Roger Hicks
Veteran
Most things on a bicycle. Most firearms. Mechanical watches. Penknives. Gas stoves. Toasters. Enlargers. Record decks (for vinyl). Sewing machines. Air compressors. Pressure cookers. Wheelbarrows. Watering cans. Cheese graters. Refrigerators. Hair dryers. Electric drills. That's just a very quick list from the things my wife and I actually own. Add in Cona coffee makers; safety razors; lathes...Well, maybe I sounded a bit denial in my earlier post. I'm torn between old and new - I kind of wonder about fact that mechanical rangefinder has survived so long and even has found it's [probably last] home in a digital camera, at same time I greet it as I like it for it's simplicity and ease of use. It's like an old dinosaur or last Apache - world has moved on but there's the last creature, last from the breed. I can't think of many areas where something haven't changed for so long time....probably except wheel 🙂 despite that tire technologies change over time. . . .
Overall, more things have survived with very little change than have been radically revised. Many of them are so simple, and reached their peak of perfection so long ago, that we no longer even notice them. Axes or hammers and chisels, for example. Yes, you can buy hydraulic log splitters and pneumatic drills but I bet there are a lot more axes, hammers and chisels in use than hydraulic log splitters and pneumatic drills.
Cheers,
R.