Jay__Dub
Well-known member
It's a beauty. Congrats!
Sorry for your loss, great find.Lol. Yes, a bit more. A older gentleman in his mid 70’s. Had inherited it from his dad about 30 years ago.
It was two hours away from me and I didn’t have a truck. Took a week before I was able to make it up to get it (my dad passed away last month and I bought his truck from his estate). Glad that it wasn’t noticed by other tool guys.

That isn’t a veryHere's a mystery-box that's been on FB marketplace for weeks @ $20, with no takers. The photos are crappy, which probably doesn't help. It's an odd hip-top flip-front combination that I haven't seen before, with pullout drawers that don't have glides. I've zoomed in on the photo showing the label and enhanced it a bit, attempting to bring out more detail.
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It looks like a previous owner brazed a series of nuts in a row to accept their corresponding sockets.
Does anyone recognize the maker? (I'm not going to be the buyer).
Tom







Cruzan, I'm surprised you didn't get any feedback on these... Did you ever figure out a manufacturer? Interesting that the label inside includes German and French. Makes me wonder if perhaps the cabinets aren't british?Picked these up last weekend, no name on them that I can see. Nylon rollers at the back of the slide, locking bar in the back twists with the key. They have latches, but multiple drawers can be open at once. Looks like the drawers can be re-arranged internally. Build quality is nice, but not quite Lista/Vidmar/Equipto level. The drawers have a rolled lip that may help. Only identifying part is the label I took a pic of. Any ideas on maker?
Read further. He did find ATD.Cruzan, I'm surprised you didn't get any feedback on these... Did you ever figure out a manufacturer? Interesting that the label inside includes German and French. Makes me wonder if perhaps the cabinets aren't british?
Sorry for any confusion. The red cabinet (from prior question/post) was ATD, the blue ones are unknown at this point.Read further. He did find ATD.
I do notice some differences. The two drawers on the chest for the Signal Corps TE-87-A radio station toolkit have a significant separator between them and do not extend all the way to the edge like that. Secondly, the TE-87-A chest has metal strapping riveted all around it at the bottom and top, not just a couple right angle corner straps like that chest. Lastly, the TE-87-A chest had three "doublers" screwed into the lid. I would think maybe they had been removed, but with the other features, I'm doubtful. Keen eye, though, and definitely looks very similar, maybe even sourced from the same maker and/or design.what looks like one of those cool TE-87-A Tool Chests
Thanks. I see your point. You probably know more about them than I do. I did say "looks like" and picked the number for the chest I see most often. I found these 2 examples online just now. The weathered one has the older "Airplane Tool Chest" brass tag and the refinished one is being ID'd as a T-11.I do notice some differences. The two drawers on the chest for the Signal Corps TE-87-A radio station toolkit have a significant separator between them and do not extend all the way to the edge like that. Secondly, the TE-87-A chest has metal strapping riveted all around it at the bottom and top, not just a couple right angle corner straps like that chest. Lastly, the TE-87-A chest had three "doublers" screwed into the lid. I would think maybe they had been removed, but with the other features, I'm doubtful. Keen eye, though, and definitely looks very similar, maybe even sourced from the same maker and/or design.
Well, I know enough to know I'd really like to run into one that wasn't a shambles of its former self or mint-y and priced like a used car!You probably know more about them than I do.
Yes, hence, my keen eye comment. There's definitely a similarity. TE-87-A is the number for the Tool Equipment set that went in it, by the way, not the chest. I don't know that the chest ever had a separate number. There are a few similar looking chests in slightly different configurations in my copy of the SNL J-19.I did say "looks like" and picked the number for the chest I see most often.
Those are very handsome, and dead ringers, I would say. Maybe the one in the staged photo of the NA O-47 stayed in service since WWI. I am not familiar with T-11. I am familiar with a TE-11. A different Signal Corps set for constructing shacks, towers and poles. Also came in a wooden chest, but it was squatter than the chest for the TE-87-A. So many sets, so many chests!I found these 2 examples online just now. The weathered one has the older "Airplane Tool Chest" brass tag and the refinished one is being ID'd as a T-11.
Those are to die for!I also just now ran into a topic on the G503 about "M1918 Tool Kits" that have a box with a similar but distinctly different look that I'm sure you're quite familiar with as you seem to have contributed to the thread.

Made by Duplex. They made and sold them in-house. They also made them third party, including Snap-on, Old Forge, and many others. After a fire burned the factory down in NY, Pendleton Tool Industries, Inc. bought out the company and moved them to Arkansas. I have a few.
Cannot find anything on it, besides the initials PC.
You're welcome. That was my Newark Airport Cell Phone Lot summary!Thanks for the great information!
...August 28, 1926 through July 2, 1928.patent pending should put it at
I did some digging when I discovered the patent pending label, and have not found where I documented it. Will try to get back to the WFH desk later today. Not been there much lately. Not sure it was anything more conclusive....August 28, 1926 through July 2, 1928.
With the caveat that aspects of these boxes like yours (Beemer has one, too) don't jibe with other data, as I have noted on this and other threads. References indicate that the patent was assigned to Coe, an employee of another toolbox maker at that time, and he didn't start Duplex Mfg, which was located in Sherman (close to Jamestown), until 1932. Also, they actually look later than some of the examples that have the patent number embossed in the lids, which are typically black, not OD, don't have the Duplex decal, and have much cruder cantilever hardware. It's possible the other references are wrong. But there's a nagging possibility of a second, later patent. I've always had a note to do a second round of research, but I never did.
PC, its even stamped on some of the levers. Must be the owner I guess.is that P&C? or an owner made markings?
That Snap-on box is here: https://www.facebook.com/marketplac...wse_serp:9913b74f-1e63-4a11-9cf3-6a44d078a9f9In Windsor, Ontario. 150 CDN. It's on Fbook Marketplace. Too far for me, plus I'm pretty sure I'd turn up dead if I brought it home. It's beautiful. Must be 40's or 50's.
On the other hand, I scored this lot for 5 bucks. Might be a Kennedy. It's a brutal paint job, I'll dig in and see what I can figure out.
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$299 for this little fella.
Could not find it. The only thing is PC, it's stamped everywhere, pre assembly/paint. On the levers, and the steel panels. It's 2 punches, as the letter spacing is never the same. Maybe it's the initials of the worker who assembled it? Not sure.@Jay__Dub
See if you can find the patent number. They are typically VERY lightly embossed, and rather small, on the lid.


