Outlawmws
Well-known member
Screw collar on mine is aluminum.
Mine too
Screw collar on mine is aluminum.
Breaking character......the crimping screw collar holding the crayon is what Timm and I were refreshing to - at least I was -

...a Millers Falls valve lapper.
...prompted the Curator to post this...The overall design of the thing is so much different than any of the Albertson or Duro/Indestro models I've seen (and others) that I figured they'd probably at least have gone for a design patent...[ ]...I think they all pretty much worked the same way -
...and promise this:That's Goodell-Pratt's grinder. MF acquired the rights to it when they acquired a majority interest in G-P in 1931. Patent is Hapgood, 1102581, July 7, 1914. G-P made it for years, MF just continued making it after they bought them. You are correct when you say that valve grinders "pretty much worked the same way," but it was how they worked inside the housings that mattered. They all used different mechanisms to affect the same progressive reciprocating action. Those patented differences avoided infringement and provided a basis for legal production. Duro, Albertson, G-P, Zim (who made them for Sears, Blackhawk, etc), etc, all used different patents. (Duro actually had two different patents for two different mechanisms for two different models of valve lappers!)
Fulfilling his promise, we present...I plan to do a Curator's Corner.






We are choosing to read 'fireside reading during inclement weather' as a compliment, and not a comment on our verboseness!OK, these last few posts is going to be an interesting read.
Perfect timing, as a spell of bad weather is just arriving I have got all the firewood stacked by the stove so as we can hibernate until it passes.
Thanks, Bean!Lug the Lovzonian!
You mean when all those pesky valves were located inside the block of a flathead!?Imagine the first guys to decide they needed a valve grinder and how that influenced engine design.


Chinesium.We're not sure about the source of the "Lowest Priced" valve grinder in the upper left.
Chinesium.
Chinesium.
Really not until the late 60's. The first time Congress took any action at all to try to stem the tide of Asian imports was 1973 and the first major anti-Dumping Act was passed in 1977. We just don't recognize that grinder. The crank handle looks like a Zim, surprisingly, but the shape of the housing does not, and we couldn't find any evidence of Zim marketplace action before 1936.Not in the 20's, 30's, 40's...
I figured.I was joking because of the lowest price... haha.
True, for the People's Republic of China, but not the other China, the Republic of China (i.e., Taiwan). It's economic and industrial growth was rapid. By the late 60's, the U.S. was its largest export market. That was the first wave of what is derisively called chinesium today, well before it started coming from the mainland.It would have been much more common to find “nipponesium” back then than anything from China. China was still a relatively non westernized 3rd world country at that time


Was there anything in that big of 1931 Montgomery Ward catalog I sent to Mark?Before we leave the subject permanently,
If you mean valve grinders, no idea. I didn't look through it.Was there anything in that big of 1931 Montgomery Ward catalog I sent to Mark?
I was wondering about your owl when Mrs Farmer J snapped this picture a few days ago.In other news, our annual winter houseguest and official mascot is back! This is 4 years running now.

Woodsy?
Snerk. Well, back in 2021 we referred to him as Mr. Wise Old Laser Beams, but only because of what he looks like at night, and in 2022 a couple times as Boobeau, as a play on words on Bubo, which is inventive and fun to say, but the wrong genus. We identified him as a fine specimen of Megascops asio in rufous morph (or a red Eastern screech owl) when he first appeared in our linden tree, one of several roosts he keeps in a < 3 mile radius, according to the experts at the NJ Raptor Center, who use our last name to keep tabs on him, but the grandboys call him "Screech," and the grandboys always get their way.As studious as @Private Lugnutz is, it would have to be X the Owl.
Just as well.. Nothing of great significance, methinks.If you mean valve grinders, no idea. I didn't look through it.
Magnificent!I was wondering about your owl when Mrs Farmer J snapped this picture a few days ago.
Your barn predates my “older home” by six centuries! When I was twelve or thirteen I painted a barn owl (or maybe a snowy owl) in tempera in my father’s art class. Been four decades since I’ve laid eyes on it.…so we could admire the timber frame dating from 1310…
I’m usually pretty comfortable sitting out at night on the porch of our family cabin, watching the moon and planets trudge along the ecliptic. But a few years ago, my hair stood on end at some of the (then) unfamiliar sounds this species can produce.Megascops asio

Anything and everything but a hoot!my hair stood on end at some of the (then) unfamiliar sounds this species can produce.
Wonderful.a collaborative effort of eight kindergarteners.
Five and six year olds? I know adults that can't do that good!a collaborative effort of eight kindergarteners.