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  #1  
Old 19-12-13, 23:10
Chris Suslowicz Chris Suslowicz is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Grant Bowker View Post
All info from ads posted on www.visual collector.com as part of listing of items that were for sale June 2011. There is a PDF file that includes the descriptions of the boxes that were for sale and then images that correspond to the text (see the file names to match to the text - the original images had to be split to fit the size limits).
I think that 6V 100/125Ah accumulator with the handle on the lid is a bodge job to turn a scrapped battery into a toolbox. The battery is _very_ heavy, especially when filled, and there's no way that the lid clips would take the weight of lifting it by a top handle like that.
(Also the fixing bolts go through the filling and charging instruction labels.)

Only very small (6V 16Ah, 6V 40Ah and the 12V 22Ah) batteries had single lifting points, and those were usually a rubber strap bolted through the end case sides.

Chris.
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  #2  
Old 20-12-13, 02:42
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Robert Bergeron Robert Bergeron is offline
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Default battery boxes

Thanks all for the support in these difficult times.

I will be going parrafin wax as Geoff suggested. Sounds right and i like the smell of hot parrafin in the morning. It reminds me of my cross country skiing days in the Sutton Québec area, a place called Farmer's Rest.

Next set of boxes i will try Oak or Beech and see what result it gives.

Thanks all for the very good info.

Leaving the net ( as Terry said ) for a few days, off to Sherbrooke tomorrow for the brother's funeral on sathurday.Sad.

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  #3  
Old 20-12-13, 09:55
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Ron Pier Ron Pier is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Chris Suslowicz View Post
I think that 6V 100/125Ah accumulator with the handle on the lid is a bodge job to turn a scrapped battery into a toolbox.

Chris.
I agree with Chris here! You can see the holes in the side in the inside of box shot where the handles have been removed. You would not want to put many tools in there either. More likely a sewing/knitting box.
Here are some of my boxes where as Chris says, the small ones have a leather strap and in the case of my smallest box it's canvas.
None appear to have ever been painted. Just natural wood colour. Although I have satin varnished a couple after sanding the blackened wood.
Apart from one 1942. They are all dated 1945. Shame, as my FFW Morris is 1940. But then my WS11 set and ancillaries are all Australian........Beggars can't be choosers!! Ron
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File Type: jpg Batteries 010.jpg (49.6 KB, 42 views)
File Type: jpg Batteries 008.jpg (51.6 KB, 39 views)
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File Type: jpg Batteries 006.jpg (54.0 KB, 38 views)

Last edited by Ron Pier; 20-12-13 at 10:01.
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  #4  
Old 23-12-13, 09:04
Johnny Canuck Johnny Canuck is offline
Geoff Truscott
 
Join Date: Aug 2011
Location: Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
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Default Batteries and Accumulators Part 1

Pictures of Accumulators and batteries.

An accumulator is a single cell, a battery is a series of cells in English parlance.

It is sort of hilarious, as research should be done before commencing a project; not when it is nearly finished. But I'm the idiot that wanted $300 to make an exact copy. Hinges are unobtainium and will have to be custom made, same for the catches. $400!

Anyways here goes.

I took a battery box into work and had the boss look at it, he knows his woods much better than I do. He identified beech, oak and mahogany in the one box I had brought in. It would appear that in wartime Britain they used whatever was around that day.

PS Grant I'm not a Visual Collector, I actually acquire the real thing, two of the wooden boxes I have are the ones David Gordon had on his site.

First, a page from WFTW Appendix 9-2



6 Volt 100-125 AH Mk.IV







6 Volt 72 AH No.2






6 Volt 72 AH No.2






End of Part 1
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  #5  
Old 23-12-13, 09:18
Johnny Canuck Johnny Canuck is offline
Geoff Truscott
 
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Location: Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
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Default Batteries and Accumulators Part 2

Batteries and Accumulators Part 2

I think this is a Canadian item, what it was for.................. I don't know, possibly a R103.

Pattern 5344









Unknown, possibly a homebrew.








End of Part 2
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  #6  
Old 23-12-13, 09:45
Johnny Canuck Johnny Canuck is offline
Geoff Truscott
 
Join Date: Aug 2011
Location: Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
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Default Batteries and Accumulators Part 3

Batteries and Accumulators Part 3

Shipping/Transit Case for a 6 Volt 85 AH Mk.II ZB 0102(Lid) Side 6 Volt 85 AH Mk.ILXX ZB C10 (Canadian??). Screw holes in the top seem to match so who knows which is correct or both?










Steel Battery Boxes

6 Volt 85 AH ZB 12716 1953










End of Part 3
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  #7  
Old 23-12-13, 10:00
Johnny Canuck Johnny Canuck is offline
Geoff Truscott
 
Join Date: Aug 2011
Location: Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
Posts: 171
Default Batteries and Accumulators Part 4

Batteries and Accumulators Part 4

12 Volt 22 AH






Misc metal battery boxes.



WS58 Battery Box.


UC 6/10 Switchboard Telephone Exchange Internal Battery Box.


Portable lamp, battery box and battery.


No.12 1.5 Volt Cells British on the left, Swedish on the right.


No.12 1.5 Volt British


BA 300/U Canadian


Everready 1.5 Volt


End of Part 4
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  #8  
Old 23-12-13, 10:07
Johnny Canuck Johnny Canuck is offline
Geoff Truscott
 
Join Date: Aug 2011
Location: Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
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Default Batteries and Accumulators Part 5

Batteries and Accumulators Part 5

1.5 Volt Cells smaller than the previous 1.5's


Misc batteries.


End

Geoff
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  #9  
Old 25-12-13, 18:14
Chris Suslowicz Chris Suslowicz is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Johnny Canuck View Post
Batteries and Accumulators Part 2

I think this is a Canadian item, what it was for.................. I don't know, possibly a R103.

Pattern 5344


Unknown, possibly a homebrew.

Hmm... "Pattern xxxx" sounds more like Naval than army use, might possibly be air force, but that's a fairly small 12V battery pack intended to be hand carried by the look of the strap fixing for a leather shoulder strap. Possibly a signalling lamp?

I think the "homebrew" one is just that, and made from a surplus headset case (they were issued with switchboards to carry the operators headset and breast microphone.) This is probably to run a doorbell.

Best,
Chris
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