Showing 127 items
matching darter
-
Moorabbin Air Museum
Manual (item), Rolls Royce Dart 511 Engine
Rolls Royce Inc. -
Moorabbin Air Museum
Magazine (item) - Rolls Royce Dart Engine, Rolls Royce Dart Propeller Turbine Aero-Engines
Rolls Royce Inc. -
Moorabbin Air Museum
Magazine (item) - Rolls Royce Dart Engine, Rolls Royce Dart Propeller Turbine Aero-Engines
-
Moorabbin Air Museum
Manual (item) - Rolls Royce Dart Engine, Rolls Royce Dart 505 Engine Established Performance Data and Installation Notes
Rolls Royce Ltd -
Moorabbin Air Museum
Manual (item) - Rolls Royce Dart Engine, Control & Performance Characteristics of Rotol Propellers for Dart 510 Engines in Viscount Aircraft
Rolls Royce Ltd -
Moorabbin Air Museum
Manual (item) - Rolls Royce Dart Engine, Dart Mk.506 Engine Established Performance Data and Installation Notes
Rolls Royce Ltd -
Moorabbin Air Museum
Manual (item) - Rolls Royce Dart Engine, Dart Mark 505 Turbo-Propeller Aero Engine for Viscount 720 Aircraft
Rolls Royce Ltd -
Moorabbin Air Museum
Booklet (item) - Rolls Royce Dart Engine, The Dart in the F27
Rolls Royce Ltd -
Moorabbin Air Museum
Manual (item) - Rolls Royce Dart Engine, Operating Instructions Dart 526 and 532-1 in the Hawker Siddeley Argosy
Rolls Royce Ltd -
Moorabbin Air Museum
Manual (item) - Rolls Royce Dart Engine, Dart Mark 525 Turbo-Propeller Aero Engine for Viscount 810 Series Aircraft
Rolls Royce Ltd -
Moorabbin Air Museum
Manual (item) - Rolls Royce Dart Engine, Dart Mk.510 Provisional Performance Data and Installation Notes
Rolls Royce Ltd -
Moorabbin Air Museum
Manual (item) - Rolls Royce Dart Engine, Dart Mk.528 Provisional Performance Data and Installation Notes
Rolls Royce Ltd -
Moorabbin Air Museum
Pamphlet (item) - Rolls Royce Dart Engine, The Rolls Royce Dart Prop-jet
Rolls Royce Ltd -
Moorabbin Air Museum
Manual (item) - Rolls Royce Dart Engine, Dart Course Notes
Rolls Royce Ltd -
Moorabbin Air Museum
Manual (item) - Rolls Royce Dart Engine, Training Kit Course Notes
Rolls Royce Ltd -
Moorabbin Air Museum
Manual (item) - Rolls Royce Dart Engine, Dart 520 Series Index
Rolls Royce Ltd -
Geoffrey Kaye Museum of Anaesthetic History
Weapon - Blow pipe, Mah Meri, c. 1936
Used by the Mah Meri people, Kuala Langat, Selangor (Malaysia), 1936. While Malaysian, this blow-gun is analogous to that used by Indigenous groups from South America with curare. The gun is of bamboo, with a highly polished inner tube of the same. The darts are reeds, made directional by knobs of a tudor wood, with poison made from the ipoh tree and the Strychnos vine The blowpipe examined in this report consists of a long bamboo tube with engraved floral motifs on the outside and a second bamboo tube inside. The mouthpiece is attached to the inner tube and the whole piece can be removed from the outer casing. There is a quiver, filled with darts, a small poisons receptacle, and a single dart and hollow bamboo tube, stored outside the quiver. The objects were donated as a whole to the museum in 1948 by Dr Thomas Edward Marshall. The engravings on the outer case originate from the Mah Meri community in Kuala Langat, Selangor, Malaysia. The floral ‘motif is of a vine with small incisions to reflect the properties/identity of the plant (poisonous/harmful)’. These motifs are generally handed down through the generations and can be used for kinship identification. They are also believed to enhance the performance of the blowpipe. The outer casing is made up of several pieces of bamboo fused together. Broken or damaged blowpipes were not discarded. Broken sections of a pipe could be removed and replaced as required, and the observably different bamboo sections suggest this has taken place at some point. Sap from the perah tree is used to seal or glue the pieces together and the glue is reversible by heating. The Mah Meri created a poison from the ipoh tree for use in hunting. The poison acted swiftly to kill the animal and did not result in secondary poisoning. The way in which the Mah Meri hunted is analogous with other blowpipe hunting practices elsewhere in the world. Blowpipe hunting practices represent a starting point for the introduction of standardised muscle relaxants into surgery during the 20th Century. In parts of South America, plant poisons were used to tip the darts and kill prey. These poisons are known as curare. The crucial ingredient in curare was Chondrodendron tomentosum root. Raw curare formed the basis for Intocostrin, the first standardised, mass produced muscle relaxant. The introduction of muscle relaxants dramatically changed surgery, allowing for more precise surgery and better patient outcomes. Bamboo blowpipes can be found in many museum and heritage collections, particularly those with strong colonial origins or influence. Blowpipes from Borneo seem to be well represented, along with those from Guyana. Blowpipes from Malaysia appear to be less common. More research is required to establish the rarity or representativeness of the blowpipe. Ownership of the blowpipe can be traced back from the museum to Dr Thomas Marshall. It has also been established the blowpipe’s point of origin is among the Mah Meri people of Kuala Langat, near Kuala Lumpur. There is no information regarding the way in which Marshall came into possession of the blowpipe. Provenance cannot be fully established. Despite these difficulties, the blowpipe represents a full set of hunting implements. It is accompanied by a quiver, also decorated with a floral motif, a set of bamboo darts, and a poison receptacle. The quiver also has a waist strap which enabled the owner to strap it to themselves, preventing its loss while hunting. Each object within the set is in good condition, although the inner tubing is beginning to split lengthwise and should not be removed from its outer casing. While the blowpipe and accompanying objects are not of South American origin, the techniques and poisons used are analogous and this object has high interpretative capacity. Hollow bamboo blowpipe with mouthpiece at one end. Two different types of organic fibre have been used at difference points along the shaft to secure different segments of the blowpipe. The item consists of two tubes a thin and unpolished inner tube that has degraded and can no longer be removed, and a polished and decorated outer casing. The outer casing is made up of different sections of polished bamboo, some pieces have developed a deep red hue which is likely the result of prolonged polishing and regular heating over many years, other sections are a lighter yellow indicating that they are newer pieces of bamboo. The entire outer tube is covered in a varied sequence of genomic patterns. The exact meaning of these patterns is unknown however they are passed down through family lineage, the exact family of origin is unknown. Connected to the mouthpiece if it is removed from the inner casing is a piece of cloth with the numbers 2241 written in black ink, their purpose is unknown.curare, malaysia, bamboo -
Moorabbin Air Museum
Document - CAC Commonwealth Aircraft Corporation, Rolls Royce Dart Notes Avon 100 Series Course Notes
-
Moorabbin Air Museum
Manual - Maintenance Manual No.847/1 Viscount Dart 525 - Propeller Equipment, Dowry Rotol
-
Moorabbin Air Museum
Booklet - Basic Notes Gas Turbine Engines Pilots Dart Handling Course Notes, Trans-Australia Airlines Engineering School - Maintenance Department
-
Moorabbin Air Museum
Manual (Item) - Ansett Dart Eng Do's & Dont's
-
Moorabbin Air Museum
Manual (Item) - Ansett Overhaul Manual For Rolls Royce Dart Engines
Publication Ref.0-Da7-AC -
Moorabbin Air Museum
Article (Item) - Photocopy of article called Convair F-106 Delta Dart drawings by Bob Hunt from Aviation News
-
Moorabbin Air Museum
Manual (Item) - Hawker Siddeley Avro 748 with Rolls Royce Dart Engines Series 1 Type Specification
-
Moorabbin Air Museum
Manual (Item) - HS748 Dart Engine TP-65
-
Moorabbin Air Museum
Book - Viscount 700 publicity book with technical details Keith Meggs Collection, Viscount 700 Series Four Rolls-Royce Dart Engines
-
Moorabbin Air Museum
Manual - Maintenance Manual No.862A Accessory Drive Equipment for Argosy/Dart Mk.222, Dowry Equipment Limited Rotol
-
Moorabbin Air Museum
Manual - Overhaul manual TSD 262, CAC DART servicing notes
-
Moorabbin Air Museum
Manual - Dart performance data TSD 58, CAC DART performance data
-
Moorabbin Air Museum
Document - Dart Aero Engine Service Bulletin, Rolls Royce