At the beginning of the first world war they plotted all military operations using these giant pins. Later in the conflict ‘map pins’ were developed and these ‘land pins’ became obsolete. Another fascinating example of how the horrors of war pushed technology forwards in civilian applications.
38 12 ReplyImho joke answers should be against the rules of the sub.
24 0 Reply
Looks like piece of a wheel and an axle from a tractor or a truck or something.
23 0 ReplyIt’s in the centre of France so it’s actually the France axle.
27 2 ReplyPlease don't touch it or you'll make France all wobbly
10 1 Reply…otherwise it’d just be sparkling wheel shaft.
7 1 Reply
Or train
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Marking the exact center of France
11 2 Replyi remember seeing somewhere in paris the prime pin
must be around Notre Dame
edit: yes, it indeed is there : point zéro
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It looks very rough, it could be an unfinished part: a fusion that hasn't received the subsequent machining.
Maybe a flywheel.7 0 ReplyI think that's just from many years of rust and wear. I doubt that's the original surface finish
5 0 ReplyCould be both
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A large ship engine valve? Maybe an unfinished casting? Finished ones here
4 0 ReplyIf that's a valve, the cylinder is probably big enough to climb inside!
4 0 ReplyI think it might be a riser or part of a sprue from a larger cast part
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I wouldn't have known it was metal just from the picture. It looks like a stone bird bath.
3 0 ReplyWhat does the top look like?
2 0 ReplyIt is flat (and round obviously).
1 0 Reply