Private Lugnutz
Well-known member
Speculatively, but honestly I just had a brain glitch twisting up date code systems.Was there any relationship with the Cornwell company?
Bill, sorry for the confusion, long day.
Speculatively, but honestly I just had a brain glitch twisting up date code systems.Was there any relationship with the Cornwell company?
I just read about the cornwell tools in the Alloy or what ever its called and they describe the date stamping like Lugs was talking about.. But no mention of wright.The old cornwell and wright wrenches certainly share a resemblance, but I've seen no evidence linking them




The CT-22?Chevy oil pan screw socket
Did they allow alcohol at that place of business? Looks a little off. Or me.@LesserSon had a post in the "Spreading the Bonney affliction!" thread with identical MS-116 and MS-118 sockets. He made an inquiry to Wright and I eagerly await their reply! I have no idea what these sockets would have been used for other than maybe a D-shaped valve/motor shaft.
Bill


Did they allow alcohol at that place of business? Looks a little off. Or me.
Wright Tool and Forge said:Below is all that was found for these Part #s.
They appear in the 1939 Catalog, but not the 1957, so they were made somewhere in-between that timeframe.
Most likely in the late 1940s as these appear to be a little more “beefed up” instead of having open sidewalls.
List price 45 – 55 cents.








Use an old Kennedy cantilever box. Ahia-based manufacturer and it will be heavy enough that you will never be able to move it!Picked up this wartime (-43) MU-53 (9/16") swivel socket at the flea yesterday. If I could only find where I have the MU-55 (5/8"), MU-56 (11/16"), and MU-57 (3/4") swivel sockets I found and posted here just last August (see Pic 4), it would make a terrific group shot.
I have serious storage issues when it comes to pieces like this. I collected a whole set of Snap-on over the years, and they're in the Snap-on box. Ditto with the WF- Plomb. But I don't have a Wright box. I have a whole drawer full of miscellaneous orphans in a Dorman chest. The Wright aren't in it, probably because there was a string of them, or because they're wartime. But they're not in a box where I throw orphan wartime. Aargh!![]()
I have found old wright tools to be challenging. The tools and documentation are not easy to come by.
I thought that was a hammer?Chevy oil pan screw socket
I have found a simple solution regarding what to do with any Wright tools that I run across. I just put them in the mail headed to misterbill. Problem solved!I don't have enough Wright tools to merit a box, honestly, but that's funny. This isn't a space/place issue, though, but one of organization. I store most things by brand. Some by type. Apparently the Wright are somewhere in the neitherworld.
And I gratefully put them in a Kennedy box!I have found a simple solution regarding what to do with any Wright tools that I run across. I just put them in the mail headed to misterbill. Problem solved!
-Don
Forget the ratchet! Get thyself a silver demitasse spoon, an oyster fork, and a gravy ladle, spiff it all up as shiny as the pieces in that set and you could use it as flatware to serve the Rockefellers and the Vanderbilts in the ballroom!but it had no ratchet.