OK, let's see if Dr. Technical can do this...first pic is the dripolator, disassembled. There is a pot, a water reservoir, a regulator plate and a lid.
Next, the reservoir, with basket filter and coffee grounds in place.
Then, the regulator plate in place.
Last picture, the assembled 8 cup Revere Ware Dripolator and a 13 cup hand blown Chemex.
The Chemex takes multiple pours from a kettle for best brew, the dripolator has a fixed reservoir, so it's just one pour. Both are designed for optimal brew time, and I like them both. Even better, they both make consistently excellent coffee. I didn't take pix of my kettles, but I use a glass whistler that has cup markings on it for the Chemex and I have a large old Revere Ware whistler for the dripolator. I have a piece of stainless steel that looks like a choreboy scrubber rolled into a short cylinder that fits through the spout of the Revere kettle. Minerals in the water bind to it and I remove it once in a while and roll it between my hands to break the deposits loose, rinse and put back into the kettle. The dripolator has also been on numerous camping trips. It is probably older than I am, and I'll be 60 in a week. The glass object in the neck of the Chemex is a Hornitos Tequila shot glass, shaped like a horn. It makes a good lid and only cost a quarter.