I really thought I had it with escalator. I looked up the history after I guessed. I think that’s allowed, right? And I already knew some of it. Even the year 1859 matched.
Is it traffic lights? Or some sort of precursor?
Is it a roundabout?
[del]Was it stop sign or traffic light related?[/del]
Was the device employed for trains, carriage or pedestrian traffic?
Edited as I missed Peter Morris’ post.
Wow, I had no idea 1859 matched. But nope, that is not it.
NO
NO
kk
Is this a thing someone might find:
- in or on a vehicle?
- in a place where passengers might board or dismount a vehicle?
- in a place where vehicles move, such as on a road, or on a rail line?
- in a place where vehicles are built or repaired?
KK
Transportation… Land? Sea? Air?
NO
However, closest to “air” in my opinion.
Sort of air… Elevator? It’s not escalator, but elevators I’m sure had the same sort of dangerous rep when they debuted.
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He did not invent the elevator, no.
Was this the year of the invention of the elevator safety brake?
Does the device make some sort of widely recognizable noise?
Sorry, wrong post.
I don’t know the exact year, but I’ll say NO.
NO
Let me nudge you and see if you can start to put things together…
He did not design or develop the elevator or elevator brake…
Is it elevator related?
Elevator doors? Buttons?
kk
I forget what it is called, but is it that type of elevator that is constantly moving and you step on and off while it goes by?
Is it something associated with or associated with the lack thereof of:
elevator doors?
buttons?
cable?
lighting?
shaft?
motor?
elevator box or enclosure?
Lighting up the buttons?
Does it have to do with a passenger operated elevator?
An elevator specifically intended for passengers rather than freight?