Went to auction because I heard there was a fine Lassy in attendance and she might be had on the cheap.
Got distracted by a few other things though:
Parts washer. Happy to have this old Handi-Kleen, it's in good shape. I took the legs off to transport it home.
There were two 1-ton hoists, I wanted to walk away with one of them. I truly loved the look of the older Robbins & Myers but the Vital came up first. I bid on it in case the Robbins&Myers went higher than I wanted to spend, and got the Vital for a very nice price:
Quite a while later the R&M Model M came up. For my experience and what I've seen, there was a fairly low level of activity around this auction so I walked away with this one too. Very heavy in weight compared to the Vital:
I was the only bidder on this collection of small files. There are about 20 small diamond files in the left boxes, the middle box has several syringes of diamond compound. The two boxes on the right have bout 60 small files. I have a use for those but the diamond files and syringes of compound are outside of my current wheelhouse. Maybe I could use the diamond files on some carbide cutters with tricky profiles? But probably not:
I think this is serendipidous? About a month ago I bought a set of circlip pliers. A set of four that has larger tips for larger clips. I had considered getting a more comprehensive set that has finer needles for smaller circlips. This came up and again I was the only bidder. So I won this lot; five pliers with smaller tips, and a mixed selection of clips.
Ah. This! Any other auction house that I've dealt with would probably split this single lot of stamps into 4 or 5 smaller lots. They run from 1/32nd to 3/8ths, there are letter, number and symbol stamps. I don;t have a use for the smallest, but as I've discovered, once I do have something I often find a use, or create a use, for it:
These next two items were freebies. No bid or no pay items that they gave me as 'parting gifts' when I picked up my winnings. A Walworth wrench and a set of t-handle hex keys.
Oh, and that lovely Lassy? Here she is, a 12F in all her glory. I've been wanting a hand tapper for some time and this low-activity auction turned out to be the place to finally get one. It came with the two fences for the table and a set of 16 collets that I need to take a closer look at. Seven of the collets had taps installed in them, so a minor bonus. It appears to be in quite good shape. Clean. Well lubricated. The only thing missing is the adjustable weight arm lever for 'automatically raising' the wheel and tap away from the work after the tap is unthreaded from the work. While the top arm on the frame has a machined mounting point for the lever, the mounting area looks clean. No witness or shadow marks, so I don't think one was ever installed on this tapper.
