Pill machine for making up to 30 pills by hand, probably 19th century
In the 1800s, pills were cut from a large long roll of a mixture of the drug and cut into pieces. The dosage could be worked out by measuring the length of the roll and dividing by the number of identical pills. This pill cutter allowed the pills to be cut more accurately into equal pieces. It is worked by hand and is capable of making thirty pills in one go. It also has space to roll out the mixture.
CATEGORY: Pharmacy-ware OBJECT NUMBER: A640431
MEASUREMENTS: overall - roll: 30 mm x 350 mm x 47 mm, .358 kg overall - board: 45 mm x 352 mm x 155 mm, .976 kg
Loan: Wellcome Trust RIGHTS: Data in the title, made, maker and details fields are released under Creative Commons Zero Descriptions and all other text content are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 licence Scanned using Cyreal multi camera photogrammetry platform www.cyreal.com © The Board of Trustees of the Science Museum
Comments