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"eeeeeeeeerrrm...eeeeerrrp!! Beep-beep! Vrrrrrrooommmm...."
"Honey what are you doing!?"
"Uh...nothing, sweetheart!"
[video=youtube_share;326R1ndtX9Q]http://youtu.be/326R1ndtX9Q[/video]
"eeeeeeeeerrrm...eeeeerrrp!! Beep-beep! Vrrrrrrooommmm...."
"Honey what are you doing!?"
"Uh...nothing, sweetheart!"
:rofl:
And the clockwork mechanism makes the car noises already.
I'm trying hard NOT to start a phone collection but I just couldn't resist the lovely light grey Northern Electric 500 that I found at a thrift store today. Curse those thrift stores!
Thats the most childish thing I have ever heard! Real men would never do that, real men sit on their half done 35 Harley's and make motorcycle sounds! Now excuse me, I have to go play with, I mean work on my 35. :eyebrows:And never mention the car noises either. lol lol
Thats the most childish thing I have ever heard! Real men would never do that, real men sit on their half done 35 Harley's and make motorcycle sounds! Now excuse me, I have to go play with, I mean work on my 35. :eyebrows:
I'm fairly sure you've started a new collection!
Nice find, you don't often see this era of phone in good shape. That's the kind of phone I remember growing up with in the 1980s, same colour too; my parents played it safe with beige everything in our house.
Does the number on the card really read 666-1088?, an odd number for Toronto.
My kind of music.....
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Bought myself a neat little mechanical, glass, German-made mantel-clock today. I cleaned it up and oiled it, set the time on it, and I'm currently regulating it for accuracy. Was $25.00 and it's a little beauty Fits perfectly on my desk.
Here's some photos. I'm not a clockmaker by any means. I bought this as a restoration-piece. Not bad, I reckon. Of course, the real proof is in how well it keeps time, once I've finished the fine-tuning.
This is what the clock looked like when I got it home:
As you can see: Covered in crud. And the movement was so gummed up, it didn't move at all!
Next came the fiddly process of pulling the clock apart...
I dumped the glass shell into a sink of hot water and scrubbed it all over with toothpaste and a brush, to remove the caked on crud. It looked like this when I got it out:
Removing successive protective plates and screws finally got me into the movement...
I ran the movement and its various components through an ultrasonic bath, disassembling it as far as I dared. Once the movement was out of the bath, I dried it thoroughly with towels and puffers and air-dryers. Then I started putting the clock back together.
I had a couple of mixups and woopsies, but I got it all back together again. It's now on my desk:
Bought myself a neat little mechanical, glass, German-made mantel-clock today. I