My Bake O Meter died

chrisinhouston • Apr 19, 2010 12:27 pm
Found this in my grandmother's kitchen back in the 1970's and it worked up until recently. She probably bought in the late 20's when she and my grandfather moved back to England from China and she had to start doing the cooking because they no longer had servants.

The bottom (second image) has a nice thick piece of asbestos on it!

I wonder if it's still under warranty?
glatt • Apr 19, 2010 12:52 pm
Good Housekeeping seal of approval.
ZenGum • Apr 20, 2010 4:38 am
Auuhhh, dude, asbestos has no safe level of exposure... one fibre can (can as in might, not will) cause nasty lung cancer. At least keep that thing sealed up in a snap lock bag or something.
Urbane Guerrilla • Apr 22, 2010 11:49 pm
Wonder why they thought it necessary. It's an oven thermometer, f'Pete's sake.
Elspode • Apr 23, 2010 12:07 am
That thing is cool enough that it might be worth dying of an asbestos related cancer to get to use it.
glatt • Apr 23, 2010 8:14 am
Urbane Guerrilla;650988 wrote:
Wonder why they thought it necessary. It's an oven thermometer, f'Pete's sake.


metal thermometer sitting on a metal rack is not going to read air temperature accurately. Metal conducts heat differently than air.
TheMercenary • Apr 23, 2010 8:30 am
Cool find.
Gravdigr • Apr 24, 2010 6:02 am
Nothing lasts anymore. Just before Grandmadigr died her four slice toaster quit on her. Turns out, it was a piece of shit. It was only 57 years old. A toaster ought to last longer than that. :headshake
Sundae • Apr 25, 2010 6:21 am
Some things were built to last ("in them days")
FARMER'S wife Maureen Mace reckons she has Britain's oldest fridge - which is still going strong after 77 YEARS.
The 4ft Electrolux cooler, which she bought secondhand for £7.50 in 1969, has a manufacturer's stamp showing it was made in 1931.

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