De Laval Cream Seperator Catalogs & Manuals on
CD
Dr. De Laval brought his great inventive genius, which was
responsible for the invention of the steam turbine engine as well as the
cream separator and many other scientific contributions of great
importance. He was granted his first patents upon a milker in 1894.
DeLaval was considered the "Cadillac" of cream separators, not
only for the quality but also for their high price tag. From 1894 to
1918, nineteen different types of milkers were developed by the DeLavel
Company.
We have collected a wonderful selection of seven {7} vintage
DeLavel catalogs and manuals together on a Gift Quality CD. Providing
hours of veiwing enjoyment, loaded with information and history of this
important company.
Catalogs Include:
:: 1895 De Laval Catalog - 28 pages.
:: 1911 De Laval Catalog - 66 pages.
:: 1923 Catalog & Instruction Manual - 40 pages.
:: 1937 Cream Seperator Operating Manual - 18 pages.
:: 1937 De Laval Catalog - 24 pages.
:: 1942 De Laval Catalog & Year Book - 52 pages.
:: 1946 De Laval Cream Separator S-10 - 40 pages.
1895 De Lavel
Catalog
Sample thumbnails taken from the
collection.
(Low resolution thumbnails - CD/DVD images are scanned at 300 DPI)
1911 De Laval
Catalog
Sample thumbnails taken from the
collection.
(Low resolution thumbnails - CD/DVD images are scanned at 300 DPI)
1923 Catalog & Instruction
Manual
Sample thumbnails taken from the
collection.
(Low resolution thumbnails - CD/DVD images are scanned at 300 DPI)
1937 Cream Seperator Operating
Manual
Sample thumbnails taken from the
collection.
(Low resolution thumbnails - CD/DVD images are scanned at 300 DPI)
1937 De Laval
Catalog
Sample thumbnails taken from the
collection.
(Low resolution thumbnails - CD/DVD images are scanned at 300 DPI)
1942 De Laval Catalog & Year
Book
Sample thumbnails taken from the
collection.
(Low resolution thumbnails - CD/DVD images are scanned at 300 DPI)
1946 De Laval Cream Separator S-
10
Sample thumbnails taken from the
collection.
(Low resolution thumbnails - CD/DVD images are scanned at 300 DPI)
|