Senior QUIZ: Remember these vintage objects? 🧠 Test your memory! 👑
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- čas přidán 13. 03. 2024
- Welcome to Trivia Quiz Rush, this is another Quiz special about vintage objects! Challenge your memory with this fun senior quiz! Do you remember these vintage objects from your past? Test your knowledge and see how many you can remember! Share this video with your friends and see who can get the highest score. Let the nostalgia begin!
Part 2 & 3 are out! Watch them here:
Part 3: • Senior QUIZ: Remember ...
Part 2: • Senior QUIZ: Remember ...
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Guess the old item, Guess the old things, Memory Test
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In case you missed the sequels to the "Vintage objects" quiz about objects from the past, be sure to check them out here:
Part 3: czcams.com/video/WxDblCtVbiw/video.html
Part 2: czcams.com/video/kCdDzNrIcG8/video.html
As always: some object names can vary per region, but don't hesitate to let me know if I made any errors. I hope you enjoy and please share your results in the comments. Dont forget to subribe to the channel! There goes alot of effort in these quizzes and it really helps!
The analog, AKA, home weather stations did not give forecasts, but gave accurate immediate conditions, which helped in the decisions for the day
Might as well just look out of the window :D
By noting changes in the barometer, rain can be predicted.
@@joemuncie9187 but it is not a day away. it is usually about to happen.
@@joemuncie9187Yes. Storm, rain, change, fair and dry.
I still have my Atari 2600 with all the games.
Nice! Never throw away your old game consoles!
You got me beat, BUT I still have my VCR and the all important VCR tape rewinder. However I threw away all my old tapes except for 4 of them about 6 months ago
That wasn’t a hand pump water well! It was a pump FOR a water well. The well is the hole in the ground that the water comes up from! I was 30/30 and spotted a mistake you made!
You are 100% correct 😀 My apologies for my inaccuracy. But you scored 30! Honor and glory will forever be yours! (Should my next be more difficult?)
Specifically called a Pitcher Pump. Typically found in the kitchen and just the right size for a pitcher to fit under the spout. The larger/taller ones are just a well hand pump and found outside on top of the well. A 10 gallon milk can fits under the spout. I grew up with both styles PLUS the crank style pump.
@@neolithicnobody8184, yup, a pitcher pump. I have one exactly like the one in the photo.
These "pitcher pumps" usually pulled water from a cistern or holding tank in the basement under the kitchen. The cistern was kept full by collecting rain water and/or a windmill powered water pump.
@@scottsatterthwaite4073When we didn't get enough rain to keep the cistern full, we had 10 gallon milk cans that we'd fill from the well by our fields and transport to the cistern. The field well had the big hand pump, the cistern top had a rotary type pump and our kitchen had a pitcher pump. The cistern had 2 sides with a lid/access to each side and each side could spill to the other side through the center wall to keep balanced. One side collected from one end of our house and vice versa, one lid was used for filling and the other lid had the crank pump. I was the last one to leave home, being the youngest, and before I left, I installed a water line from the field well to the cistern with a 12V pump so my parents no longer had to manually transfer when the cistern ran low.
I got all but the mangle and the butter mold. My grandparents (now my brother) had a mangle but it was electric and used as a type of "roller iron". My aunt told me that you had to be careful you didn't get pulled into the roller or you would soon learn why it was called "The Mangle". The Amana Radar Range had a huge copper wound transformer in it which made it so heavy. A modern microwave has one about the size of your fist along with two magnets and a copper "wave generator" component. All good to remove for scrap or just keep the magnets to hold stuff up on the fridge...
So you scored 28/30? Thats great! I've seen hotels use big versions (like... human-sized) of mangles to dry laundry (can you imaqgine how many?) I do NOT wanne operate one of those, I can see myself getting stuck in the laundry only to be pulled in to what would be a horrific scene haha, no sir....
YES. When you're 81, there's not much you haven't seen or owned. 😊 (microwave)
When I was a kid in the 50s, my Mother took a job at RCA. They had an open house, showing what they did and what they were working on. One thing they had was a demo of microwaves cooking a hot dog. I might be one of the first people, to ever eat a piece of hot dog cooked by microwave. Sad part was the microwave wasn't in a protective box, as it is today. Just out in the open with the waves going where ever they wanted. Might explain a lot about me.
So true! And Microwave is correct!
@@TriviaQuizRush 😄
My parents told me that people didn't think microwaves were safe back in the day. Now I understand why. Thanks for sharing!
I got 26 out of 30 (I mistook the Atari game console for a dictaphone), so I just proved that I'm older than dirt!
Thanks for sharing your result! It's always fun to see how these quizzes surprise.
I have several of these items and grew up using all of them except the Telex. Yes, I've even used a telegraph. When I was growing up, there were several small farms in the area that were linked together with a telegraph system. The small farms used to be one great big farm back in the day and the workers lived in the other houses, most were family members of the owner. It was cheaper to communicate via telegraph than to use a phone back then, considering long distance charges between the farms at the time. I'd say the most memorable item for me would be the churn. I have countless hours operating one of those over the years. I can still hear the distinct sound it made as you cranked the handle. That and the ice cream maker. My older Sister got her long hair tangled in the mechanism and had to get a hair cut the hard way. It wasn't a pretty sight, she lost over 10 years of hair growth in no time at all.
It's amazing how these items hold such nostalgic memories for many. Thanks for sharing your experiences!
We still have our churn. A few years ago, I was trying to churn butter with it. I cranked and cranked. Finally my husband said "There's got to be a better way. ". He got out the blender, turned it on and -voila BUTTER! The churn is in a place of honor with our other antiques.
I did my first software programing in 1975 on a telex, made a tape then put together punch cards...gee I feel like a relic.
Very cool! Thanks for creating this!
Glad you liked it!
I'm 60 and Nailed 26 of the 30. Microwave is the Bonus, even Tho it was Actually Accidently Discovered in the 1950's.
The First was if I remember Correctly made by Radarange and was many Hundreds of pounds used by the Military Prior to better/smaller Models being Produced and Marketed for Hoe Use.
26/30 is a great score! Great job.
And you're right about the microwave being discovered earlier as an accident: "Percy Spencer developed and patented the first microwave oven after noticing that a magnetron was emitting heat-generating microwaves during an experiment with radar in 1945. The first models were huge-about 6 feet in height and weighing more than 750 pounds."
You beat me to it! My dad was an electrical engineer who specialized in microwave based communications. He told me about microwaves ability to cook things, probably as a warning to stay out of his home lab/workshop where he was always building some mysterious devices.
He bought a microwave oven @ 1970, and it was a big heavy thing. When my mom died in 2000, that microwave was still working, good as new! I wish I'd kept it, but I knew I'd be moving out of state so I was getting rid of unnecessary things.
I had to think through the microwave question and the historical timeline. I remember first using a microwave in the late 60's in the college snack bar. A big industrial-type machine. It was the early 70's when I remember first seeing them in the stores. Amana Radarange was the Cadillac and very expensive, probably around $1k. My first was about 1974/5, a small "Little Litton" that was probably a couple hundred. Very heavy for its size.
Eight track tape player: "Riders on the storm. Riders on the storm. Clunk kachunk whirrr Into this house we're born...."
🤛
One thing I also learned about drive-in movie speakers was that some of them also had car heaters on the same unit which would sensibly spare car batteries if watching a movie in colder weather!
I didn't even know that. Sounds great! Honestly they should bring back drive-in cinema's :D
One tihng I learned about drive-in movie speakers was to put it back on the stand before driving away. My buddy and I and a couple of guys went to the movies and the guy who was next to the speaker fell asleep in the back seat. Mike , the driver, said " Jim put the speaker back", and not hearing an answer, presumed that he did, and pulled away waking Jim up when the speaker hit him in the foot.
@@billgrandone3552😂
@@TriviaQuizRush The only reason I know of that car drive-ins have become obsolete is because the amount of land it takes to have a drive-in theater makes it difficult to gain profit because the taxes for the land are ridiculous (assuming they owned the land and didn’t have to pay rent as well). Long Island New York had that problem and all the drive-ins were gone. This happened a few decades ago when things were not as expensive as they are now. I’m sure other places had similar issues.
These days, I’m not even sure how many people would want to go. However, if younger people experience drive-in theaters they might actually like it.
Yeah that makes sense haha. Especially these days….
#18 My grandmother would fill one with cream for me to churn while I watched cartoons on TV in the 1950s.
Sounds like a great time, thank you for sharing!
Microwave is what made cooking faster in the 70's
Correct, and it was invented by accident
I'm officially an old person, not only did I get them all right, I still own some of these things!
I've lived off-grid on solar power for 17 years, and I collect tools that don't require electricity, and I use them!
Some things are just yard art, such as the plow I have outside that's identical to the one at 8:27, except mine has no wood handles left.
I also have an ice crusher, a laundry mangle, Brownie camera (I have several early 1900s cameras), weather station, wood sled, manual coffee grinder, Dad's slide rule, and I'm pretty sure the pogo stick is out in the shed.
I really need to have a farm yard sale, I've got too much ol' crap!
Amazing how this is all still used and supports your off-the-grid lifestyle. Most of us are so used to modern conveniences. Thank you for sharing!
I basically got 20/30. Some of the full names you gave were unknown to me. I was born in 1967 and lived in Mississippi starting in ~1973 at the age of six. I grew up on my Grandparents' farm there. 😊
Well done, and thank you for sharing!
The radio was called a "wireless" in the UK.
I guess they were ahead of the wireless trend back then!
Kitchen water pump, generally used with a "dry sink" insert that had to be taken out and cleaned after use. The sink generally had no drain.
Pfff such a hassle, I'm happy im from the 80s :D
It’s called a pitcher pump found by the kitchen sink
Thank you for sharing
Your horse drawn plough is actually called a mouldboard plough we owned one and used it behind a tractor
Oof, my apologies.
never seen or even heard of s CASSETTE REPAIR KITS I've not evn seen them at any RADIO SHACK
Guess that makes you lucky if you never needed one :)
I subscribed. Trust me, I know it's expensive to feed the cats.🐱
Thx! And yes it is haha.
Especially when all 3 need specialized food -.-‘
A new coffee grinder could be drafted into grinding spices, BUT you did not want to drink the funny tasting coffee if you used it for grinding coffee beans eeeyuck
I have 3 different small coffee grinders, one for coffee, one for dried jalapenos that I grind into a seasoned salt, and another for whatever isn't coffee or peppers. I wrote in marker which is for which, not making THAT mistake again!
"This coffee is too, spicy!!"
Spicy coffee haha, no thanks :)
Never seen any of these
None? Not a single one? I'm from the 80, most of these before my time and still recognised alot.
I was only way off on the telemtry unit, most of the rest I've seen or even used some variation of, man have i cranked the handle on both the butter churn and the icecream freezer back in my youth🤠👍
Great job! Hope you liked the quiz.
I missed 4, my guess is the microwave oven
Correct! And great score!
28/30 Mangle and Butter mold.
Great score! Part 2 is out, check it here: czcams.com/video/kCdDzNrIcG8/video.html
Am glad we never had shag carpet in our house.
It's definitely a relief to avoid the shag carpet cleaning nightmare!
OMG! I’m really old. 28/30 correct.
Or maye you are just very knowledgable ;)
Missed the flint and steel. Photo very poor on a smartphone. Being from the first half of the 20th century, all these items were familiar.
Sorry for the poor quality photo. I hope you enjoyed the rest of the quiz!
Very US specific!
Really? I didnt feel that way, Im Dutch myself
@@TriviaQuizRush Well, granted that I opted out after maybe a third but things like soap box derby cars and drive-in theater speakers seem very much US to me.
I had 29/30 ( if you consider I knew how or for what it was used but maybe not the exact name/model like I said coffe grinder not specify that it was manual) and bonus question was the microwave.
Correct! And yes that is how it's meant. It more about that nostalgic "oh yeah that thing" experience :D
26/30. Microwave
Correct!
these were fun. knew most of them. didn’t get the Atari stuff. or 8 track tape deck. didn’t have a car.
Great job, thank you for sharing!
28 out of 30. I guess I’m a senior. Born 1955. I even have a slide rule, and took slide rule class back in the day. I sure would like to find one of those huge “school model” slide rules that hung on the blackboard.
Nice score and thank you for sharing your experience!
You gotta make it tougher. I only got one Wrand I've.
Forgotten what the bonus question was but I got that right as well. I'm Forgetful, but I'm not stupid.
And most of those objects were before my time, but I don't get stumped easily.
Great Job, and thank you for your feedback. I will make the next one more challenging.
GAWD, I am now soooooo old. 28/30, missed the two butter questions. My aunt used to make butter from their cow, but with a full-size churn. That mold looks way old, before our time. My mother used her wringer washer into the 1980's. Still sitting in the basement. #3 - I did not recall that bakelite came in colors like that. My first thought was catalin which is translucent, multiple colors and patterns and very expensive to produce. The bakelite I remember was solid dark brown and often painted on radios (and even early tvs). #14 - Precisely a Kodak Carousel slide projector. Have one of those, along with an 8-track player and other stuff shown.
Thank you for sharing! About the color of the Bakelite, yeah I had some options to choose from :D It probably differs per region which type is most popular so it can be challenging to find the picture most recognisable for the majority. And i'm from the 80s myself so I've never seen one in real life haha. Part 2 is comming out soon and it will be a little more challenging I think!
All but two or three. I did not identify the butter mould and the cassette tape repair kit. To be fair, I didn't think of them all in your terms. For instance, the telegraph key did not immediate make me think of Morse Code. Nor did the device for drying and ironing clothing conjure the word 'mangle' (which I recognize) immediately.
Microwave oven. I was still living at home, we got one in the late 1960s.
Thank you for sharing! And I absolutely agree, the quiz is about recognizing the items and remembering what it does. That nostalgia feeling…. :) Not about the exact name that I displayed because I’m sure different people use different terms.
I finally found a channel I feel young at!!!
Happy to help! :D
Bonus is microwave.
Correct! Hope you enjoyed. Be sure to check out part 2 and 3. Links in the video description.
Note on the butter churn: You put cream in it and what you got out was fresh butter and buttermilk.
Never seem one myself unfortunately. Thanks for sharing!
I got 27 and the bonus question is microwave
Correct! Great job! Did you get a microwave in the 70's? I'm from the 80's myself and heard many people where reluctant because of fear of the radiation a microwave might produce...
The stereoscopic viewer required a stereoscopic camera to make the right and left images for the viewer
Fascinating how technology evolved, have you ever tried modern 3D goggles? I own a pair of HTC Vive goggles and it's amazing.
I’d add that was a very new model, early ones held the pics out from the viewer.
90%
Nice job!
I got about 10 of them wrong. By the way, the "mystery device" must be a microwave oven. Larry Carroll
Correct! Hope you enjoyed.
On the camera. the other thing that the camera brought was the neighborhood grocery store offering developing services with seeing the pictures you took in only a week to ten days because it had to go all the way to Seattle Film Works, and they sent you back film that ONLY THEY COULD DELELOP, but the film was included in the cost of developing. I hope you didn;t want more than 12 photos, lol
Smart of them, seen from a commercial aspect
If you bought film from other companies, like Kodak, it would not need to go to Seattle, as far as I remember. Seattle Film Works did have good film.
Pogo stick ???? be nice to lnow what size this is. with that photo it could have been a fancy kind of wall picture hanger.
I have been asked somewhere in these comments to add a banana-for scale :) I will do so next time!
Missed the teletext, didn't have one on the ranch. I won't correct you on the 'water well' as someone already did. I have hours at the crank of the ole' butter churn. Also missed the butter mold, ours weren't that fancy. They were circular, truncated cone with a plunger on top. The bottom of the plunger had the butter decor, you held it upside down, oiled it, put the butter in, stuck it in the fridge with the plunger fitting twix the rack wires until the butter set. Then you took it out, put it on a saucer, pushed the plunger and out came the molded butter. I have also used outhouses, read by kerosene lamps and chopped wood for the cooking and heatung stoves. Yeah, I been around awhile.😂
It sounds like you've had quite the experience with all those old-school methods! Thanks for sharing your memories.
Only 21. About the Telex machine. The Teletype is a mechanical wonder. In the seventies they were used as input/output units for computers. Served as keyboard, display, printer and mass storage with the punched tape reader/printer.
Still a decent score! Thank you for sharing.
Bakelite isn't Plastic. It is classified as a thermosetting resin.
Thanks for the correction!
Still got my slide rule
Don't throw away stuff that still works :)
I didn’t do very well! I guess that means I’m not as old as I thought!
Does that mean you’re happy or unhappy with your result? 😅
Yikes missed 8
Thats not too bad!
I said go-cart. Does that count? The car at the drive=in is going the wrong direction. One car would park next to one speaker. Another car would park next to the other speaker. There is a drive-in a couple of miles from here. I got 22 plus microwave. My grandmother's milkman walked right inside her kitchen and put the milk and butter in her refrigerator.
You'd hang the speaker on your car door. Now they tell you where to tune your fm radio. It's nice. You can bring in your own food and eat dinner in the car. They used to charge by the car, but now it's per person. It's still a bargain.
Yes it counts :D Great score tho. And Microwave is correct! Thanks for sharing.
30/30
Wow thats's impressive
Did not recognize first one, recognize all since.
Was it too easy?
Number 21 is incorrect. The photo shows what was commonly called a pitcher pump. The well is the hole in the ground that the pump fit into.
You’re right! Thank you for letting me know!
@@TriviaQuizRush and I failed to mention that they are still made, and many are in use today. They're great to have when the power fails to your electric powered well.
27 of 30 got alot of these
Great job! Maybe you'll find part 2 more challenging? czcams.com/video/kCdDzNrIcG8/video.html
I know you're going to say the Microwave was the bonus, but the microwave came out in 1945.
You're correct that is was "invented" around the 40s (by accident; they where actually doing 'radar-stuff'.) But it became commercialised as a household appliance in the 70s.
in the 1970’s most people would have had toaster ovens.
microwaves would have been bigger and way expensive!
Biscuit.
Not the answer to the bonus question, sorry!
I enjoy these, but it would be really helpful if there was something used for scale. There were two where I was way off because of scale. Answer to bonus: microwave
I guess you are right, someone else mentioned that too. :D It's challenging tho, because I don't own the actual objects.
@@TriviaQuizRush yeah, that would make it difficult. 😕
Just for the record, if you are going to specify "brand names" for some items, and not others, then you got a shitload wrong.
Thank you for letting me know!
26 out of 30 right.
Great job!
Only 20 right and I think the answer for the bonus question is microwave?
20 is a fine score. And you're correct, it's a microwave!
Obviously an American quiz spelling two "LL" words with only one "L".
Thanks for your feedback! Dutch creator here :) so i had to pick either British or American, and even then my spelling isn’t perfect. 😅 only hoping both British and American viewers will enjoy (and everyone else).
I am 85 what do you think i got correct.
Mmmh, if I had to guess... I would say you scored about 26/30. Please share! :)
Not sure you might have been napping while 8 tracks came and went. I hope you are able to share your experiences with us youngsters. I’m 67
Did nor say whole name.
Doesn't really matter. Names can differ per region/country anyway. If you know what it was and what it did it still counts as a point :)
Way to call "senior quiz" something featuring plenty of objects last used over a hundred years ago and/or in the US only.
Alot of objects see use over 10 to 60 years, from 1st iterations to better developed versions. This quiz is meant to viewers of a wider range of ‘seniors’ for some nostalgic fun. Sorry I disappointed. I put a lot of hard work in my quizzes and i can only hope people enjoy my content.
We "seniors" have seen and/or used all those items. I have hand pumped water from a well. My first camera and first photos were taken with a Brownie box camera exactly like the one shown.
@@KameraShy I'm 39 :D Almost all of those items are 'before my time' but I still recognised alot :) I'm working on part 2, and I think it will be a little more challenging.
Is this more American bullshit
The full quiz? Certainly not, it’s meant for everyone. But there might be 1 or 2 in there that might be specifically American.
Here is some BS, there is the kitchen door don’t let it hit you on the way out…
Why don’t you name this Quiz for Intelligent people? Some of us aren’t old
I'm 'only' 39 myself I i still recognised alot in this quiz, even though it was before my time. So yeah its for everyone... However: They ability the 'memorise' things is only a part of ones intelligence, but sure, i could have done that. But if you want to know, these are the stats for this video viewers:
25-34 years 1.2%
35-44 years 3.1%
45-54 years 7.4%
55-64 years 22.9%
65+ years 65.3%
Thats because people like nostalgia about things they recognise from the past :) That said I don't only focus on seniors, my general knowledge quizzes are for all audiences. Be sure to check them out!