Give me your best guess on this thingy

BTV Digger

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I found this on one of my last hunts of 2015 (late Dec). Made of lead with iron teeth and broken off on one end. Some sort of animal comb? Teeth to an early machine? Site dates from the 1800s and gone before the dawn of the 20th century. Any ideas? Thanks much.

John
Dec23_mysteryitem.png
 
That is a tough one John. Not sure it's an animal comb....looks a bit too lethal. The fact that it is lead I think is the key. Maybe it was weighted so it would cut something without having to put manual pressure on it. Need to cogitate on that one a bit.
 
could it be some type of very old electrical plug , the metal prongs would fit into a special outlet slots ??
 
now looking more at this , my question is are the iron prongs sharp or noticeably thinner on one side than the other ??
 
Maybe it's a noodle maker? Roll out your dough and then use this to cut it into noodles?

Most of the noodle makers I have seen have rolling blades, but perhaps this is a primitive homemade version? Just a wild guess.
 
Thats a possibility Tony !! I was rolling around the idea of the cutting part of a mechanical "bleeder" or fleamer .
 
now looking more at this , my question is are the iron prongs sharp or noticeably thinner on one side than the other ??

Not really Dan. They're solid iron though and firmly stuck in the lead...can't move them. I've included a few more pics if that helps. The more I look at it, the view from the bottom (at least what I think is the bottom) actually shows a more intact oval shape so the thing may be complete and not broken after all.
lead_sharpie1.pnglead_sharpie2.pnglead_sharpie3.png
 
Maybe it's a noodle maker? Roll out your dough and then use this to cut it into noodles?

Most of the noodle makers I have seen have rolling blades, but perhaps this is a primitive homemade version? Just a wild guess.

No that's a good guess Tony. I hadn't thought of that. Thanks.
 
So I plead ignorance Dan. What's a mechanical bleeder or fleamer!?

John regular or traditional fleamers or "scarificators" looked like the first picture . These were blood letting instruments but later on they became spring loaded like the second picture . Notice the four or five blades they are similarly like on the piece you have .

Dan
 

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John regular or traditional fleamers or "scarificators" looked like the first picture . These were blood letting instruments but later on they became spring loaded like the second picture . Notice the four or five blades they are similarly like on the piece you have .

Dan

After doing a bit more research I think that's exactly what it is Dan! I think it's the blade mechanism that was enclosed inside of the casing in the picture you show. Upon lifting the external lever, the lead-encased blades would pop out for cutting. Then you could lower the lever and the blades would lower back down into the housing for safety. Thanks much for your help.

John
 
Now THAT is a pretty darn cool find John. Nice job on the ID Dan.

So, would this be used on living farm stock for some type of medical treatment or might it be used for preparing a hide for tanning ??
 
Looks a bit large and heavy to be a bleeder instrument.
How about something mounted on a roof as part of a lightning arrestor system.
Or, maybe something mounted somewhere to keep birds from roosting?
 

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