Beerhippie
Well-known member
@Outlawmws : Gun cleaning kit is for a 1903 Springfield. I recently gave one to a buddy who's re-making a GI '03.
'03 Springer was used well into the Vietnam era, if not longer. Generally a designated marksman's or sharpshooter's gun.So WWI not WWII. Thx Timm!
The follow up with the pieces out if the dishwasher:Update: Bad idea. the dirtiest one cleaned up very well, the cleaner one lost all paint and flash rusted. Running the DW through a cleaning cycle with a powder cleaning agent to shine it back up. I'll not try that experiment again. Before:
Dishwasher detergent is largely sodium carbonate, AKA washing soda. Caustic and not paint friendly, but you seem to have figured that out.The follow up with the pieces out if the dishwasher:

Also why you shouldn't put coated things like printed glassware in the dishwasher. It's not the temperature it's the chemicals.Dishwasher detergent is largely sodium carbonate, AKA washing soda. Caustic and not paint friendly, but you seem to have figured that out.
Any metallic finish on china or glass will quickly be finished, too. A local glass blower makes beautiful custom glasses that our clients buy for use at the pub. Some regulars leave them here, but are warned that if they have a reduced metallic finish (many do), it will not survive our glass washer.Also why you shouldn't put coated things like printed glassware in the dishwasher. It's not the temperature it's the chemicals.
Thanks for the offer. How about the Keen Kutter screwdriver, I listed earlier. If you're looking for SK sockets, I've got a ton. PM me if you're interested or can think of something else I might have hanging around.
Any metallic finish on china or glass will quickly be finished, too. A local glass blower makes beautiful custom glasses that our clients buy for use at the pub. Some regulars leave them here, but are warned that if they have a reduced metallic finish (many do), it will not survive our glass washer.
Mostly tools today, with a smattering of other things of interest to me:
Flea: $15 S&W knife, $1 Bridgeport Bell System wood handled driver, $10 SO swivel head ratchet; $10 I believe this is an M1 Garand cleaning kit tube and $10 for the Aluminum box of flies;
YS- $7 all! SK speeder, Big & small wood handle drivers, Wrenches from Indesrot, Proto, Plvmb, Craftsman Long C, Williams, SO, and Bonney, a pipe EZ out, Ideal wire stripper, and a 1" copper punch
Estate sale: $2 quart of Evaporust, and a GAM driver set orphan
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The lady of the house has been under the weather, so this was the first day she's been out of the house in a while. I took her out to lunch and we stopped at an estate sale that was on the way. Very little sign of male habitation, the stuff there looked like the inventory of a Tuesday Morning.
I was bored out of my mind, then saw this in a random grab box of stuff:
Not an expert on the Diamond stuff, I'm guessing this is from the 50's??
You have to be over 65 years of age to use it, so it's seen little use as most of us of that age have learned how to delegate.That is a really clean pallet hammer.
I resemble that remark!You have to be over 65 years of age to use it, so it's seen little use as most of us of that age have learned how to delegate.
The delegatee will use a Junior Crate Tool.I resemble that remark!![]()


















The tape measure is a Keuffel & Esser, a brand I’m not familiar with.
The hat was my wife’s pick and I know better than to argue.
Also surveying stuff, so big tape measures helped there.K&E were very big in drafting and architectural stuff - compass sets, scales, triangles etc. so tape measures are not far off.

LEFT-BEHINDs
Pic 1: One of the kookiest homemade multitools I have ever seen in the wild. Tempted! As some of you know, I have a collection - a whole drawer full! - of tool mods, and I am fond of efficienct designs, but at some point it can get trumped by practicality, and the thought of that file digging into one's hand with every swing is past that point for me!
Pic 2: A pair of vintage water skis. Tempted! If only for the novelty or the criss-crossed wall hanging quality on a boat shed.
Pic 3: A combination of medallions (Disston and E.C. Simmons) on the same hand saw. Curious, but not enough! Guessing that is either a standard vintage Third Party production practice I didn't know about (not really a hand saw guy), or a PO replaced one of the medallions. Calling @LesserSon.
I agree with RTM (to a point). PO used a ubiquitous post-war Disston medallion to replace top sawnut on a somewhat earlier (looks to have undisturbed solid brass medallion and two nuts) Simonds (not EC Simmons) saw. The lower sawnut was also replaced, using a smaller-headed, steel sawnut.My vote highlighted and fixed above. The top one does not seem as flush set as the lower one? Lots of Disston out there, much fewer E.C. Simmons
Ooooh! I thought it said, "Senor Crate Opener". Ya know, like Mr. Clean, Mrs. Butterworth, and Aunt Jemima.You have to be over 65 years of age to use it,
Thanks! (And for the correction, too! That was one of those that's-what-I-meant,-but-my-fingers-typed-something-else dysbrandia© errors.)PO used a ubiquitous post-war Disston medallion to replace top sawnut on a somewhat earlier (looks to have undisturbed solid brass medallion and two nuts) Simonds (not EC Simmons) saw. The lower sawnut was also replaced, using a smaller-headed, steel sawnut.







Serious Suckage!Needville, TX city wide garage sale
Minor correction on the Lee Trevino quote . . .
