Canadian Forum
By Robin Plewes
Reprinted from "Crown Jewels of the Wire", March 2006, page 27
DOUBLE THREADED
Uniquely Canadian
The feature of double threading has made many collectors wonder as to its
purpose and origin. This threading feature is unique to two styles of Canadian
insulators. Both the unembossed cd143 "tallboy" and the no name cd120
insulators are hard to find.
A definition of double threading is that there are two threads on the pin,
which makes for a much steeper pitch. There are two thread starting points at
the top of the pin hole, about 180 degrees across from each other.
There have been a couple of theories as to what the purpose of the double
threading may have been. We may never know for sure, as the manufacturer who
made these insulators has not been confirmed with any certainty.
This excellent illustration {courtesy of Ray Klingensmith} shows the standard
single threaded pin on the left. The theoretical double threaded pin is shown on
the right. Every second thread has been darkened to show the continuation of one
of the threads. Each thread in this case makes about 4 rotations as it travels
the length of the threaded portion of the pin.
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As the idea of threading insulators came into being, it is quite likely that
it was simultaneously initiated by several glass manufacturers. Robert Hemingray,
Louis Cauvet, Samuel Oakman and others worked at developing methods of threading
that became the norm in insulator production. There is a very good chance that
someone in Canada started up their own threading concept, independent of what
was being developed in other glass houses. Cross country communications were no
where near what we have today, so I can envision an innovative craftsman toiling
away with existing insulator molds to come up with a threading concept to
improve the threadless insulators, which had a bad habit of popping off the
pins. We know that the double threaded insulators are some of the first threaded
items to be manufactured. It has been shown that some of the double threaded
143s were in fact made in the threadless cd743.3 molds.
One idea as to the intent of the double threading is that it was an attempt
to save some lineman's labor in repairing the sometimes-troublesome threadless
insulators. Perhaps the double threaded insulators were designed to thread onto
threadless pins, thereby saving the lineman the trouble of changing out the pin
as well as the insulator. Threadless pins would usually be about 15/16" -
1" in diameter, based on the holes in most of the threadless insulators.
The great example that I have personally seen was in fact whittled cedar and fit
the insulator quite well. Some threadless were "glued" in place with
tar and cloth. The threadless pin in this case would have to be a bit smaller in
diameter to allow for the folded cloth and tar. Linemen of the time must have
carried knives to trim the pins to suit the application at hand. Very few
threadless pins have been found. Cedar wood would be easy enough to trim, but
I'm sure there were other woods used also that would not be so easy to work with
while up a telegraph pole. Likewise, linemen must have occasionally whittled
pins on site from what ever was at hand.
A second possible purpose for the double threading is that it would allow the
glass workers to make insulators a bit faster. The threaded plunger could be
removed in about 3 rotations, which is about half the number of a standard
threaded insulator. With 100s or 1000s of insulators to be made, manufacturing
time must have been as important back then as it is today. With insulator
machines already in use at this time by some manufacturers, this probably was
not a big consideration. For those making insulators by hand though, it may have
been a design factor.
There is another possible intent of the double threading that has also has a
labor saving theme. The thread pitch or angle is quite sharp, so it only takes
about 3 revolutions to travel the length of the pinhole. Maybe the concept
behind the double threading was to save installation time of insulators and line
construction overall. This would probably have worked had there been double
threaded insulator pins to go with these double threaded insulators. Given that
it is very tough to install a double threaded insulator on a standard pin, there
would no time saved with this "improvement". I know of 2 collectors who have
personally removed double threaded cd143s in the wild. Given the difficulty of
installation and removal on standard pins, I can't see that these insulators
would have been changed over the years. Therefore these must have been original
installations. There has not been a double threaded pin reported to date, so the
chances of one being found are very slim, given the scarcity of both double
threaded styles.
Following this thought is the recent discovery of a tapered single threaded
pin that allows for the speedy installation of a double threaded insulator and
the jam fit of a threadless insulator. This pin may explain why there has not
been a double threaded pin found {yet}. It would be easier to make a taped
single threaded insulator pin than a double threaded pin. The tapered single
thread design is a great idea for the transitional period between threadless and
early threaded insulators.
Those collectors who have removed double threaded insulators from their
original installations, may very well have overlooked the smaller diameter
single threaded pins that were used. In one case though, the insulator was tough
to remove, so it must have been jammed on a standard sized pin.
This picture shows 3 side mount insulator pins. The first on is a common one
in great shape. The middle one is the slim tapered one that fits the double
threaded and threadless insulators and the last one is also very old and it was
found with a Mold-line-over-dome cd102 and still has one of it's original square
nail.
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This tapered pin style probably saw even less use than the double threaded
insulators. The example seen in the pictures is a side mount pin. If there was a
machine making the side mount style, there was very likely a machine producing
the straight-crossarm pins too. A newer standard threaded insulator does not
thread onto this tapered pin {It just spins and doesn't catch the threads.}, so
the pin was no doubt made specifically for the double threaded insulators and/or
threadless 742s that would have been in use at the same time.
As with most small innovations, the product that gets accepted is the one
that succeeds. The overwhelming numbers of early threaded Brookfield ( cd133s
for example) insulators found in eastern Canada suggest that there would be no
way for a smaller Canadian glass house to compete with a different insulator
threading style. It is very likely that the early equipment suppliers also
provided insulator pins.
With the American suppliers able to provide large quantities of both pins and
insulators, the Canadian innovation must have quickly fallen out of favor. To
give an idea as to how quickly the double threading idea died, it is interesting
to note that there are also standard threaded insulators ("Tallboys")
that were made in the same mold as the double threaded cd143s. This mold had
previously been used for threadless 743.3 insulators also. The insulator mold
was still fit for use, through 3 styles of threading. There are more standard
threaded "tallboys" than double threaded versions around, leading us
to figure that there was a relatively short run of double threaded insulators
and a really short run of threadless insulators. This fits with the fact that
the 743.3 insulator is very rare.
This comparison picture shows from left to right, the threadless cd743.3, a
double threaded cd143 and a single threaded cd143. The dome profile and a few
mold quirks prove that these insulators were all cast in the same mold.
The cd120 insulator is also very scarce and it's application is unknown. With
the telegraph lines being the main destination for insulators in the 1880s, the
cd120 style probably didn't receive a lot of orders and may in fact just have
seen a production run of a day or so. Early phone lines were being strung about
this time, so the cd120 style was probably made to try and get a bit of this
business.
This picture shows the most common color aqua on the left with a much less
common light aqua on the right. There is a super rare dark cobalt blue also.
It's a real eye catching insulator with only about 3 known to exist at this
time.
There are estimated to be no more than 2 dozen cd120s in collections today,
so the insulator mold must have been set on the shelf shortly after it was
proven. With an unpopular threading mandrel and a profile that was not in big
demand, there would no reason to make more or retool the mold.
There is one other style of double threaded insulator that deserves
mentioning. It's a shorter, stocky style of 143 with a rounded base. The profile
of this insulator is not quite as stocky as a Montreal Telegraph 143, but the
rounded base in this case is unique to this one insulator. The rounded base that
can be found on Hamilton Glass Co insulators, some unembossed Canadian styles
and some Brookfield insulators is referred to as a mold line across base. This
is where the mold line comes down the outer edge of the skirt and crosses the
base to meet a mold line around the inner edge of the base.
This side view of the rounded base,
double threaded 143 shows the actual
base.
The three styles of 143 bases.
A comparison shot showing the shorter stocky profile of the rounded base
double threaded 143 on the right. On the left hand side there is the more
common, tall and slim threadless mold style of double threaded 143.
The rounded base feature on the double threaded insulator can best be
described as rounded continuous drip. There are a couple of styles of this
rounded base as shown in the scale drawing below. The more common sloped flat
base style is on the right hand side of the illustration. The left hand profile
shows an offset rounded base where the inner shoulder is a 1/4" lower than
the outside shoulder.
The rounded base double threaded cd143 is a hard insulator to find. Perhaps
the presence of this insulator means that there was more than one Canadian glass
house experimenting with the double threading of glass insulators. There could
also have been 2 or 3 separate molds at the one factory. If this was the case,
then quite a bit of effort was put into the concept of double threading before
it was dropped in favor of the single threaded design, that became the standard
in insulator production. There is a theory as to who may have made the double
threaded insulators. The Hamilton Glass Company {1864 - 1891} was operating in
the time frame of both threadless and threaded insulators. The little cd120 is
perhaps the "link", as it has the more common style of rounded base
that is found on several other MLOD {Mold Line Over Dome} Canadian insulators,
including the cd162 embossed Hamilton Glass Co.
The Hamilton Glass Co. was a very big plant in its time. They produced a wide
range of products, which can be found in many areas other than southern Ontario.
A Few Special Double Threaded Insulators.
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CD 120 in Dark Cobalt |
CD 143 in Green |
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CD 143 Steel with Purple Swirls
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CD 143 in Cornflower |
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CD 143 Aqua with Amber |
CD 143 in Yellow Olive Green |
Given that they produced in volume, they would presumably be
willing to spend time and money developing improvements to their products. The
concept of insulator threading would fit with this thought. As with many early
insulators, the color of these insulators was not an issue. What ever color of
glass was in the furnace at the end of the shift or job, was made into
insulators. For the eye-candy portion of this column, here are some of the rare
standout colors that these insulators were made in.
The header insulator for this column is the taller version of the double
threaded cd143 in aqua glass, the most commonly found example of double
threading.
For this column I would like to thank Manfred Hagar, Phil Ort, Cecil Boos,
Bill Meier, Dwayne Anthony and Ray Klingensmith for their valued contributions.
Other News:
- Collectors in the east take note of the 2006 Ottawa Valley Insulator
Collectors show and sale in Eastern Ontario. The eighth annual show will be held
in the Perth Lions hall on April 22nd.
Check the web site for details http://www.insulators.com/clubs/ovic or call
Robin PIewes 613-256-7638 before 9.00pm EST.
- Collectors in the west take note
of the spring insulator meet at the Insulator Ranch in Merritt BC. May 27-28
2006 is the date. We will provide lunch on the Saturday and breakfast on the
Sunday. Hope to see you there, Bev and Bob Scafe, 3045 Spanish Creek Place,
Merritt, Be. V1K1B8 Lots of parking for campers, trailers, tents. Call
250-3782787 or email bobscafe@telus.net for more info.
Feel free to drop CJOW or myself a note if you have anything you would like
to see covered in the way of Canadian insulator news or information.
Good Collecting .......
Robin BY ROBIN PLEWES
Robin Plewes, Almonte Ontario.
Phone: 613-256-7638 Email: robin.plewes@cmcelectronics.ca
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