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Salter Brand Logo. Salter is a British housewares brand. Established in 1760, Salter has been developing precision products for over 260 years. Salter develops and sells products that span a wide range of core product categories, including scales, electricals, cookware and countertop.
Salter Science was a brand of science kits sold by Thomas Salter Ltd., a Scotland-based company which manufactured toys and science activity kits for children. [1] Kits included activities with electricity , microscopy , magnetism and crystal gardens , but the company is probably best known for their chemistry sets .
The experiments described in the instruction manual typically require a number of chemicals not shipped with the chemistry set, because they are common household chemicals: Acetic acid (in vinegar) Ammonium carbonate ("baker's ammonia" or "salts of hartshorn") Citric acid (in lemons) Ethanol (in denatured alcohol) Sodium bicarbonate (baking soda)
Salter may refer to: Salter (surname) Salter (trap) Salter Brecknell, a manufacturer of light commercial weighing scales, part of Avery Weigh-Tronix; Salter Housewares, a manufacturer of consumer weighing scales; Salters Steamers, a boating company on the River Thames, England; Worshipful Company of Salters, a Livery Company of the City of London
Scientific glassblowing involves precisely controlling the shape and dimension of glass, repairing expensive or difficult-to-replace glassware, and fusing together various glass parts. Many parts are available fused to a length of glass tubing to create highly specialized piece of laboratory glassware.
Salter's duck, also known as the nodding duck or by its official name the Edinburgh duck, is a device that converts wave power into electricity. The wave impact induces rotation of gyroscopes located inside a pear-shaped "duck", and an electrical generator converts this rotation into electricity with an overall efficiency of up to 90%.
The original 2200 was a single-user system. The improved VP model increased performance more than tenfold and enhanced the language (renamed BASIC-2). The 2200 VP evolved into a desktop computer and larger MVP system to support up to 16 workstations and utilized commercial disk technologies that appeared in the late 1970s and early 1980s.
A definitive history of all Spot-On products was published in October 2013. "The Ultimate Book of Spot-On Models Ltd" by Brian Salter (with Nigel Lee and Graham Thompson [9]) is a 500-page large format book containing around 2000 colour images of nearly all the products made at the Belfast factory. [10] [11]