I suppose this one "Needs" a back story.
I grew up on a "hobby" subsistence farm...we always kept a Jersey cow for table milk and butter. In fact I never tasted store bought milk until I was nearly 17.
Dad would milk the cow by hand and the barn cats would line up in a row at gutter edge(southern end of Northbound cow) in anticipation of a warm meal fresh from the teet if you will...the wait was longer than cats could stand so near the end they would start to Mew...loudly!
In effort to quiet them dad would "Strafe" them with a stream of milk right from his milking stool...this is what us kids lined up to see. The sight of cats lapping at the air trying to gather as much inbound warm milk goodness as possible never failed to make tears of laughter flow from us kids...after the straffing run, more milk matted the cats fur than was gathered from air licking so the cats licked each other clean giving dad time to harvest the rest of the milk in peace.
I suppose those child memorys are what drew me to this product.
Bruce did a sweet conversation on the Ertl toy version of this (no cats)
The photo shows I have some issues to overcome as the Artsy version has a fixed milk can right where I want my drive belt to pass. I think I can overcome this. The crank and pulley do turn right out of the box but pulley has a guard that gets in the way of belt drive. I will remove guard and likely add bronze bushings to the axle.
I believe in operation the inner pot spins (real one) and the heavy cream moves to perimeter via Centrifugal force and lighter buttermilk drains from center so you would need 2 pails and your cream is separated. You can sometimes find original full scale units on eBay.
The hand painted cats on mine are iffy (luck of the draw) so if I get this converted and running well I will send it off to my Artsy sister for a better paint job.
PS: you absolutely can Not set a pail of milk down for 2 seconds in the barn or this Will happen, don't ask me how I know....
[ Guests cannot view attachments ]