In the photo are Paolo Salucci, Nora Coppo, Guido Boreani and Nora's husband
(kneeling). This was the first meeting of the Italian Collector's Association in
the home of Nora Coppo of Genova, Italy on June 9, 2002. As seen each collector
is holding a favorite insulator. Paolo is holding a Ginori unipart, Nora is
holding a VACCARI type "WEITSCHIRM" CD 765 glass insulator, found near
Viterbo in a warehouse. Guido is holding the classic Italian "Paderno Type
porcelain insulator.

European Insulator Association's
(EIA) First
Meeting
The European Insulator Association (EIA) held its first annual meeting in
Pisa, Italy on June 8, 2003. Founding members in attendance include Nora Coppo,
Guido Boreani, Paolo Salucci, Andreani with mother (all from Italy), Ulrich
Reiser (Germany), Frantisek Danek and Miroslav Immer (Czech Republic), Fredrik
HojeHilt (Holland) and was hosted by Mr. Barsottelli (Italy) of the Italian
Insulator Collector's Association "Isolatori Di' Italia."
After the meeting they gathered at a restaurant for their first official
lunch. No formal bylaws have been established by the EIA, but they aren't
letting that deter them from their goals of finding, researching and
documenting European insulators and the Italian collectors are actively
preparing a book on Italian insulators.
The 2nd annual EIA meeting is tentatively planned for Stuttgart, Germany
possibly during the summer
of 2004 and will be hosted by Ulrich Reiser. This group represents some of the brightest
and most enthusiastic insulator collectors in Europe and I anticipate
sharing more exciting discoveries from them in the future.
Looking at the center of the photograph of the EIA advertisement flyer (next
page) there is a low voltage telephone style white porcelain (u-number
unassigned) stamped with the Verbano logo with a crown inside a triangle with
"T.S.1 EP" underneath it.
According to "World Wide Porcelain Insulators" by Jack Tod and
Marilyn Albers, this Italian insulator was manufactured by Societa Ceramica
Italiana "Verbano" in Laveno, Italy. The company's catalog reveals the
Verbano factory was established in 1925 as a result of an agreement between P.H.
Rosenthal & Company of Selb (Germany) and their associates, Italian Ceramic
Society of Laveno. Verbano produced this telephone style insulator in the late
1940s to the early 1950s. In the flyer's photo this insulator is humorously
superimposed over the actual location of the leaning tower of Pisa.

The medium voltage multipart in the logo in the upper left hand corner of the
flyer is a "Paderno Type" double bell insulator made by Richard Ginori.
It was originally patented in 1897 by ING. Semenza for use on the13 kv electric
tramway line between the power station at Paderno D' Adda and Milano, a distance
of about 30 miles. This was a major accomplishment at the time and many
technicians from around the world came to see it. The U.S. manufacturer Thomas
apparently offered a nearly identical style and nicknamed it "Antwerp"
in its 1905 catalog but little else is known about it. Paderno insulators are
still being manufactured today in a slightly modified design.
In the next photo "The Fab 3" Zoltan Drinoczy, Nora and Guido are
selecting insulators out of the display shelf at the home of Nora Coppo. (Italian
photos courtesy of Nora Coppo, all rights reserved, used with permission). Among
some of the noteworthy insulators (not counting all the nice spools!) are a
canary yellow glazed Suisse Langenthal porcelain and a potpourri of colors and
shapes of Italian and other European insulators.

Nora shares this recently discovered low voltage glass insulator embossed
"Fidenza 6102" (cd number currently unassigned). It is threaded to the
base and has a slotted crown groove with a brass thimble insert. It measures 2-3/4 inches wide and 5-2/5 inches in height. Only six of these have been
recovered to date. It was made in the 1960s to early 1970s time period. A
four-wire line of these was located on a mountain along with a few on a wall and
one on a light pole. This line has subsequently been dismantled and apart from
the 6 recovered and the few spotted on a precarious hard to reach wall, no
further quantities of this unusual style insulator are known to exist. Of
interest to this piece are its height for a low voltage insulator, high quality
threads and light aqua color glass, which is unusual for Fidenza insulators.

FIDENZA 6102 -
A newly discovered insulator
Thanks to Don Mecklenburg for "Practical Telephone Hand-book",
circa 1906, pp. 334-337) and Steve Homewood for "Practical Telephone
Handbook and Guide To the Telephonic Exchange" by J. Poole, Pitman of
London, 1919, 6th edition, pp. 390-397; and "Telephony" by T. Herbert
& W. Proctor, Vol I,1934, pp 1104-1109 and sending the Sinclair-Aitken
insulator with original hardware along with the photo of their installation). A
special thanks to Nora Coppo for the Fidenza 6102 and her tremendous support and
Lis and Jim Bergman for information provided for this article. Thanks also to
Guido Boreani for granting permission to share information from his book
"Isolatori D'Italia," March 2003. '
I'm receiving numerous emails, letters and phone calls reporting new
discoveries of foreign insulators. Keep up the outstanding communication! There
is so many exciting discoveries being made. With your continued help, together
we can make a difference.