Shoe-fitting fluoroscope

Shoe-fitting fluoroscopes were X-ray machines installed in shoe stores from the early 20th century up until about 1960 in the United States by which time they had been prohibited, and into the mid-1970s in the United Kingdom. In the UK, they were known as Pedoscopes, after the company based in St. Albans which manufactured them. The gimmick changed from decade to decade to better suit the financial market at the time, but the most famous sales pitch was that the flouroscope allowed salesmen to better fit shoes and it was fun for kids to go to the shoe store. During the depression the most popular sales pitch was that the fluoroscope allowed the best possible fit which made for longer lasting shoes, which meant you didn't have to buy as many pairs for yourself, or your children.

The shoe-fitting fluoroscope was nothing more than a fancy way to attract potential customers. One could get the same fit by a simple measurment.

Contrary to the health pitch served up by the shoe stores, an article about these devices in the "Engineering Disasters" series, shown on the History Channel, stated that the level of exposure from typical machines ranged from 20 to 75 rems (or 200 to 750 mSv) per minute. That is to be compared with the current maximum allowed occupational exposure to workers in nuclear power stations in the USA of 5 rems (50 mSv) per year and 20 mSv (2 rems) per year for classified radiation workers in the UK.

In 1949, the danger of the flouroscope was revealed and the machines were quietly phased out during the 1950s. An unknown number of people who were exposed to dangerous levels of radiation may have suffered radiation sickness, deformities and/or cancer as a result.