Stubby1743
Well-known member
Windscreen wiper blade backing strips?








I really like those Blackhawk Nutmaster wrenches. Not an everyday tool but can really speed things up in situations where you can only use an open end and access *****. I like that they are bi directional unlike a lot of other wrenches designed for this purpose (Craftsman, Thorsen speed-hed etc).Took a 25 minute ride for a tool only sale at a repair shop. Most of the time mechanics know what they paid and want top dollar for everything but I ended up going and doing very well. The guy said it was all extra **** laying around and just wanted it gone. Definitely could have left with a lot more at great prices but didn't need anything else. Paid $10 for the vise grips and $10 for the Starret hacksaw blades, Wright combo, Blue Point grabber tool, and NOS Proto 30mm and NOS misc tools. All the other stuff was free including the Blue Point metal case with brake home set!
Does anyone know what the tool circled in blue is for? Also I can't seem to find any info on the Blackhawk Tools 7/16"x1/2" #2016 wrench.
I next hit another sale near home advertised as tool heavy. I showed up 5 minutes after opening and the animals were running amuck. Grabbed the NAPA New Britain puller, brass hammer set, Blue Point speak plug gapper (I think I have 4 of these things now-they're at every sale around here it seems), Herbrand no. 182 brake spring pliers, CMAN metric long patterns and offset metric wrenches, and a complete Unique ratchet set. If anyone has any info on this let me know. Has a patent date of 1908 it seems. I had to control myself at this one also as he had great stuff and even better prices. All in for $20.
Then I saw a sign for a sale on my way.home and grabbed a back of catchers gear for my son. The young man told me $5 and I handed him a $20 and said enjoy it's worth more than $5.
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Nice find! Love those clasps....including the Blue Point metal case...
Great find! I've got the Super Unique version. (Not making that up...)...and a complete Unique ratchet set.
I didn't know you had a catcher at home. How old? Two of my three boys were catchers. I was a catcher. And I've been an umpire for 30 years. I've spent a lot of my life behind the plate.Then I saw a sign for a sale on my way.home and grabbed a back of catchers gear for my son.
Also I can't seem to find any info on the Blackhawk Tools 7/16"x1/2" #2016 wrench.
Concur, well noted, and well said. I did a Curator's Corner on those down in the Lugzsonian a couple years ago if you are interested in delving deeper into a fascinating subject. Link here. A teaser chart, or a warning - if you're not already familiar that I can get pretty nerdy, or a summary if you only want the Reader's Digest version here...I really like those Blackhawk Nutmaster wrenches. Not an everyday tool but can really speed things up in situations where you can only use an open end and access *****. I like that they are bi directional unlike a lot of other wrenches designed for this purpose (Craftsman, Thorsen speed-hed etc).








My kid is 9. He's been catching for two years and loves it. I still want him to learn all other positions though. Gotta be marketable.Nice find! Love those clasps.
Great find! I've got the Super Unique version. (Not making that up...)We have a decent Will B. Lane thread. See A-Z Index in Sticky at the top of the Vintage Board.
I didn't know you had a catcher at home. How old? Two of my three boys were catchers. I was a catcher. And I've been an umpire for 30 years. I've spent a lot of my life behind the plate.Much respect to your boy.
Concur, well noted, and well said. I did a Curator's Corner on those down in the Lugzsonian a couple years ago if you are interested in delving deeper into a fascinating subject. Link here. A teaser chart, or a warning - if you're not already familiar that I can get pretty nerdy, or a summary if you only want the Reader's Digest version here...
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they’d be stainlessWindscreen wiper blade backing strips?
With some rusted wiper blade metal strips. I've never seen those get rusty, but West coast...Looks like brush bristles from the street sweeper from here.












Went to the sale @RTM mentioned last week (thanks for the tip on this!) and it was an interesting one.
Glad we left you guys some goodies. Was hard to leave a few of those, but I don't need them, so hope it was nice CL ad bait.That first stop was from an insider tip, and to raise money for a blacksmiths group and the shop tools being cleared were donated to the group the one useful to the group were assimilated and the remainder of the proceeds from their sale went to the group - a pretty generous thing I thought
We had no clue what that was for. Best use was holding my coffee cup, until someone moved rusty stuff over it. Thought maybe for holding hot stuff, but we were too busy to think hard. My buddy mentioned you bought it, and I could not even recall what he was talking about.A very odd vise -Purpose TBD -needs research





Posted in the Vises tread -we will see if anyone can crack it.We had no clue what that was for.
Cool finds! I'd have ben all voer those! I wish I still had the comics I collected as a kid, and the giant drawer full we 'inhereted" from an older cousin.The comics range from 60's to 80's but are ww2 themed and were the type I loved as a kid. No sgt. Rocks in there but they are similar in feel and verbage and were .50 each so why not?
I'm not sure but this may be my first of this era too. Older plastic handles are a hard find around here. Most probably got swapped back to Sears.The old Crafty Phillips is a tough find Outlaw. It's almost like they only came in flat head.



yup, thats where the comics, merc books, snappy spinner and plomb sockets came from. A lot of the prices there where outragous. I cant believe the sale was going on thursday and some of the prices. I would have bought more had it not been for the some of the prices and their refusal to negotiate much.Smoke, did you go to the sale in Lake Oswego? I had good luck there on Thursday.
Your description of that sale is so true. The guy had a major taste for harbor freight and it was even the old really bad stuff. But there were a few vintage goodies to be found here and there. Is the spinner you found 9/32nds? I didnt see any other snappy or black hawk goodies there.Well, I had planned to hit two estate sales today, but as I was out the door I realized that the first one was farther away than I thought, and didn't have enough pictures of tools to make it a go. So, I hit the other one I was planning on, and then found two others.
The one I hit was a definite garage guy, but sadly with a taste for Harbor Freight. But I managed to find a few things: 4 Hexite wrenches, SK spinner, weird little wrench thingy, Martini filet knife, small blow torch, very old flex six point (only markings I see are -20), heavy duty Wiss scissors, Ford socket wrench, Cornwell combo, MAC combo, and Snap-on extension. I also could not resist this:
a Tyrolean walking stick, complete with metal tip, and shields of various Austrian towns.
The other two sales were busts.

Are these rare wrenches because I can't seem to find much about them.I really like those Blackhawk Nutmaster wrenches. Not an everyday tool but can really speed things up in situations where you can only use an open end and access *****. I like that they are bi directional unlike a lot of other wrenches designed for this purpose (Craftsman, Thorsen speed-hed etc).
The ones I’ve seen are bent into a “U,” like a hairpin, bundled and jammed into plastic inserts. They are also much narrower (the duct tape provides relative scale) and do not have a notch at either end.Looks like brush bristles from the street sweeper from here.
Steel leaf rake remnants. I was going to guess hang file supports, but then I spotted the ferrule (or whatever it’s called on a rake).

C'mon that's only one round stick away from being back in service. Fall is coming.LS for the win!
Looking at the hastily re-assembled rake--and I'm sure I didn't get all the tines in the right spots--you'll notice that he's missing three tines.
This leads me to wonder--was he keeping this in hopes of finding enough free-floating tines to someday complete the "set" before he undertook the task of restoring this apparent heirloom to either hang above the mantelpiece, for future generations to enjoy, or just to use in the yard? I know hoarding is a sickness--and who among us can honestly look at our own "collections" and not admit we hear its faint call in our own minds?? Well, let's not go there!! Congratulations LS! I was going to mail the rake to the winner, but I tossed it in the recycle bin, instead.
I saw the advertising pictures of the stuff there. Some cool stuff but way out of my bottom feeder budget for sure! But I’m still riding the high of the tool board I posted in the plomb thread and I was just excited to get out with my familyNo, it is a 1/4 SK. The guy really didn't know tools, but it was the advertising that people were going nuts over. Some really rare stuff, but pricy.
You have the amber handled S-K spinner magnet!No, it is a 1/4 SK. The guy really didn't know tools, but it was the advertising that people were going nuts over. Some really rare stuff, but pricy.
I think relatively rare. I started hunting for them at sales after I found my first one. Now I have… drumroll please… two. Lugz’s article on it is really interesting, I recommend it!Are these rare wrenches because I can't seem to find much about them.
Lmk if you need/want mine. I doubt I'll ever use itI think relatively rare. I started hunting for them at sales after I found my first one. Now I have… drumroll please… two. Lugz’s article on it is really interesting, I recommend it!
Not common for sure. I have that type in metric - Peugeot - as said they work pretty well where you have clerance for the big head.I think relatively rare. I started hunting for them at sales after I found my first one. Now I have… drumroll please… two. Lugz’s article on it is really interesting, I recommend it!
I appreciate the offer but I’ve already got those sizes. Thank you though!Lmk if you need/want mine. I doubt I'll ever use it





