO DETECT, YOU'RE TOO BUSY!!!

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    ENGLAND
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  • Reply To This Topic #2 Posted Nov 19, 2009, 03:57:30 PM
    Metal type?
    Size?
    *United StatesOffline
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    michigan
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    Reply To This Topic #3 Posted Nov 19, 2009, 04:48:06 PM
    Moonshine still. coffee2
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    Reply To This Topic #4 Posted Nov 19, 2009, 04:57:31 PM
    Three legged dog with a dentist's spit sink and a coffee cup lid on it's back.

    But seriously...post the pics as soon as you get them. The folks here are wizards of identification.
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    Southern Indiana
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  • Reply To This Topic #5 Posted Nov 19, 2009, 06:50:10 PM
    Sounds like an old coffee maker by your description.  Huh?

    Digging up History (and pulltabs) since 1982.
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  • Reply To This Topic #6 Posted Nov 19, 2009, 10:30:27 PM
       Look through these.

       http://images.google.ca/images?client=firefox-a&rls=org.mozilla:en-US:official&channel=s&hl=en&source=hp&q=Cream%20Separator&um=1&ie=UTF-8&sa=N&tab=wi

       Cream Separator.


    * 326.jpg (25.46 KB, 376x600 - viewed 292 times.)

    I'm as dirty as I look!
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    Reply To This Topic #7 Posted Nov 19, 2009, 10:45:47 PM
    That's it!! stand and all!! You guys rock!
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    South Florida
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    Reply To This Topic #8 Posted Nov 20, 2009, 08:28:13 PM
    That's it!! stand and all!! You guys rock!
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  • Reply To This Topic #9 Posted Nov 21, 2009, 03:46:00 PM
    I hate digging those things up.

    Daryl

    The only way to really understand something is to play with it.
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    Reply To This Topic #10 Posted Nov 21, 2009, 04:03:29 PM
    A little history:

    I believe yours is a DeLaval New World Standard Series Number 14 floor model cream separator.  It was rated at 550 pounds of milk per hour.  This would have been enough capacity to separate the milk from up to 25 cows in an hour's time.  DeLaval was the most popular of the centrifugal cream separators.  The company originated in Sweden in 1883 and started in the US in 1885.  Gustaf DeLaval is credited with inventing the first continuously operating cream separator for which he received a U. S. patent on October 4, 1881.  The advantage of Gustaf DeLaval's invention was that the milk did not have to be separated in batches but rather the milk could be continuously separated without stopping.  By 1909 there were one million DeLaval cream separators in use, by 1922 there were 2.5 million and the number had jumped to four million by 1928.

    Look for the manufacture date stamped on the base of the disc holder and in the frame of the separator.

    DeLaval would have been considered the "Cadillac" of cream separators.  They were the first and most common but also the most expensive.

    Don.......

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    Reply To This Topic #11 Posted Nov 22, 2009, 02:42:51 PM
    Thanks for the info! Thats very interesting:) Ill check out the date when I get the chance.  icon_thumleft
    Tags: Need help Identifying object 
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