crystalguy30
New member
- Joined
- Oct 5, 2023
- Messages
- 2







You **** big time for the cabinets and the contents!Saturday I attended a rummage sale at a local church. Tuesday I was able to pick up the two cabinets I bought there for $10.00 each. One is a five-drawer lateral filing cabinet, and the other is a four shelf unit that was designed for hanging files, but all that is easily removable, and the shelves pull out on ball bearing slides. I use the lateral files for bulky tools like saws and drills. The shelf unit will hold similar items that I don't want to lift out of the lateral file drawers.
The duct tape is just to keep the drawers from sliding out while moving the cabinets around.
Saturday, I attended an estate sale and have already posted my finds from there. Many of those finds came from three card files that the departed hoarder had obtained from the County Tax Office. The estate company was asking $150.00 each for the cabinets, which was a little steep.
I attended the monthly flea market on Sunday, and dropped by the estate sale on the way home. It was the last day of the sale, and I offered $150.00 for all three cabinets, with the agreement that they could continue to sell any items from the drawers until the sale closed at 3 PM. They took my offer, and helped load everything out about 5 PM. We removed the bins/drawers to move the cabinets, which are quite heavily built. All three cabinets have the same outside dimensions.
The green cabinet is built differently from the other two. It has front panels attached to the slides, and two bins lift out from each drawer. There is a latch to keep the slides from moving, so this would be perfect for a mobile installation.
The two gray cabinets have bins with front panels that lift out, leaving the slides in the cabinet. They are built identically to a cabinet I already own, except for the manufacturer. Apparently these were built to a government specification.
There was quite a bit of stuff left in the drawers/bins. I have found a few goodies (collectible tools, useful supplies, etc.) and not much that will go into the trash. I should be able to find homes for the rest easily. I've already cleaned out six bins for the green cabinet and am sorting things by use (AC power items, 12V DC items, etc.) as a first step. The top pallet of bins is from the green cabinet, and the lower pallet holds bins from the gray cabinets.
I'll be keeping the gray cabinets for sure, but may sell the green one.
Great finds!Saturday I attended a rummage sale at a local church. Tuesday I was able to pick up the two cabinets I bought there for $10.00 each. One is a five-drawer lateral filing cabinet, and the other is a four shelf unit that was designed for hanging files, but all that is easily removable, and the shelves pull out on ball bearing slides. I use the lateral files for bulky tools like saws and drills. The shelf unit will hold similar items that I don't want to lift out of the lateral file drawers.
The duct tape is just to keep the drawers from sliding out while moving the cabinets around.
Saturday, I attended an estate sale and have already posted my finds from there. Many of those finds came from three card files that the departed hoarder had obtained from the County Tax Office. The estate company was asking $150.00 each for the cabinets, which was a little steep.
I attended the monthly flea market on Sunday, and dropped by the estate sale on the way home. It was the last day of the sale, and I offered $150.00 for all three cabinets, with the agreement that they could continue to sell any items from the drawers until the sale closed at 3 PM. They took my offer, and helped load everything out about 5 PM. We removed the bins/drawers to move the cabinets, which are quite heavily built. All three cabinets have the same outside dimensions.
The green cabinet is built differently from the other two. It has front panels attached to the slides, and two bins lift out from each drawer. There is a latch to keep the slides from moving, so this would be perfect for a mobile installation.
The two gray cabinets have bins with front panels that lift out, leaving the slides in the cabinet. They are built identically to a cabinet I already own, except for the manufacturer. Apparently these were built to a government specification.
There was quite a bit of stuff left in the drawers/bins. I have found a few goodies (collectible tools, useful supplies, etc.) and not much that will go into the trash. I should be able to find homes for the rest easily. I've already cleaned out six bins for the green cabinet and am sorting things by use (AC power items, 12V DC items, etc.) as a first step. The top pallet of bins is from the green cabinet, and the lower pallet holds bins from the gray cabinets.
I'll be keeping the gray cabinets for sure, but may sell the green one.
You **** big time for the cabinets and the contents!
You ****You **** big time for the cabinets and the contents!
Add me to the crowd that thinks you ****!You **** big time for the cabinets and the contents!
Indeed he can!^^^ It's possible, but I will point out that like @misterbill's example, most of William's branding was a sticker and therefore did not require factory-placed holes in the cover. Whether Duplex routinely pre-stamped those holes there for all their contract work, I can't say.
Maybe @misterbill can tell us if his box has holes under the sticker.



You ****! I'm on a Kindle now and only have a short stack of books but you seem to find books I'd be all over.While out running errands today, I stopped by the one sale that was of any interest, and then the Restore afterword's.
At the sale I found a set of Lectrolite DBE's, while I was lucky enough to dig out of the socket bins a bunch of Blackhawk 7/16s drive sockets. And while I was digging, I found a Snap-on and Proto LA to boot.
But the real score came from the thrift a few weeks back:
Japanese Homes and their surroundings, 1886.

^^^ It's possible, but I will point out that like @misterbill's example, most of William's branding was a sticker and therefore did not require factory-placed holes in the cover. Whether Duplex routinely pre-stamped those holes there for all their contract work, I can't say.
Maybe @misterbill can tell us if his box has holes under the sticker.
I will have to look closer, but they my all be owner drilled.
I can’t remember when or by who but I thought I saw a Williams box like it but it had a badge in that spot in this thread.
Thanks Bill! @S-K Tool Fanatic! Even though we know Duplex supplied boxes for multiple brands, thanks to Bill's photo above, there is no question your's certainly could have been a Williams. Congrats!













Ah, the old bait and switch. A shame you got taken advantage of like that. After a stop like that, i'd keep looking, buy a lottery ticket or two, continue seeing if your luck holds upAs I was about t leave the owner asked if I was interested in a Kennedy toolbox with a mic, caliper and misc. I told him probably not but said I'd take a look anyway. Out comes an absolute mint Gerstner machinist chest cram packed full of machinist tools. He said $100 and it's yours!
Any interest in selling the ball peen hammer’s?
Shhhweeeeet! (Admit it, though, Dave, after restoring a few of them, I know you're prolly just a smidge disappointed you don't have to do one little thing to it!Out comes an absolute mint Gerstner machinist chest
Say what?!...a rolling drill bit index...


Estate sale ($40): 3-SK sockets sets; cap pistol; Diamond Calk 4" crescent wrench; PS&W bit brace; 50' Ace Hardware tape measure; bicycle light?; Mac SP16 scraper; Master Tufboy no.308 8' tape measure; Estwing E3-22SM 16" framing hammer; Keencut 13C-8 scissors; Yale pad lock; Schrade -Walden drop point knife; Carl Nath **** chisels; Vermont American no. 65966 dove tail saw; Draw knife; Propane, Las'stik king sized dust cloth.
Normally, I ignore loose sockets, but in this case found the empty cases and swept up the entire draw of loose sockets and ratchets. Tada I think I'm only missing one 1/4" deep socket.
![]()
I second this!You ****!