That's just about too cool! Salesman's demo?
Either that or maybe a countertop display model.That's just about too cool! Salesman's demo?
I have 2 of these Sunbeam toasters. They are old enough to, well, you know.^ You guys are opening Pandora's box there with kitchen appliances. Sure you want to venture there?
I wouldn't even mention it, but I've been three years now sorting and collating and archiving material on can openers, jar wrenches, lid lifters, and corkscrews, but I've kept it all hidden for fear of the torches and pitchforks coming out amongst the membership here.
You get into that "toaster" thing and there's no end to it.


Black & Decker U136 6.5 in circular saw





















I figured we see you here B. Very cool. Keep em coming. Great life they had.This saw belonged to the father of an old friend of mine. He used it as a building contractor I think from the late 1940s onward, and also built a mount for it so it was upside-down on the side of a heavy workbench and used as a table saw. When my friend gave it to me it was still mounted on the bench in his garage, which used to be his father's garage, but luckily he had the original box etc. for it in the basement of the house. My friend's name was Emery Yeager and he passed away a couple years ago at the age of 90. He used to race hydroplane boats in the late 40s and 50s and he and his father used this saw to cut lumber to make the boats they raced. I have some of his old hydroplane plans and about ten 16.5-foot long, 1" thick cedar planks he never used. Mayville, NY where this saw was made is only about 30 miles drive from my house.
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Ahhh yes, the days before CSPC and OSHA. Good times!No reverse and it has the widow-maker stay-on button.

I figured we see you here B. Very cool. Keep em coming. Great life they had.




The Maxaw 700 is one of my favorite all-time saws. To use modern blades, put the saw in a vice and turn it on. Take a file or small grinder and slowly round off the square edges until a standard blade will fit. Take your time though. Wappat was the first manufacturer to incorporate a retractable guard onto their saws (at least in the way modern saws have them). This is why many saw makers had red saw guards on their saws all the way through the 1960's. All Wappats and later Maxaws had the red guard. Amazing saws that were incredibly well balanced and powerful. Its rare that you have the wrench and rip fence. Let me know if you need parts, I might have an extra guard laying around.
Skil 754 7.25 in circular saw
Skil 754 7.25 in circular saw
Cummins Chicago 700 Maxaw 7 in circular saw
Cummins Chicago 700 Maxaw 7 in circular saw
Cummins Chicago 700 Maxaw 7 in circular saw
Cummins Chicago 700 Maxaw 7 in circular saw
Cummins Chicago 700 Maxaw 7 in circular saw
Cummins Chicago model 700 "Maxaw" at International Tool Catalog Library

You can detach the head, and use it straight, or reattach the angle head to go +50 or -33% speed.IIRC, the same model was used as a straight line, or with the 90 deg accessory, correct?
IIRC, the same model was used as a straight line, or with the 90 deg accessory, correct?
Thanks, that is what I meant. The same body (model) was used for both configurations.it was sold boxed up both ways, as a regular straight 1/2" drill motor with a handle, or with the angle head included, attached and ready to go with a metal case made to fit the whole shebang.



Wow and only $2 bucks. I am a firm believer that the younger generation will go back to using these tools. There is a sign of it now.A great old Sioux brand drill motor I did not need but the darn guy selling it wanted $2 !!! This is why I hardly went to any estate sales this year, if you don't see them then you don't buy them, lose money and cramp your storage even further. The cord on this Sioux is not even cracked, hard or brittle, they must have made it out of something deluxe, and it has remarkably few nicks and scratches from use. Someone must have spent a ton of money on this when it was new, then never used it. A friend of mine who owns an automotive machine shop said when they ground valve seats and valves, that the Sioux equipment for it was the best, and he is a pretty sharp cookie, so I have respect for the Sioux brand even more.
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I just found it tonite.Let’s see if Don Long sees this thread and posts some of his beauties.


Memory's. Mine was the Craftsman 1/2-inch drill. Thought I broke my arm a few times.Today any power tool with a cord is "vintage" except for super large and heavy-duty things used in heavy construction. My favorite power tools will always be the 60s and earlier, all metal ones with the suicide stay-on buttons and three prong grounding plugs, the tools that needed a mechanic caring for and using them or they may kill someone. I remember working outside at a refinery one winter when it was about two-degrees for a contractor that gave me an old half-inch drill motor for a job. Because it was cold I had heavy arctic clothing on which was lucky because I thought I felt a tingle while using the drill. I put the lead of a voltage tester between my gloved finger and the trigger when I pulled it and got a steady 120 volts. Another time when I was an apprentice I was using a similar drill motor with a yard-long auger bit on it to drill up through the wood plate of a wall for running romex cable and the auger hit a metal plate on a roof truss and stuck, the drill motor, which had the suicide button on, snapped out of my hands and started spinning and flailing around in front of my while wrapping the power cord around and around my arm. Another worker grabbed the extension cord and unplugged it, thank-you. And another time I was volunteered to get on top of a 30-foot wood extension ladder with a large Hilti hammer-drill to go through the wall of an old brick building. Here I am though......
Milwaukee Hole Hawg and BIG hole saws. Those things don't stop immediately. I'm hurting just thinking about it.Memory's. Mine was the Craftsman 1/2-inch drill. Thought I broke my arm a few times.
Milwaukee Hole Hawg and BIG hole saws. Those things don't stop immediately. I'm hurting just thinking about it.
I have two out of the three here in the shop, plus my '90s Mag 77 Skilsaw! Our recip saw is '90s Bosch--not bad for a "second-best"!Milwaukee had a lot of personality and passion for their tools. I remember the Hole Hawg heavy-duty drill, and also at one time they put out a really fancy edition of their Sawzall on one of it's anniversaries. Then for a short time they sold an extra capacity version of their portable bandsaw called the "***********", which gave some a chuckle on the job site. But besides special editions, all of their corded tools were of great quality.
Monsters back in the 1960s to me.
Yea. That is a Thor, the mighty bone breaker.
