3/16/2012

Insulators - A History and Guide to North American Glass Pintype Insulators Price Guide Review

Insulators - A History and Guide to North American Glass Pintype Insulators Price Guide
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
The latest, 2007 edition of INSULATORS: A HISTORY AND PRICE GUIDE TO NORTH AMERICAN GLASS PINTYPE INSULATORS, is widely available. For the uninitiated, "glass pintype insulators" are those little inverted-jar dinguses that adorn the cross-posts of many a North American utility pole. The "pin" (usually made of wood) attaches to the cross-post and extends up into the insulator. And the whole works keep telephone or telegraph-type "live wires" from dragging the ground and causing damage, but without posing a shock hazard to the linesmen.
While glass insulators are not nearly so commonly used as in the past, they still abound in the millions and many of us like to hunt them out--in an abandoned railway right-of-way, say, or as an item of "junktique" that winds up in many flea markets and antique stores. Perhaps even better, although these types of insulators serve a limited and residual function today, in the past they were legion. From before the civil war on up into the early 1970s, glass insulators were constantly evolving--to serve the frontier, to carry extending railway lines and telegraphy, and to carry long-distance calls on AT&T "long lines", which saw their heyday in the 1920s long before satellites, microwave towers and fiber-optics.
One storied glass firm, Hemingray (note the "R") was founded after the Civil War, churned out its BILLIONTH insulator in 1937, and lived another 30 years under different ownership. But how to distinguish an insulator that is quite literally common as glass from one that is more precious and commands a higher price? It isn't just history: rare patterns are worth more, favorite sizes are worth more, and perhaps most interestingly insulators left out in the sun for decades that turn bizarre colors like purple or "root beer" are rare and can be extremely expensive.
The McDougalds' book in earlier editions had a reputation as the "bible" for insulator collectors, and the legend continues with this new revised volume IMHO. I keep mine handy whenever I buy, sell or contemplate doing either. Forty-five dollars, I do realize, is quite a price for less than 300 pp. of line drawings, prices and spiral-binding, but it's worth it for practically all of us who have been led to (or stumbled across) this beautiful glass and the history it represents. In fact, collecting glass insulators (and often ceramic and plastic ones, too), has become over the past 30 years a full-fledged hobby with clubs, conventions, info sites and blogs, not to mention thousands of listings any day on eBay.
This book does presume a few very basic technical terms regarding insulators (many of them common to all manufactured glass). For the basic vocabulary, log onto insulatorinfo dot com; for the real lowdown on prices and values, buy INSULATORS the book. It is not likely to be discounted anytime soon, so interested or would-be collectors might as well order it thru Amazon and have it shipped for free or for cheap.


Click Here to see more reviews about: Insulators - A History and Guide to North American Glass Pintype Insulators Price Guide

13,000 entries are listed by CD number, embossing and color for each embossing. Each CD number has a scale drawing to assist with identification. An expected retail "price range" is given for each listing. The continuous spiral binding allows the book to lie flat for reference work. Appendices to cross reference Manufacturer style number to CD numbers, Primary Embossings to CD numbers, and insulator patent dates and the insulator Consolidated Designs (CD numbers) upon which they are embossed are also included. Also priced are battery rests, spools, miscellaneous glass insulators, commemorative insulators, private issue commemorative insulators, saleman miniature insulators and private issue miniature insulators.For the first time, the price guide will include four color plates containing 60 photorgraphs, featuring many of the colors that provide a representative sample of insulator colors. Also, in response to many comments from price guide users, the drawings have been included in the text of the guide rather than in appendices at the end. We have also increased the thickness of the covers in order to make the book more sturdy.

Buy Now

Click here for more information about Insulators - A History and Guide to North American Glass Pintype Insulators Price Guide

No comments:

Post a Comment