Patent Calcium Inhalator

808kaz

Full Member
Nov 22, 2009
208
0
OAHU, HAWAII

Attachments

  • WAIALUA CAMP 04.JPG
    WAIALUA CAMP 04.JPG
    69.6 KB · Views: 322

Bigcypresshunter

Gold Member
Dec 15, 2004
27,000
3,338
South Florida
Detector(s) used
70's Whites TM Amphibian, HH Pulse, Ace 250
Primary Interest:
Beach & Shallow Water Hunting
Thats something different. I cant find anything online either. My guess is part of some kind of patented inhalator for medicine. :dontknow:

I found this: "Calcium glycerophosphate is found to be effective in treating and preventing a disease, disorder and/or condition of the respiratory system."

I dont think that type of painted label lettering on glass is very old.
 

Upvote 0

Bigcypresshunter

Gold Member
Dec 15, 2004
27,000
3,338
South Florida
Detector(s) used
70's Whites TM Amphibian, HH Pulse, Ace 250
Primary Interest:
Beach & Shallow Water Hunting
ACL (Applied Color Label), also called the painted label bottle (stenciled lettering) was popular in the 40's, 50's and 60's. This may help date your glass piece.
 

Upvote 0

gyrogear

Tenderfoot
May 15, 2009
7
0
This looks like a piece of laboratory glassware to me. That looks like a ground glass joint at the top, most probably for a stopper, but possibly to connect to other glassware. That is definitely a tubing connector near the top. I can't tell for sure from the photo, but it looks like there is a chamber within the outer glass envelope. Does the tubing connector attach to it or just penetrate to the space between the envelope and the inner chamber? Can you post a photo that includes the bottom section?
Regarding the label: Most older glassware had labels acid etched into the surface rather than painted on.
 

Upvote 0

Bigcypresshunter

Gold Member
Dec 15, 2004
27,000
3,338
South Florida
Detector(s) used
70's Whites TM Amphibian, HH Pulse, Ace 250
Primary Interest:
Beach & Shallow Water Hunting
gyrogear said:
Regarding the label: Most older glassware had labels acid etched into the surface rather than painted on.
I didnt think of that. :thumbsup: It may be etched. Does that make it older? :dontknow: The writing is Old English.


Does anyone know why the glass is heavy and pointed on the bottom?
 

Upvote 0
OP
OP
808kaz

808kaz

Full Member
Nov 22, 2009
208
0
OAHU, HAWAII
gyrogear said:
This looks like a piece of laboratory glassware to me. That looks like a ground glass joint at the top, most probably for a stopper, but possibly to connect to other glassware. That is definitely a tubing connector near the top. I can't tell for sure from the photo, but it looks like there is a chamber within the outer glass envelope. Does the tubing connector attach to it or just penetrate to the space between the envelope and the inner chamber? Can you post a photo that includes the bottom section?
Regarding the label: Most older glassware had labels acid etched into the surface rather than painted on.

I'm sure it's some kind of laboratory glassware, my friend has the piece now, I emailed him to add additional pictures and for a better description, the letters are etched, and it did come from a old pineapple plantation dump in the hills, from the bottles we where finding I would date it from 1915ish to around the 1940's, thanks for you help...
 

Upvote 0

gyrogear

Tenderfoot
May 15, 2009
7
0
I can't say for sure without knowing how the tubing connector is configured internally, but I think this is an early form of nebulizer. If it is configured the way I am imagining, then a calcium substance was introduced through the top opening and a stopper installed. The whole piece was stood in a heated water bath. The weighted bottom would keep it upright. The heat would vaporize the calcium and the tubing would connect to a respirator worn by the patient. This is a "best guess" answer, since I can't make out the internal construction from the photo.
 

Upvote 0

808beginnerdigger

Full Member
Mar 8, 2010
172
1
Howzit Kaz... The wording looks like it is etched and not painted. There is also markings on the bottom I missed. I cleaned it up and here are the pics.
 

Attachments

  • CALCIUM INHALATOR 001.JPG
    CALCIUM INHALATOR 001.JPG
    106.4 KB · Views: 218
  • CALCIUM INHALATOR 003.JPG
    CALCIUM INHALATOR 003.JPG
    94.7 KB · Views: 218
  • CALCIUM INHALATOR 008.JPG
    CALCIUM INHALATOR 008.JPG
    133.4 KB · Views: 224
  • CALCIUM INHALATOR 005.JPG
    CALCIUM INHALATOR 005.JPG
    83.4 KB · Views: 219
  • CALCIUM INHALATOR 006.JPG
    CALCIUM INHALATOR 006.JPG
    124.9 KB · Views: 222
  • CALCIUM INHALATOR 004.JPG
    CALCIUM INHALATOR 004.JPG
    84.3 KB · Views: 226
Upvote 0

808beginnerdigger

Full Member
Mar 8, 2010
172
1
gyrogear said:
This looks like a piece of laboratory glassware to me. That looks like a ground glass joint at the top, most probably for a stopper, but possibly to connect to other glassware. That is definitely a tubing connector near the top. I can't tell for sure from the photo, but it looks like there is a chamber within the outer glass envelope. Does the tubing connector attach to it or just penetrate to the space between the envelope and the inner chamber? Can you post a photo that includes the bottom section?
Regarding the label: Most older glassware had labels acid etched into the surface rather than painted on.
Thanks Gyrogear... I post more pics.
 

Upvote 0

gyrogear

Tenderfoot
May 15, 2009
7
0
Ok, from these new photos I can see it is a single wall vessel. The top joint is not ground glass, so was designed to accommodate a cork or rubber stopper. The graduations on the lower part are in milliliters.
I can see several impact fractures in the closeup photo of the label. Quite possibly why it was discarded.
The broken part on the bottom would indicate there was probably a base attached.
My best guess now would be a vessel for a chemical rather than a thermal reaction. Most probably a calcium compound was added as a powder, then a liquid chemical was added to react with the calcium and produce a vapor which then flowed to the patient via tubing attached to the bib.
Sort of the same way acetylene gas is generated in a carbide lamp by dripping water into calcium carbide.
One possible use for an apparatus like this would be for treating exposure to hydrogen fluoride. You can read a little about that here.
capsnet.usc.edu/LabSafety/documents/HFEXPOSURE_Treatment.doc
 

Upvote 0

gyrogear

Tenderfoot
May 15, 2009
7
0
Sorry, I don't know the age. Judging from the type font on the etched label, I would guess mid to late 19Th century through early 20Th century.
 

Upvote 0

Bigcypresshunter

Gold Member
Dec 15, 2004
27,000
3,338
South Florida
Detector(s) used
70's Whites TM Amphibian, HH Pulse, Ace 250
Primary Interest:
Beach & Shallow Water Hunting
gyrogear said:
Ok, from these new photos I can see it is a single wall vessel. The top joint is not ground glass, so was designed to accommodate a cork or rubber stopper. The graduations on the lower part are in milliliters.
I can see several impact fractures in the closeup photo of the label. Quite possibly why it was discarded.
The broken part on the bottom would indicate there was probably a base attached.
My best guess now would be a vessel for a chemical rather than a thermal reaction. Most probably a calcium compound was added as a powder, then a liquid chemical was added to react with the calcium and produce a vapor which then flowed to the patient via tubing attached to the bib.
Sort of the same way acetylene gas is generated in a carbide lamp by dripping water into calcium carbide.
One possible use for an apparatus like this would be for treating exposure to hydrogen fluoride. You can read a little about that here.
capsnet.usc.edu/LabSafety/documents/HFEXPOSURE_Treatment.doc
Sounds good to me. I would guess early 20th century. http://cgi.ebay.de/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=110677361774 Todays inhalators are plastic.
 

Attachments

  • patent inhalator.jpg
    patent inhalator.jpg
    4.3 KB · Views: 183
Upvote 0

Top Member Reactions

Users who are viewing this thread

Top