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Antique X-Ray Camera Laminagram Lead Covered Microfilm Unit Keleket Recordak?

$ 528

Availability: 100 in stock
  • Original/Reproduction: Original Unit
  • All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
  • Laminagram Camera: Lead Covered X-Ray Camera 30'-40's
  • Condition: This camera came from and old laminographing X-Ray device.It was stored in hospital storehouse 20-30 years and was salvaged from extinction when the unit was dismantled in 1987.
  • Maker: Keleket? Remington Rand? Recordak?

    Description

    X-Ray Lead covered camera,i don't know any more than that.hospital got rid of the whole apparatus due to radiation + modern medical safety concerns.
    It went into the junk pile.I was there when they began breaking the wooden table +
    took the camera out before it got wrecked.Unit been in my dry storage since 1978.
    This antique Moroccan astrolabe was once used to cross the Sahara desert. It is made of brass, carefully and ornately etched with markings to indicate time, direction, star positions, and more. This amazing tool is considered the precursor to the modern smartphone: it gives you the time, your location, your horoscope, and even help you make decisions—all with the swipe of a hand.
    This astrolabe makes an impressive wall decoration and conversation piece. Astrolabes became popular during the height of the Roman Empire and remained popular until about the 18th century, when they fell out of favor.
    These multi-use tools consist of a circular stack of sliding features all embedded within a disk called a “mater”. A round plate containing a two-dimensional projection of the Earth’s latitudinal lines sits within the mater and, over that plate, another circular feature called the “rete” contains the locations of certain well-known stars in the sky. Over that, a straight rule pivots around to line up with time measurements along the edge of the mater. And on the back of the whole thing, a pivotable siting device helps find the altitude of a star—often the starting point of a calculation. (source: Smithsonian Magazine)
    Often found in shipwrecks, this unusual scientific tool was located in the southern Moroccan desert town of Zagora. They are quite difficult to find in good condition and are treasured by collectors.
    Details & Dimensions
    18cm tall x 12cm wide (7in x 5in)
    This item ships free worldwide directly from Morocco.
    Handmade; please allow for minor imperfections and design variations. Please inquire with any questions or for more pictures.