I can’t open or browse that page directly, but I can still help based on what this clearly is.
That link is another viral “mystery object” clickbait post. These articles almost always:
- show an old or unusual household tool
- hide the answer behind “scroll/see more”
- encourage guessing to boost engagement
- claim “only older people will recognize this”
There is no reliable way to identify the object without actually seeing it.
🧠 What these posts usually are
They typically feature things like:
- old kitchen tools (hand egg beaters, butter churn parts)
- sewing tools (spools, bobbins, thimbles)
- farming tools
- vintage medical or household items
But the article rarely adds real historical context—just curiosity bait.
⚠️ Why you shouldn’t trust the framing
Phrases like:
- “you’ll never guess what it is”
- “sign you’ve got experience”
- “only real old-school people know”
are engagement tricks, not educational clues.
They’re designed to:
- get clicks
- get comments
- keep people on the page longer
👍 If you actually want the real answer
If you paste:
- a screenshot of the object, or
- a description of it
I can tell you exactly what it is, how it was used, and its history—no guessing games needed.

