National Goblin weekend
A feature in today’s daily mail defends supposedly useless 70s gadgets such as the Sodastream, Fondue sets and the Goblin Teasmade. (They are in a list of a top 20, although the site the article refers to isn’t properly live yet).
I first encountered a Teasmade in a small hotel in the late 70’s when I was installing phone systems around the country. I don’t remember which specific hotel but it may have been one rather unusual one I stayed in at Cannock Chase. It only had about six rooms but the reception had more than thirty keys on the board. (It must have been every cupboard & padlock in the place). The rooms were fairly normal but what was unusual was the bathroom- it was a large room with the bath in the centre & with thick shagpile carpet. (The bedrooms themselves weren’t en-suite).
When I first encountered the Teasmade it was curiousity that made me fill it and set it up. It was basically a glorified alarm clock but instead of sounding an alarm, it boiled a metal kettle instead. The kettle bit was sealed so that once it reached boiling point, the water squirted out under pressure into a ceramic teapot. The kettle was on a sprung platform that raised up as the water transferred from the kettle to the teapot, at which point a changeover switch would operate, the light would come on and the buzzer would sound.
I actually found it a pleasant way to be woken up as it would would progressively get noisier over several minutes, although the buzzer was a bit severe. After encountering another one somewhere else and repeatingt he process, I eventually noticed one in Coventry Exchange & Mart, a large 2nd hand shop in town, & bought it for a song.
I vaguely have memories of having a clock radio version later (probably after the local Radio Station started, Mercia Sound), although as I had a semi-live-in girlfriend by then, I found nicer ways to be woken up!
The other useless object celebrated was the Sodastream, a device for carbonating water. Everything the Daily Mail says about it is true- they didn’t make enough pop as the bottles were too small, the concentrates didn’t taste very nice, the bubbles weren’t as good as real pop, they got messy & sticky, the CO2 bottles themselves were quite expensive and you had to take your old one in with you. Overall they were rather Cak, but good fun for a kid.
(The post title is a possible urban myth that Goblin wanted to use that slogan for an annual promotion but they were told that it would break advertising rules)






May 10th, 2008 at 1:40 am
Sodastream.
I thought it was the 80’s. I seem to recall leting a bit of co2 into the atmosphere trying to actually get it into to mix. Just found out from Wikipedia it was invented in 1903, wow!
I hope the DIY fizzness hasn’t caused any serious damage to the planet.
May 13th, 2008 at 6:37 pm
I’m not sure how BOC make Carbon Dioxide- I suspect it is a by-product of making liquid oxygen- they liquefy air then distill it. If they do make it that way, then there is no concern of carbon emissions as such because it was already in the air before the process rather than trapped underground like oil & coal.