Can a Hippie Out-Tool a Trucker in a Tyre Changing Contest?

  • Thread starter houlahound
  • Start date
In summary: I like to bring up these sorts of tools, because it's worth taking a minute to think about what we'd do in a world without string. No clothes other than leather, no string to make traps with, no sails to explore the seas, no baskets, no pottery, etc.
  • #36
houlahound said:
Looks too sciencey for this thread...no fair.

I'm calling a foul ball.
It's still a tool! If you look at the components, it's not too hard to work out the kind of thing it is.
 
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  • #37
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  • #38
For??
 
  • #39
OCR said:
It's an alignment telescopes manufactured by Taylor Hobson.
Bingo. I guess that means its your turn to provide a tool!
 
  • #40
images?q=tbn:ANd9GcRkoDanYf1NHnqfq_Y0PEJQnhpyB9zJi_Rb9IZun6tmn-7VrwXSFA.jpg


Hint, mostly worn as a waist belt.

No reverse engineering the images - new rule.
 
  • #41
houlahound said:
For??
The micro http://www.taylor-hobson.com/products/27/108.html#Micro-Alignment-Telescopes-with-built-in-optical-micrometers2 allows the user to set reference lines of sight for applications such as the alignment and measurement of bearings and bores.
 
  • #42
Gotcha, technically it's your go.
 
  • #43
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  • #44
Your in the ball park as far equine related...and I meant human waist not horse waist in my hint.
 
  • #45
houlahound said:
and I meant human waist not horse waist in my hint.
Must be a Surcingle Belt, then...?
 
  • #46
Nope...getting colder.

Hint 2. Its mostly worn around a human waist but when its not it is worn on a horse but not around the horse's waist.
 
  • #47
houlahound said:
Nope...getting colder.
Lol... I don't know, unless it's some part of a safety harness ... :blushing:
 
  • #48
images?q=tbn:ANd9GcRvxpW6X2Tyt7hWGr0AdaLmgnSJcHsmCrad1JcUV01boOcXstX7.jpg
 
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  • #49
Part of the belly band on a draught horse harness ?
 
  • #50
They are temporary/short duration hobbles to restrict a horses mobility while the rider is dismounted and wants his horse to graze and not get spooked and run off.

Usually while the rider is taking a break.
 
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  • #51
houlahound said:
images?q=tbn:ANd9GcRvxpW6X2Tyt7hWGr0AdaLmgnSJcHsmCrad1JcUV01boOcXstX7.jpg

Looks like hobbles, to me...?
 
  • #52
Correct, see above post.

Well done, I'm out for a while.
 
  • #53
houlahound said:
Its mostly worn around a human waist but when its not it is worn on a horse but not around the horse's waist.
Ah, the rider more or less stores the hobbles as a belt around his waist, and takes it off to use as hobbles...?
 
  • #54
I will have a go. I had to blur out what is cast into the tool as I am afraid it would give it away.

IMG_20161122_163029.jpg
IMG_20161122_163057.jpg
 
  • #55
Some kind of toe jack?
 
  • #56
Well I don't think it would be a risk of giving it away if I say that it is in fact meant to move two items apart as a jack of course would. However, this device was engineered for a specific purpose and from experience I will say that it does it quite well. Its intended purpose was not to lift things.
 
  • #57
Pinch bar used for moving railway locomotives and trucks short distances during maintenance ?
 
  • #58
Nidum said:
Pinch bar used for moving railway locomotives and trucks short distances during maintenance ?
Nope. I will give another clue. I am sure someone on this forum has done the task that this tool is meant to do, only done it the hard way. I will tag my favorite member again. LOL. @jim hardy The tool in the very first image in this thread has likely been used many times to do what this tool is designed for. Not as a chopping operation though.
 
  • #59
Ahhh!...
...it is in fact meant to move two items apart...
I am sure someone on this forum has done the task that this tool is meant to do...
The tool in the very first image in this thread has likely been used many times to do what this tool is designed for.
It's a bead breaker! ?
 
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  • #60
http://www.dlokka.hommboi.lokka.com/img/photos/1244962657-Beadcheater2.jpg​
 
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  • #61
Ding ding ding! We have the correct answer.
-
Bead buster is actually cast into the tool so I had to blur it out.
 
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  • #62
Averagesupernova said:
Ding ding ding! We have the correct answer.
-
Bead buster is actually cast into the tool so I had to blur it out.
Lol...[COLOR=#black]..[/COLOR] :ok:
 
  • #63
would never have got that one.
 
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  • #64
What gave it away @OCR ?
 
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  • #65
Averagesupernova said:
What gave it away
The pinched fingers, skinned knuckles, ...
 
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  • #66
real men don't use a gadget to break the bead.

you either use two tyre levers or put the tyre flat on the ground and run over it with another vehicle a few times.

= real men would never have seen such a device...disqualified.
 
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  • #68
good point.
 
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  • #69
Averagesupernova said:
What gave it away @OCR ?
I've used a device like that on big tractor tires, where you don't remove the rim from the tractor... just the tire off the rim.

The breaker I used was powered by air, so your picture wasn't a dead give away... the design of the "foot" in the upper right, picture two helped, so did your clues...
...it is in fact meant to move two items apart...
I am sure someone on this forum has done the task that this tool is meant to do...
The tool in the very first image in this thread has likely been used many times to do what this tool is designed for.
I googled "bead breaker", and found the image I posted...

Tires I used the tool on...

DSCF0565.JPG


DSCF1127.JPG
 
  • #70
Averagesupernova said:
Try that with these:
Lol... yup, they're 30.5-32 radials... :oldsmile:
 

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