I would disagree with some of the points, but as it is a peeve I wont press my luck.
Lycanorukke,
Please believe me when I say you have no luck to press. I'm an engineer, machinist, tinkerer, nascent blacksmith, and have read widely on the subject of the history of technology since my early teens. The aeolipile is a toy that cannot produce work meaningful in an industrial sense.
I have to shoot down starry eyes claims regarding the device at least quarterly both here and at an alternate history board I frequent. I lay the blame for this at the feet of our post-industrial society. Just as how in an industrial society people grew more intellectually distant from how their food was raised and processed, in our post-industrial society people have grown intellectually distant from how their goods are manfactured and transported. Work in Western societies more and more equates sitting in front of a display screen and tapping on a keyboard while the cultural knowledge of how things physically work recedes in the distance.
By way of an example, it took me several posts to explain to intelligent people at another forum why an Edison-type phonograph would require screws with a constant thread pitch.
On to your suggestions...
A "homemade" rad sensor of the type you described is exactly the type of device I was hoping this thread would produce. A low-tech capable people dealing with visitors from high-tech capable societies would have a great need for such devices.
Creating the foil needed is very easy, we've been producing exquisitely thin gold leaf for as long as we've been working with gold. Glass is another material that people can easily make once the knowledge is developed. And, as your suggestions regarding pumps illustrates, low-tech capable people can build vacuum pumps again once the knowledge is there. Put all that together and they'll have all the rad sensors they need.
Your suggestion regrading "fridges", thanks to our knowledge of thermodynamics we've been able to "retro-tech" a TL0 "fridge" consisting of two clay pots, sand passed through a sieve, and water. This device is used in the field to keep vaccines cool during mass innoculation projects in sub-Saharan Africa and other locations.
Regards,
Bill
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