Object number
59/310
Description
An auger is a boring tool used in a variety of woodworking trades to bore long deep holes. It consists of an iron shank with a T-shaped handle at one end and a boring device at the other. A taper auger, also known as a 'reamer', is shaped like a tapered conical half-funnel. It was used to enlarge, by side paring, an existing hole made by a shell or spiral auger, and was commonly used by wheelwrights to bore out the centre of wagon hubs. This taper auger was donated to the Museum by a wheelwright from Terling, Essex, and is believed to date from the mid-seventeenth century.
Physical description
1 taper shell auger: wood; metal (iron); good condition
Production date
1625-01-01 - 1674-12-31
Production period
Mid-seventeenth century
Object name
Material
Associated subject
External document
- L:\MERL\Objects\JISC 2012\60 series negatives\60_13216.tif - High resolution image