Uruguayan Glass Insulators
by Bernard L. Warren
Reprinted from "Crown Jewels of the Wire", February 1995, page 5
This is a continuation of "The Uruguayan Adventure" article begun
in
January 1995 Crown Jewels of the Wire
Glass insulators are known to have been produced by two major glass companies
in the Montevideo area. It is the author's opinion that the Sociedad Anonima
Fabrica Nacional de Vidrio, translated as the the "National Glass Factory,
Inc.", produced the first glass insulators in Uruguay. CD styles positively
attributed to this company include CD 128, 500, 501, 501.1, 502, 503, 560, 1052 and,
most likely, the small unembossed 1051.
Most insulators produced by this company were embossed S.A.F.N.V., the
initials of the company name. Extensive research in April 1994 turned up two new
embossings that the author believes represent the last insulator production of
S.A.F.N. V. The stylized embossing, "", was located on some examples
of CD 501.1, 502 and 503. An extremely rare embossing, consisting of the
superimposed, lower case letters, "", exists on a few CD 500's and
502's. The CD 502 is the only insulator style known to exist with all three
embossings.
S.A.F.N.V. produced one unembossed insulator, the CD 560 cable in
light green. A single specimen is known to exist. The extremely rare, unembossed
CD 1051 spool is also attributed to S.A.F.N.V. by the author, primarily because
of the glass color, and the fact that the company also produced the much larger
CD 1052 embossed spool. Colors of insulators produced by S.A.F.N.V. include
light aqua, light green through deep 7-up green, dark amber, deep cobalt blue
and light olive green to deep olive green. The cobalt blue and olive green
colors are exceedingly rare.
The second glass company involved in insulator production, the Cooperativa de
Artesanos de Vidrio, translated as the "Cooperative of Glass
Artisans", produced insulators in five different CD's. CODARVI, the name by
which this company was known, produced insulator styles CD 388, 510, 511, 512
and 513. CD 388, a larger, two-piece cemented insulator is the only high
voltage, glass power insulator known to have been produced in Uruguay.
Unlike S.A.F.N.V. insulators, all five styles of CODARVI insulators exist in both
embossed and unembossed varieties. With one exception, CODARVI embossed
insulators are embossed CODARVI-PANAMCO on one half-mold and IND. URUGUAYA on the
opposite half-mold. The exception is a CD 513 embossed CODARVI on one half-mold
and "21" over IND. URUGUAYA on the opposite half-mold. Whether this insulator
pre-dated or post-dated the association of PANAMCO with the CODARVI company is
unknown. It is significant, however, in that it is the only embossed CODARVI
insulator without the PANAMCO embossing.
All CODARVI insulators were apparently
produced in clear glass but straw colored specimens are known to exist in all
five CD's. A few insulators exist in a green tint straw and the CD 511 exists in
a rich, peach-straw color that is exceedingly rare. With their flat crowns and
perfectly straight sides, the CD 510-513 cable top CODARVI insulators are really
striking in their appearance and quite different from the more colorful and
equally attractive S.A.F.N.V. insulators.
The numbers 21, 22 and 23 that are
embossed on most S.A.F.N.V. insulators and some CODARVI insulators are not mold
numbers or dates. They represent the three basic sizes of insulators produced by
both companies. Number 21 indicated the largest style insulators, the CD 502's,
503's and 513's, all approximately 3"x 4" in size. Number 22 indicated
the mid-size style insulators, the CD 501, 501.1, 511 and 512. Number 23 indicated
the smallest style insulators, the CD 500 and 510. These two insulators, at
approximately 2 "x 2-1/4", are two of the smallest insulators ever
known to have been designed and produced for regular telephone line service. The
CD 500 and 510 insulators are truly exquisite little "Crown Jewels of the
Wire".
Dates have never been established for the beginning or ending of
insulator production by S.A.F.N.V. or CODARVI and little is known about these
two glass companies today, except that neither has produced glass insulators for
decades. Based on the age of constructed lines observed and the inter-use of
S.A.F.N.V. insulators with imported insulators, i.e. CD 107s, 152's and 154's,
it is the author's belief that production could have started as early as the
1930' s or 1940' s and continued through the late 1960's or early 1970's for
S.A.F.N.V.
The numbers 67 and 69 that appear on many CODARVI insulators are not
mold or size numbers and almost surely represent the years, 1967 and 1969, that
these molds were produced in. It is quite possible that insulator production
with these molds was not limited to those years but could have continued into
the early 1970's. Insulator production at CODARVI could have been limited to the
1960's and early 1970's. Much more research on both of these glass companies is
needed before production dates can definitely be stated.
A point that may be of
interest to the reader is the intermingled use of S.A.F.N.V. and CODARVI
insulators that the author observed on both communication lines and low voltage
power lines on travels throughout the cities, towns and countryside of Uruguay.
Although the colorful S.A.F.N.V. insulators are usually thought of as
communication style insulators, they were repeatedly observed in cities and towns in use as low
voltage power insulators, especially the CD 501.1, 502 and 503. All of the
observed uses of CD 503' s, one of the more rare S.A.F.N.V. styles, was as low
voltage power insulators. The cable top, CD 510-513 CODARVI insulators, long
associated with low voltage power line use, were also observed on numerous
occasions in use as regular communication style insulators on telephone lines in
the countryside.
One final note on insulator threads. All S.A.F.N.V.
insulators, except the CD 560, have regular threaded pinholes. The CD 560 has
vertical ribs and was designed for cementing to a metal pin. All CODARVI
insulators have spiraled type pinholes and were designed to be cemented to metal
pins. It should also be noted that all insulators produced by both companies
have smooth bases.
Listed below are the CD's, embossings and colors known for
S.A.F.N.V. and CODARVI insulators. Only the major name embossings are shown,
not the dates, mold or style numbers. An asterisk (*) denotes four or less
specimens known.
S.A.F.N.V. INSULATORS |
|
CD 128:
|
S.A.F.N.V./CSC -light green to greenish aqua, dark green, rich yellow
green, olive green*.
|
|
CD 500:
|
S.A.F.N.V. - light aqua, light green, medium green, deep 7-up green,
light yellow green *, medium yellow green * .
|
|
CD 500:
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- aqua*, deep 7-up green*.
|
|
CD 501:
|
S.A.F.N.V. - medium green, dark green.
|
|
CD 501.1:
|
S.A.F.N.V. - dark amber, aqua, light green, medium green, deep 7
-up green, dark olive green*.
|
|
CD 501.1:
|
- dark amber*, light green, medium green, deep 7-up green.
|
|
CD 502:
|
S.A.F.N.V. - medium dark amber, dark amber, aqua, light green, medium
green, deep 7-up green, me dium olive green*, dark olive green*.
|
|
CD 502:
|
- dark amber, aqua*, medium green, deep 7-up green.
|
|
CD 502:
|
- aqua*, medium green*, deep 7-up green*.
|
|
CD 503:
|
S.A.F.N.V. - dark amber*, deep 7-up green * .
|
|
CD 503:
|
- very light green', deep 7-up green*. (This is a new CD 503 mold
that creates a taller, distinctively different and more elegant ap pearing
insulator than the above CD 503.)
|
|
CD 560:
|
S.A.F.N.V. de V. - deep violet cobalt* .
|
|
CD 560:
|
(Unembossed) -light green*.
|
|
CD 1051:
|
(Unembossed) - dark olive green*. (Attributed to S.A.F.N.V. by the
author but not confirmed).
|
|
CD 1052:
|
S.A.F.N.V. de V. - deep 7-up green*.
|
CODARVI INSULATORS |
|
CD 388:
|
CODARVI - PANAMCO H.T. 21 / IND. URUGUAYA off
clear*, straw * .
|
|
CD 388:
|
(Unembossed) - off clear.
|
|
CD 510:
|
CODARVI - PANAMCO // IND. URUGUAY A - clear, straw*, rich
peach-straw*, green tint straw*
|
|
CD 510:
|
(Unembossed) - clear.
|
|
CD 511:
|
CODARVI - PANAMCO // IND. URUGUAYA - clear*, straw*, rich
peach-straw*.
|
|
CD 511:
|
(Unembossed) - clear.
|
|
CD 512:
|
(Unembossed) - clear, straw, green tint straw*.
|
|
CD 513:
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CODARVI - PANAMCO // IND. URUGUAY A - clear, straw * .
|
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CD 513:
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(Unembossed) - clear, straw, green tint straw*.
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Bernard Warren and his display of Uruguayan insulators.
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