Love them Don! I wanted a sharp and smooth jaw wrench hence my inclusion of the Trimo on the Ridgid thread. They look so nice together. Your 12" Trimo is clean with the original paint. Wish mine had a hanging loop.
Thanks Allfast! I use a pretty gentle method. Degrease with hot water and POR15 Marine Clean with a toothbrush scrub. Then I soak in Evaporust for a half day using scrubs of 0000 steel wool to help things along. Basic Rustoleum satin black goes on the painted areas. I like it because it dries quick and I can touch it up easily. I then do a slurry of cold galvanizing compound and Break Free CLP applied liberally with 0000 steel wool. This puts a micro layer of polished zinc on the exposed steel. I just finished the Trimo but the Ridgid has been hanging in my drafty garage for a year without any flash rust.160 years between the two of them. Cleaned, painted and greased for another century.![]()

I found it in a rusty & crusty pile at a salvage shop in Seattle sitting outside, covered in rust, so there is some pitting and the stamping of the letters aren't perfect, but the important parts are in good shape!If anyone needs a hook jaw for a 24" Ridgid wrench, feel free to message me. Free to a good home.
"B-4-4" date code. Cleaned, all rust removed and oiled up. The jaws are sharp and have plenty of life left in them.
I found it in a rusty & crusty pile at a salvage shop in Seattle sitting outside, covered in rust, so there is some pitting and the stamping of the letters aren't perfect, but the important parts are in good shape!

-Donthe jaw is marked D-11-2Got this one today

Here's my 6" Rigid. It's less than 6" when it's closed all the way. Maybe that's why sometimes people think they see a 4" when it's really a 6" closed all the way.I’ve never seen a 4”
If I am reading this right, that's your Grandfather in uniform in the photos, and his Grandfather was the machinist and factory manager? Pretty cool. Which one? Neville Island (Davo?) or Ambridge? I'm curious how old you and your father are.This might be my Great Great Grandfather's. He was a machinist during the war. I have some of his levels and squares from the time but this one has a soft spot in my heart as it's been used by me to do the same stuff my Great grandfather and Grandfather did. He managed the LST Factory in Pittsburgh.
It well might've been. All of the features match the 1945 date code that @d42jeep pointed out. (They were typically finished in black enamel prior to 1948, and there's a possibility some were just natural steel, but those reddish orange paint remnants I see on the handle, which was a postwar finish, may have been a safety thing, or one of your forebears painted it later.) Ridge had thirteen (13) contracts for pipe wrenches and other tools with the Navy during WWII, and one of them was still being executed in April 1945. If the Navy was buying some of them for the LST factories in Pittsburgh, which is not at all out of the question, but I have no way of knowing from the WPB records I have, it didn't have far to travel.Tell me this thing was in the LST factory....
Thanks so much for the information. My grandfather pictured with the Dodge, landed on Normandy 2 weeks after D-Day. He was born 12-25-1921. So that sweet picture at the trading post Was his birthday. My dad is retirement age. I believe he was at Ambridge but I'd have to confirm with my old man. I swear it was Charleroi. His brother quite possibly transported your father's ship, he was a heavily decorated with medals. They blew the poor belly turret off at one point heavily damaged and it back somehow.Thanks for contributing to the thread, @truffle. Love the story and the photos. My father was a WWII vet. Navy. Destroyer ****** in the Pacific. A few of his brothers, my uncles, fought in Europe, and one of them landed in Normandy. I have always been interested in the war, and vintage tools, and when the two come together, it's the sweet spot.
If I am reading this right, that's your Grandfather in uniform in the photos, and his Grandfather was the machinist and factory manager? Pretty cool. Which one? Neville Island (Davo?) or Ambridge? I'm curious how old you and your father are.
It well might've been. All of the features match the 1945 date code that @d42jeep pointed out. (They were typically finished in black enamel prior to 1948, and there's a possibility some were just natural steel, but those reddish orange paint remnants I see on the handle, which was a postwar finish, may have been a safety thing, or one of your forebears painted it later.) Ridge had thirteen (13) contracts for pipe wrenches and other tools with the Navy during WWII, and one of them was still being executed in April 1945. If the Navy was buying some of them for the LST factories in Pittsburgh, which is not at all out of the question, but I have no way of knowing from the WPB records I have, it didn't have far to travel.It would've been supplied after D-Day, though, well after the hundreds of LSTs splashed into the Ohio river on their way to Normandy. EDIT: LST's were used in the Pacific, too, of course, and we were still mopping up over there well into 1945.
My only thing I can say is this thing is yellow... I remember it as a little kid being yellow... it was pretty crusty when I became a heavy equipment mechanic and it got soaked in hydraulic fluid daily, the finish wasn't modified and with the yellow being up inside the jaw way down in adjusting nut... any other paint would have fallen off in the oil I promise whatever safety yellow they used was strong. BUT There's 2 or 3 spots where there might have been a red finish. I'm still betting all my marble it was born safety yellow. Even some of the stuff I'd see in all the steel mills in the area (I use to be a into the heavy equipment repair at steel services) corresponding to that is that color yellow... I doubt it come out of Westinghouse but my great grandfather and grandfather worked there post war... where the famous Atom smasher was.Thanks for contributing to the thread, @truffle. Love the story and the photos. My father was a WWII vet. Navy. Destroyer ****** in the Pacific. A few of his brothers, my uncles, fought in Europe, and one of them landed in Normandy. I have always been interested in the war, and vintage tools, and when the two come together, it's the sweet spot.
If I am reading this right, that's your Grandfather in uniform in the photos, and his Grandfather was the machinist and factory manager? Pretty cool. Which one? Neville Island (Davo?) or Ambridge? I'm curious how old you and your father are.
It well might've been. All of the features match the 1945 date code that @d42jeep pointed out. (They were typically finished in black enamel prior to 1948, and there's a possibility some were just natural steel, but those reddish orange paint remnants I see on the handle, which was a postwar finish, may have been a safety thing, or one of your forebears painted it later.) Ridge had thirteen (13) contracts for pipe wrenches and other tools with the Navy during WWII, and one of them was still being executed in April 1945. If the Navy was buying some of them for the LST factories in Pittsburgh, which is not at all out of the question, but I have no way of knowing from the WPB records I have, it didn't have far to travel.It would've been supplied after D-Day, though, well after the hundreds of LSTs splashed into the Ohio river on their way to Normandy. EDIT: LST's were used in the Pacific, too, of course, and we were still mopping up over there well into 1945.
Tiny is cool. Offset is cool. Tiny and Offset is really cool.Sometimes we find stuff when we aren’t even looking!