Carbon battery core pencil

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ROBBYBOBBY64

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I found this the other day. I have hear of people in the old times using a carbon core for a pencil before, but this is the first one I have discovered.
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willong

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I found this the other day. I have hear of people in the old times using a carbon core for a pencil before, but this is the first one I have discovered.
ROBBYBOBBY64.
How do you determine that is what the item is as opposed to a carbon arc electrode as used in electrical lighting that predated incandescent (Edison) lamps and were later used in aerial searchlights?

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hemihampton

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I find these all the time in different dumps, one dump is full of them, but never found any with a point, would seem pretty big for a pencil, have found much smaller ones that were pencils. LEON.
 

ROBBYBOBBY64

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How do you determine that is what the item is as opposed to a carbon arc electrode as used in electrical lighting that predated incandescent (Edison) lamps and were later used in aerial searchlights?

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These are a lot bigger than what you have in the picture. Size is 6 inches long by an inch wide. I have asked the community before and they all agree they find loads of them. They said car battery core. One even mentioned antique telephone battery. Either way this has a wire of some kind stuck in one end. Does not go thru.
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ROBBYBOBBY64

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I find these all the time in different dumps, one dump is full of them, but never found any with a point, would seem pretty big for a pencil, have found much smaller ones that were pencils. LEON.
This is the first like this I have found. They did alot of stone work in the area...lots! In the 1930's it was booming. I figure it is most likely from then. It would have working great for marking big blocks of stone.
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willong

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These are a lot bigger than what you have in the picture. Size is 6 inches long by an inch wide. I have asked the community before and they all agree they find loads of them. They said car battery core. One even mentioned antique telephone battery. Either way this has a wire of some kind stuck in one end. Does not go thru.
ROBBYBOBBY64.
The picture I posted is merely representational of carbon arc lighting in general and wasn't meant to suggest the specific application of the rods that you found. I suspect that WW2 vintage searchlights probably used electrodes about the diameter of your battery cores. For what it's worth, I have uncovered large dry-cell batteries in 1930's era trash too, though I always thought they were either for telephones or radios. I remember one small dump in particular because it was the first place that I found embossed whiskey bottles, albeit machine made ones, after I began deliberately hunting bottles. (A chance encounter was my first find.)
 

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