It sounds like you’re describing small glass tubes with three tiny ball bearings inside. These are likely vial-style ball bearings, which are often used in a few different contexts:
1. Spirit Levels (Bubble Levels)
- Some compact spirit levels use tiny glass vials with liquid and small spheres to indicate levelness.
- The ball bearings move inside the liquid to help show precise horizontal or vertical alignment.
2. Rolling Ball Counters or Sensors
- Small glass tubes with ball bearings can appear in mechanical counters, clickers, or motion sensors.
- The balls move as the device tilts or rotates, completing a mechanical or electrical function.
3. Miniature Toy or Puzzle Components
- Some novelty items or puzzle toys use glass tubes with ball bearings as part of a game or decorative mechanism.
4. Laboratory or Technical Use
- Tiny vials with bearings might be used in precision equipment or microfluidics experiments to mix small quantities of liquid by rolling the balls around.
Tips for identifying them safely:
- Check for markings or part numbers on the tube.
- Observe the movement of the balls: does it act like a switch, counter, or level?
- Do not break the glass—tiny vials can contain hazardous liquids in some lab equipment.
If you want, I can help pinpoint exactly what your glass tubes are if you describe: the size of the tubes, what the balls look like, and where you found them. This usually narrows it down quickly.
Do you want me to do that?