

The Flameport Museum.I'm sure a few museums would be interested in them
I gathered they'd be no use Today, but yes, just going by the weight, you can tell they were built to last.Made when stuff was made to last.
Put it back on the shelf and it will outlive you, your children, grandchildren and their grandchildren.
No use today.
I was thinking, could they be Service Fuse Cutouts? Although only 15 Amp, perhaps at a time when electricity was used only for lighting (5 Amp)?A pair of MEM15amp, wire type fuses, mounted in an cast-iron box, pre-1950's. MEM - Midland Electrical Manufacturing.
That thought did cross my mind.....The Flameport Museum.
I was thinking, could they be Service Fuse Cutouts?
And rated at 15 amp.No, I don't remember a time, when rewirable fuses were ever used, besides which, there is no ways to seal them.


I'm sure a few museums would be interested in them
Rewirable cutout fuses were not a lot different to those ceramic units and I've always regretted losing a cast iron unit during clearing up after a job, my first house had something similar,No, I don't remember a time, when rewirable fuses were ever used, besides which, there is no ways to seal them.
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