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JoeM

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JoeM

546721628_Whatsit1.jpg.6e3ddfe1a2780283f56b970b15799dec.jpg

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ebinmaine

Lots of rocks

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JoeM
12 minutes ago, ebinmaine said:

Lots of rocks

Hmmm got part of it right. (down here we call them stones) 

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Stormin

Possible for lifting paving flags. We could do with more photo's from different angles.

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oliver2-44

Google Images says it's Iron Oxide.

So old Misses Google aint as smart as she thinks she is!

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CCW

When the hooks are closed a cable would run through the opening.  Cable would be attached to some load.  The other end allows the hook to connect to a lifting device - FEL?

 

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lynnmor

I-beam lifter upper.

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JoeM
51 minutes ago, lynnmor said:

I-beam lifter upper.

very close 

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Stormin

 My re-think is for steel plates. Have used similar in the past.

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Handy Don
2 hours ago, JoeM said:

546721628_Whatsit1.jpg.6e3ddfe1a2780283f56b970b15799dec.jpg

The jaws don't overlap so they must fit into rings or span something -- an I-Beam? The other end is opposing hooks--slot goes up onto a cable then body turns 90º to hook the middle of a stretch of cable. Probably used by riggers when securing or moving beams.

Edited by Handy Don
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953 nut

Used to lift sections of rail on the railroad. 

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JoeM
1 hour ago, Handy Don said:

The jaws don't overlap so they must fit into rings or span something -- an I-Beam? The other end is opposing hooks--slot goes up onto a cable then body turns 90º to hook the middle of a stretch of cable. Probably used by riggers when securing or moving beams.

We actually used these to hang messenger wire from overhead beams. A use could be the bottom side of the bridge. Mostly temporary work.The double hook is call a "sister hook" and the messenger wire ran through those hooks. The messenger wire could hold up various things. From water lines to electrical cables. 

a special prize selected especially for you

a dance from the banana!

:banana-dance:

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