
Chernobyl Liquidators Medal
An enamel medal, as given to the civilian and military personnel who cleaned up after the 1986 Chernobyl nuclear disaster.
An enamel medal, as given to the civilian and military personnel who cleaned up after the 1986 Chernobyl nuclear disaster.
A cutaway demonstration British Oxygen Company acetylene gas regulator.
A sine bar (a measurement tool) which came from the tool room of the North British Locomotive Co., Ltd.
A Harding’s Improved Counter, made by G & J Weir Ltd of Cathcart, Glasgow. Weir’s make pumps and are still in business: https://catchingphotons.co.uk/blog/industrial/proper-scottish-engineering/
A pewter dish from 1985, commemorating 2 billion barrels of oil produced at the Sullom Voe oil terminal in Shetland.
A Strathclyde Transport bus stop sign from the early 1990s.
A gauge for measuring the diameter and wall thickness of condenser tubes – maker unknown, but made to a very high standard with a calibration tube and a velvet-lined wooden case.
A sales sample from the Pennycook Patent Glazing & Engineering Company. Founded in 1880, this company specialised in large glass roofs, they’re responsible for the roofs of Glasgow’s Central Station and Edinburgh’s Waverley Station.
A book of drawings of CO2 circulators from various early British nuclear power stations, made by James Howden & Co of Scotland Street, Glasgow.
An enamel badge from the Atomic Energy Authority Constabulary police dog section at the Dounreay nuclear power research facility in Caithness.
A core sample of rock from the Cononish gold mine near Tyndrum in the Highlands.