Cruzan80
Well-known member
Nice part about those (in general) is the negative rake for the RAS. I probably would have grabbed it, and then had to figure out a way to bore a 1" arbor hole (my RAS is considerably bigger than 12").
Wow.. that looks practically new.I found this Crown mid box at a Tahoe estate sale yesterday. It was part of an upper/mid box set that I was able to talk the seller into separating. I would have preferred finding a Kennedy but I’m not complaining.
I like the box but I like the greenbrier in the back ground more!
I stuck it on the Stainless table below the Kennedy.

Wow! I haven't seen one of those in years!I found this beauty today for $8. It's a Craftsman Auto Scroller Saw (glorified jig-saw). For some reason I've never seen one of these before. I am still fascinated how you can lock the blade in any position or leave it unlocked & you can turn the blade with the knob instead of moving the whole saw. Not sure how practical it is yet, but it was difficult to pass up. It looks fresh out of the box even though it probably dates to around 1970'ish. The original Craftsman plug isn't grounded. Anyone have any ideas when the Craftsman Auto Scroller Saw was first offered?
The badge says "double insulated" which means it doesn't need a grounded plug. Nice saw.I found this beauty today for $8. It's a Craftsman Auto Scroller Saw (glorified jig-saw). For some reason I've never seen one of these before. I am still fascinated how you can lock the blade in any position or leave it unlocked & you can turn the blade with the knob instead of moving the whole saw. Not sure how practical it is yet, but it was difficult to pass up. It looks fresh out of the box even though it probably dates to around 1970'ish. The original Craftsman plug isn't grounded. Anyone have any ideas when the Craftsman Auto Scroller Saw was first offered?
But it still has a polarized plug--meaning you always have to try twice to get it the right way around when plugging it in. May as well have left the ground lug on just so you get it right the first time.The badge says "double insulated" which means it doesn't need a grounded plug. Nice saw.





Nice find. A quick perusal of my catalog collection and the first instance I see of the red trimmed logo is 1970, the last being around 1976 ,as in 1977 they went to the red/white rectangular Sears/Craftsman logo. Key for your box,and Don's heritage badged boxes are still available.I couldn't resist this carpenter's box for five bux. I like the flip-up handles on the ends, but neglected to get photos showing them. That little sticker on the top left corner explains that the bump is an optional pop-out for a framing square. There are two little holes drilled through the lid that attached a block of wood with slits to hold handsaws. His saws were there too, but I left those. (They're still there. I try not to collect hand saws).
It's got the same black/red crown logo as some of my other boxes (including the brown one behind it). Is there a particular time frame when that logo was used?

Nice find. A quick perusal of my catalog collection and the first instance I see of the red trimmed logo is 1970, the last being around 1976 ,as in 1977 they went to the red/white rectangular Sears/Craftsman logo. Key for your box,and Don's heritage badged boxes are still available.






The Heritage logo ran about 1945 through 1958/59 on most pieces. Then the Crowntop logo began appearing in 1958 running through the mid to late 70's on some items. The Craftsman chevron logo begins to show up on the larger boxes around 1961. The rectangular Sears/Craftsman logo finds its way to us around 1977 .

Very cool.




I always thought the same with the 7 1/4".Yeah.....four of 'em
Here's the other two
The two saws pictured here have also been posted in the Collecting Power Tools thread.
I find it interesting that of the four old vintage C-man saws that I have, two are 6-1/2"ers and the other two are 7"
....I've always known circular saws to be 7-1/4" until I acquired these





I switched out the handles. 









