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Parker Coffee grinder
I bought an original Parker coffee grinder about 20 years ago that I came across at a antiques store in Medina,Ohio. Do these have much collector value? The grinder is in excellent condition and has a beautiful label that reads No. 431. I have it in a original about mint Gustav Stickley china cabinet(circa 1915) that I use for a display case.
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Parker coffee grinders are very collectible. Post a couple pics of yours and someone who knows what you have will chime in.
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DISPLAY??
ours (a model 200) sits on an 1816 painted store bin- I just finished grinding this morning's coffee with it before looking at the PCA board |
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Coffee grinders? nah, nobody wants them. My 700 just sits there and looks pretty.
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Don’t the exhaust fumes bother the wife? The angle of the photo almost makes it look like you converter it it internal combution or steam powered. :rotf: . |
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I should have remembered how you scrutinize everything in the background of my photos. The 1871 Edward S Clark, South Boston, steam launch engine has nothing to do with the coffee mill, except share a place to rest. Likewise, the Smith's of Derby tower clock, whose pendulum rod is visible in front of the mill, does not make the coffee at a preset time. The Carlisle Finch bipolar motor/dynamo is very much like the motors used on the motor driven Parker mills shown in their catalog.
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How much you want for that Daisy...?? . |
which one? There are three in there. One's a Buck Rogers with a compass in the stock.
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The one standing on the floor.... . |
John, Sorry Some of us highjacked your thread. The 431 is a nice sized box mill. If Allan Swanson pops in, he can comment, as he really knows his small box mills. He's in Maine now, and may not be following the forum.
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