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Good luck...


RicFlair

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Well, every once in a blue moon I break out this item and see how many interesting guesses and ideas come about from people. I do know what this is, lets see if anyone else does. 

 

A few hints.... I own the only two in existence as far as I know. One I found buried under a thousand grease guns while picking a barn in Florida and the other was in Germany. They were produced by the Ideal Spray Company (England). Patent reads January 1927. Both designs differ very slightly and contain a check ball, spring, and diaphragm at the top. There is an adjustable piston inside the cylinder. 

 

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Then my second guess is that it is an insecticide or similar sprayer with the port on the side attached to a drum of product and it would be sucked into the cylinder when the handles are opened and then when the handles are brought together the check valve in the side port would close and the product would be sprayed out the end nozzle.  Based on that, the sprayer on the right is missing the check valve.

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7 minutes ago, Larry Schramm said:

Then my second guess is that it is an insecticide or similar sprayer with the port on the side attached to a drum of product and it would be sucked into the cylinder when the handles are opened and then when the handles are brought together the check valve in the side port would close and the product would be sprayed out the end nozzle.  Based on that, the sprayer on the right is missing the check valve.

My friend, your the first person to ever correctly guess its purpose. I cant believe it. It is a bug sprayer (at least that's the the most solid answer I have been given by someone with actual knowledge of the piece). As for the check valve, your basically correct. Only thing is I believe what your referring to in the side port is really just caked up residue. There is, however, a small steel ball in the top "cap" section that sit beneath a spring. One of the tools allows you to depress the top via a little washer to release pressure whereas the other tool does not which is odd to me. Ill take some pictures of it tomorrow. 

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Side note: I have a personal theory that this device was obsolete almost as soon as it was made. Other tools of similar function produced the same year are much much simpler in design. It did last this long without even a dent amazingly so Ive gotta give them credit where credit is due

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If you can, post a picture of the spray end of the tool.  It would be interesting to see.

 

By the way, when I went back and reread your description and you said, "Both designs differ very slightly and contain a check ball" figuring out what it was, was easy.

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Ham brine injector hand pump.

 

My search led me in a different direction.

 

The patent date is January 1827, Worcester,  Mass. Looking for the SDG Ideal Spray co in Worcester yielded no results. Interestingly though, in the 1830s there was a fire at the patent office, destroying records for many years of filed patents, 1827 would fall in that category.

I began looking for "pumps" & "bellows" on archive.org. I found an 1880s catalog for hardware and farm equipment.  They had "ham preserving" injection set-ups that look like improved models.

 

If the tool has an orifice to accept a tube or needle-type apparatus, I would put my money on brine injection pump.

 

Respectfully,

 

JP

 

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Thats great investigating. I would only disagree based on the picture you provided. That tool seems heavier and the base hints that hefty leverage is needed judging by the base being made for a table top. 

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On 1/8/2024 at 7:34 AM, Nate Dort said:

The stamp says "PAT'D JAN. 18' 27", as in January 18th, 1927. I don't think they had color printed labels in 1827.

 

Here's the original patent: https://image-ppubs.uspto.gov/dirsearch-public/print/downloadPdf/1614777

 

It doesn't specify a specific purpose, just general spraying of whatever liquid you want.

 

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Wow, great work! So it is infact an insecticide/paint/anything sprayer. How interesting

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On 1/9/2024 at 6:33 PM, RicFlair said:

Wow, great work! So it is infact an insecticide/paint/anything sprayer. How interesting

 

Your finding one in Florida lends credence to it being an insecticide/herbicide sprayer - we have plenty bugs and foliage here!

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