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2024 Garage Sale Thread (13th Annual)

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RTM

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Mystery Item: It’s wood and concave, with a hole in the center and two toothed “blades” bridging the hole. My first thought was something to shell corn, but I have no idea.
My corner sheller has the same general idea, but with a cross wise blade to cut the kernels off. Maybe yours does other mutilation to corn?

 
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bmwrd0

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So, the Chest.
53520322837_625aabdfd5_c.jpg
As you all know, I found this yesterday, barely missing meeting RTM in the process. I finally got a chance to inventory the contents, and here is what was in it:
53523640245_9fe2c39709_c.jpg
Planes:
53523249851_3eff3eec70_c.jpg
Stanley #8, #5 (welded body), #3 (needs tote and knob), #40, #45 (japaned, needs knob), #71 (holes drilled in body). Also, Stanley #151 and #82
Saws
53523463078_03b1918d22_c.jpg
A couple Disston D-8's, both cross and rip, and a variety of keyhole, back and hack saws. Nothing spectacular.
Draw Knives, Drills, Braces
53523625719_7873c147fa_c.jpg
Draws are PEXTO and two I don't recognize the marks of
53522427972_cbe5ee2bef_c.jpg
53522431502_f9cd93795b_c.jpg
not sure about the drills and braces, although one of the drills has had the handle replaced.
Misc.
53523523038_be85016970_c.jpg
PEXTO wrench, Bemis and Call wrench, a bunch of unmarked wrenches, Plomb linesman dykes and star drill, Proto LA star drill.
Till
53523760375_dabea164ea_c.jpg
filled with junk and stuff you have seen in other pictures.
Also, these two oddballs were in there.
Untitled by Aaron Warfield, on Flickr
 

LesserSon

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My corner sheller has the same general idea, but with a cross wise blade to cut the kernels off. Maybe yours does other mutilation to corn?

I’m thinking this one could be for dried corn (animal feed).
 
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RTM

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Jumping back to tool gets, here are some chisels picked up from a friend who needed to thin the herd at his house. His house was wall to wall stuff, and he needed to clear some space for a contractor to work.

He's a bookbinder by trade, but also built many book binding tools over the years, including giant wooden clamps, with wooden hand cut screws, used as laying presses, etc. His tools are known to us for having been wicked sharp, and tuned to HIS needs. He thought nothing of making or modifying a tool to fit his needs. These were some of those. He had also put together sets of chisels by 1/16" from 1/16 - 1", no skips, to allow him to fine tune almost anything. The bottom one here, a PEXTO has an extra long handle, that he would push with his shoulder, to gently trim the edges of wooden screw teeth that were binding in motion. The top four (3 are Buck Bros, one unknown) have custom handles for push paring work, gently trimming things to fit
.PXL_20240131_155959592-XL.jpgPXL_20240131_155936614-XL.jpg

I also bought the 2 giant Buck chisels in this box, but they aren't the quality of the older Cast Steel ones above. A few other goodies in this tote will be used to repair other tools, or passed on to others. The wooden spoke shaves are convex curved, something I don't own currently.
PXL_20240211_232350510-L.jpg

As he is lacking the time and energy to focus on the physical side of the task, he has turned his focus to writing, and started liberating his tools, and some of his wood stash. These were all pieces destined to become clamp cheeks, or threaded screws. Because of all the rain, I have not been able to sort through all the wood, its just hiding in the bed of the truck, or some totes to make space for the second load. My local buddies and I will be redistributing some of this wood depending on need. The need at the time was to get it out before the rain hit.

PXL_20240211_225855995-L.jpgPXL_20240211_225822891-L.jpgPXL_20240211_225743495-L.jpg

I also picked dup a bunch of other tools to be sold on a consignment basis, to try to find interested folks to put them to good use. We have a tool sale coming up in the neighborhood soon, so will take them there. I may try to move a few on CL, (just cuz the tool sale may be a bunch of flippers, like last time), including a monstrous Record #53 WW vise (inverted in pic), the biggest they made in modern recollection. I have a 52-1/2 sitting waiting, so I won't be taking it. (And for those in the don't set a plane blade down on the bench, all the mouths on these are taped over. Otherwise I'd fear flat tires, they are so sharp.)

PXL_20240211_230037331-L.jpgPXL_20240211_230124139-XL.jpgPXL_20240211_225914964-L.jpg

This was a difficult job, 4 of us showed up one day, 3 the other, and 1 guy by himself, to help clear this out. The friend is attached to these as to a child, as he has nurtured them along, for many years, to get so many other woodworkers, and book binders, in a position to learn from his expertise and his largesse. So we didn't just toss them in boxes, we discussed history, where he found them, who owned them prior, etc. Even harder because this is the third one in under a year, with one only 1/2 done so far. The other owners were far less attached, and just wanted them gone.
 
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RTM

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Draws are PEXTO and two I don't recognize the marks of
53522427972_cbe5ee2bef_c.jpg
53522431502_f9cd93795b_c.jpg
not sure about the drills and braces, although one of the drills has had the handle replaced.
Misc.
1832 is DR Barton (year they were founded, someone used the mark long after DR was dead) David R. Barton and two sons, Charles and Edward, formed this company after D.R. Barton & Co. was taken over by the Macks. It was also bought out by Mack & Co. in 1880; the mark used by this company apparently was also used by the Macks. Note that Mark (1) was used by this company, D.R. Barton & Co., and the Macks. (1) D.R.BARTON/1832/ROCHESTER N.Y. (in oval shape with top and bottom lines curved

Second Might Be G.I. Mix & Co Believed to be this guy. I have more notes elsewhere on them

 

zanyad

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Pick this cabinet up for 40.00
You ****!
The chemicals below were Free
You ****!
here is the full haul. 1932 Popular Mechanics, Utica pliers, Stanley 4 in 1, Craftsman-Crescent-Vaco screwdrivers, an old mortise lock, Vaco wire strippers, parallel jaw pliers, Arrow T-18 staple gun, Yale cabinet lock all for $10
Nice. West side ReStore pricing has gone up of late, and the selection isn't as good as it used to be either.
O.K. I finally got on the board this year. I went to a woodworker’s tool estate sale and literally every room in the house was full of tools, not just the garage. The old man had passed, and his kids were selling his household, but every table in every room was full of tools. I was scanning tables as fast as I could (along with twenty-five other tool hounds!) and I hear someone yell “How much is this?”. Of course, you have to look, and it is a ¾” HP Baldor buffer on its own pedestal base. The gentleman turned away, and the price was SO low, I just stepped in. I then looked under items, as there was just too much everywhere. Under a box, under another metal box, hidden in the corner, I found an older Snap-on rolling tool chest. I am not sure the woodworker’s kids even knew it was there. I asked their helpful neighbor friend for a price without moving anything off it. It was too cheap not to pull it out and bring it home. I loaded the two items up and thought I should just check one more time. I found an early SK knurled ¾”-drive socket set with ratchet, sliding T-handle, and 17 sockets. By this time, they liked me and almost gave it to me. Nice Saturday morning.
Congrats, you ****!
So, the Chest.
53520322837_625aabdfd5_c.jpg
You ****!!!
Jumping back to tool gets, here are some chisels picked up from a friend who needed to thin the herd at his house. His house was wall to wall stuff, and he needed to clear some space for a contractor to work.

...

As he is lacking the time and energy to focus on the physical side of the task, he has turned his focus to writing, and started liberating his tools, and some of his wood stash.

...

This was a difficult job, 4 of us showed up one day, 3 the other, and 1 guy by himself, to help clear this out. The friend is attached to these as to a child, as he has nurtured them along, for many years, to get so many other woodworkers, and book binders, in a position to learn from his expertise and his largesse. So we didn't just toss them in boxes, we discussed history, where he found them, who owned them prior, etc. Even harder because this is the third one in under a year, with one only 1/2 done so far. The other owners were far less attached, and just wanted them gone.
Sorry to hear, glad they're getting the treatment they deserve!
 

jeffmoss26

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You ****!

You ****!

Nice. West side ReStore pricing has gone up of late, and the selection isn't as good as it used to be either.

Congrats, you ****!

You ****!!!

Sorry to hear, glad they're getting the treatment they deserve!
My pic was from an estate sale, not the restore
 

WisJim

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@bmwrd0, the one rusty item with a screw clamp and angle iron like parts is a saw vise, to hold a handsaw for sharpening. I have a couple similar ones, I don't recall the patent or brand at the moment.
 
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RTM

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@bmwrd0, the one rusty item with a screw clamp and angle iron like parts is a saw vise, to hold a handsaw for sharpening. I have a couple similar ones, I don't recall the patent or brand at the moment.
Wait, what? I can't find the picture now. I remember someone posting what looked like a very stubby folding toolbox saw vise, but now I can't find the link under BMWrd0 pix. Clues please?
 
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RTM

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I am seeing it now, its just so different than my current saw vise.
Hmm, I am recalling a real stubby one. Yours looks like a Stearns


And do you know what that other thing with the screw is, top of pic? I just found out this weekend.



1707757776824.png

Highlight below
MainSpring Vise for Civil War Era rifles.
 

d42jeep

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I was clearing out my Craigslist window and I noticed a Berkeley estate sale listing today not too far away that mentioned tools. When I arrived the seller told me that he didn’t have the tools ready to sell and to come back tomorrow. I did some serious whining and I guess he took pity on me and after a short wait he let me into a packed full garage. I heard him call his brother Shooty so I asked if he was a former Oakland A’s player and he was. The family used to have an auto repair shop in Berkeley which explained all the tools.
-DonIMG_3144.jpeg
Craftsman tools. IMG_3146.jpeg
Snap-on tools ❤️IMG_3164.jpeg
D-I wartime deep sockets IMG_3163.jpeg
S-K toolsIMG_3160.jpeg
Utica pliersIMG_3161.jpeg
Bonney wrenchIMG_3158.jpegIMG_3159.jpeg
Boyd DBE wrenchIMG_3149.jpeg
Plomb tappet wrench.IMG_3153.jpeg
and some other stuff.
-Don
 

Jacobs976

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Not sure if I did good or not but second sale of the year had some stuff I wanted. Left behind two post drills and a few interesting things that the guy decided to keep(1950s microscope/binoculars thing, an 1800s shotgun that someone tried to load with modern full load slugs and blew apart, and an embossing press from a fraternity circa 1980) but it was probably for the best.
PXL_20240213_004049655.jpg
Some Snap On and Cornwell wrenches and socket, Utica duck bill pliers, misc I didn't check names on.
PXL_20240213_004124768.jpg
Adze, odd spoon shaped hoe(too blunt for adze, maybe a woodworking spoon for breaking up burnt sections like on a wood canoe), hewing axe, froe, two drawknifes, chisel, 4 planes.
PXL_20240213_004054624.jpg
A small steel anvil.
PXL_20240213_004155962.jpg
A vise(currently seized with a piece of steel in the jaws, possibly just too tight to break loose as is but it's not missing anything as far as I'm aware) and another pipe wrench to toss in the lot.

In the end I have $155 in the lot.
 

Outlawmws

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Thanks! Would paraffin wax work as well, or is that only for wood-on-wood?
Wood-on-wood I use bar soap (Ivory is m go-to). It works great. I think Paraffin would be more sticky.
^ as I recall, "Door-Eze" has some beeswax in it. Straight paraffin works fine on wood drawers.

Door-Ease is essentially a synthetic "Beeswax", so IMO you can use them interchangeably as a lube. I would not sue Door-Ease for a candle...
 

Private Lugnutz

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I want a neighborhood like that.
This is an interesting topic. I'm of two minds on it. Proximity would be great, in respect to travel. Not so great in other respects.

Quick relevant story...

A tool guy started showing up at both of my regular flea markets two years ago. Big burly Irish-American dude from Bergen County in his 50's. All antique or vintage. He had a good eye, but he didn't know much about them, and when I started informing him about things I had no intention of buying, he started to figure out that I knew a lot about old tools, and it became a source of amusement that I had probably been getting some good deals from him. Smartly, that has never changed. Gradually we became more and more friendly and I got to know his story (in short, union carpenter, lost his job during COVID for reasons I won't name due to no-politics rules here on GJ, turned to house clean-outs to help make ends meet). This is the same guy who gave me the 1937 West Point postcard for my son last year. Anyway, I started to notice the stuff was coming from far and wider than north Jersey, including Philly area. He drives a shitbox car loaded up inside down to the axles with his stuff and there have been times he was still asleep in the front seat when I am leaving the flea, and I will wrap on the window and wake him up. The point is the guy is hustling, we're friendly, but I don't really know too much about him, and he didn't really know too much about me.

Anyway, one day I wore a HS baseball cap to the flea. I never mentioned where I lived before. So I had to suffer a minute or two of him busting my chops about the town's reputation - it's more than a little snobby rich, Bruce Springsteen used to live here, etc, but there is plenty of blue collar legacy and I snuck in a long time ago, before it got ultra-gentrified.

Then he says, "I did very well there on Yard Sale Day. That's where I got..." and he proceeds to tell me a tool I bought from him last year was in a garage a couple blocks away from my house! :)

I guess the moral of the story is that I am not opposed to driving around and grabbing something free off the curb at dark o'clock on Bulk Pick-Up Day (thread veterans will remember the barbershop cabinet that all my Roaring Twenties wood box sockets are now in...), but picking through my neighbor's stuff, in their yard, or in their driveway, etc, people I have known from games and plays and PTA meetings and parties etc for years, and then haggling with them, is not something I want to do.
 

Provincial

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Near Salem, OR
I was clearing out my Craigslist window and I noticed a Berkeley estate sale listing today not too far away that mentioned tools. When I arrived the seller told me that he didn’t have the tools ready to sell and to come back tomorrow. I did some serious whining and I guess he took pity on me and after a short wait he let me into a packed full garage. I heard him call his brother Shooty so I asked if he was a former Oakland A’s player and he was. The family used to have an auto repair shop in Berkeley which explained all the tools.
-DonIMG_3144.jpeg
Craftsman tools. IMG_3146.jpeg
Snap-on tools ❤️IMG_3164.jpeg
D-I wartime deep sockets IMG_3163.jpeg
S-K toolsIMG_3160.jpeg
Utica pliersIMG_3161.jpeg
Bonney wrenchIMG_3158.jpegIMG_3159.jpeg
Boyd DBE wrenchIMG_3149.jpeg
Plomb tappet wrench.IMG_3153.jpeg
and some other stuff.
-Don
Love that Boyd! I'm thinking Thorsen source. A little different from the one I sent you in 2020.
 
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Raineman

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central Maryland
Me and the Mrs. went to look at a property today. In one of the sheds were some empty toolboxes. I told the owner I would like to buy them and he said just to take them. So I did, but hopefully they’ll be the most expensive boxes I’ve ever “bought”. Need to clean up the mouse droppings but most of the original felt is in great condition. (I’ll try thumbnail pictures this time)


IMG_5512.jpegIMG_5514.jpegIMG_5513.jpegIMG_5510.jpegIMG_5511.jpeg

I am quoting my own post from Jan. 7 for the simple reason that I stated, "but hopefully they’ll be the most expensive boxes I’ve ever “bought”." Now it is time to let the cat out of the bag as to why I said that.

These toolboxes are part of an estate that has been unoccupied for the past 3 years. The family took only a couple sentimental items for themselves, and apparently a small collection of old toys that were auctioned off for expenses, and they left the rest. ALL of the rest. The day I acquired these toolboxes is the second time me and the Mrs. went to look over this place, with the intention of buying it.

Well, we are now under contract to do just that, make it ours. It is a 2 bedroom, 1 1/2 bathroom rancher with a full unfinished basement, a 10 x 20 shed, a 3 stall block built stable/barn with a 2nd floor, and 3.6 acres. It is exactly 5 minutes from our current home and you would never even know it was there. How does this apply to the GS forum you ask? Well, it is full of tools! Including, but not limited to a '58 International dump truck, a late '30's International Deuce & a half, and a '59 Mercury Monterey 2 door. Mowers, tillers, power tools, a kiln, and stuff I can't even get to.

The house will take us 2-3 months to get it able to occupy we figure and I can only imagine what we will find when we do the clean out. It will be our project for the next year, and probably the rest of our lives, but we'll basically be doubling our estate net worth for our kids & grandkids for when we kick it, which is very important to me. It is definitely a "fixer upper" and the land is in need of some serious attention. One big oak has to come down immediately, but the trunk (if not rotted inside) will be more than enough to make 2 mantles for both sides of the through fireplace.

We've been mad scrambling to get our current home ready to sell, it goes on the market on 2/21 and there are already showings lined up. We live in a very desirable townhouse community and they sell fast. My brother in law has a home 7 miles from us and has an in law suite that he has offered to us for as long as we need to get the house ready.

So...this is why I've been scarce here, because I've been a tad busy. Smokeshow & alinc, put my piles off to the side for now, I haven't forgot you have stuff for me. Give me a few months because all my trade stuff is buried in storage right now.

I'll post up tools and other interesting finds as I dig them up, but most important is the house and LAND. I figure most folks here can look past the hoard and see the bones and big picture like we have of the amazing potential of this property. We're hoping to take possession by the end of March. Thanks for letting me ramble folks.


IMG_5461.jpegIMG_5462.jpegIMG_5463.jpegIMG_5464.jpeg
 

Private Lugnutz

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Now it is time to let the cat out of the bag as to why I said that.
I thought it was just a joke about them being free!
...we'll basically be doubling our estate net worth for our kids & grandkids for when we kick it, which is very important to me.
The future, its uncertainty, the daunting challenges that Mrs. Lugz and I did not have to face, and how I can best convert the advantages we had (granted, with some hard work as well) into something that can ease their burden, has been on my mind all the time these days. Good on you, sir. Love all the outbuildings and the size and orientation of the property.
 

gleman

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Michigan And Florida too!
I am quoting my own post from Jan. 7 for the simple reason that I stated, "but hopefully they’ll be the most expensive boxes I’ve ever “bought”." Now it is time to let the cat out of the bag as to why I said that.

These toolboxes are part of an estate that has been unoccupied for the past 3 years. The family took only a couple sentimental items for themselves, and apparently a small collection of old toys that were auctioned off for expenses, and they left the rest. ALL of the rest. The day I acquired these toolboxes is the second time me and the Mrs. went to look over this place, with the intention of buying it.

Well, we are now under contract to do just that, make it ours. It is a 2 bedroom, 1 1/2 bathroom rancher with a full unfinished basement, a 10 x 20 shed, a 3 stall block built stable/barn with a 2nd floor, and 3.6 acres. It is exactly 5 minutes from our current home and you would never even know it was there. How does this apply to the GS forum you ask? Well, it is full of tools! Including, but not limited to a '58 International dump truck, a late '30's International Deuce & a half, and a '59 Mercury Monterey 2 door. Mowers, tillers, power tools, a kiln, and stuff I can't even get to.

The house will take us 2-3 months to get it able to occupy we figure and I can only imagine what we will find when we do the clean out. It will be our project for the next year, and probably the rest of our lives, but we'll basically be doubling our estate net worth for our kids & grandkids for when we kick it, which is very important to me. It is definitely a "fixer upper" and the land is in need of some serious attention. One big oak has to come down immediately, but the trunk (if not rotted inside) will be more than enough to make 2 mantles for both sides of the through fireplace.

We've been mad scrambling to get our current home ready to sell, it goes on the market on 2/21 and there are already showings lined up. We live in a very desirable townhouse community and they sell fast. My brother in law has a home 7 miles from us and has an in law suite that he has offered to us for as long as we need to get the house ready.

So...this is why I've been scarce here, because I've been a tad busy. Smokeshow & alinc, put my piles off to the side for now, I haven't forgot you have stuff for me. Give me a few months because all my trade stuff is buried in storage right now.

I'll post up tools and other interesting finds as I dig them up, but most important is the house and LAND. I figure most folks here can look past the hoard and see the bones and big picture like we have of the amazing potential of this property. We're hoping to take possession by the end of March. Thanks for letting me ramble folks.


IMG_5461.jpegIMG_5462.jpegIMG_5463.jpegIMG_5464.jpeg
You **** @Raineman!

That's going to be a chore but put a song in your heart and get after it!
 

VolksWomble

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Location
UK
I am quoting my own post from Jan. 7 for the simple reason that I stated, "but hopefully they’ll be the most expensive boxes I’ve ever “bought”." Now it is time to let the cat out of the bag as to why I said that….<snip>

Congratulations @Raineman! We completed on a house move 18 months in the making in January, so I know how you feel, finding the place you really want. I’m looking forward to your build thread in the appropriate forum!
 
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