Outlawmws
Well-known member
RTM *****!
Todays grab…. Found this sale late last night and was able to pounce first thing this am. Saw a FBM listing for a 10 pc Indestro Select 1/2 drive 1/2 thru 1” set for $5. Got there and also picked a Stanley set of drivers for $5, a couple more Craftsman, Klien, Mac and Kobalt for another $5. Seller also had this vintage Union box for guess what? Another $5. The leather handle is in incredible condition. Got home and found another FBM post for $5 which had a 7pc 3/8 drive Snap-On Metric hex drive set along with a Craftsman SAE set & another Japan set… Think I’m done for today.
Steve![]()
Found today at “an early weekend garage sale”:
Script Barcaloy combination wrench set
P&C spinner/extension
Plomb 4800 9/32”-drive midget set in original box
Early S-K No. 4237 1/2-drive socket set, with flex-head breaker bar, a cross-bar, and ten "S-K Chrome" sockets. All of the sockets are marked “S-K Chrome" with the fractional size only (no model numbers).
Utica three-diamond no. 82 needlenose pliers
Klein Tools 201-7CST spring loaded side cutter pliers
Hexo #15306 chrome vanadium DBE
Two Vlchek chrome molybdenum DBEs
Long C Craftsman combo
Smaller Indestro Super, Crescent, Plomb Pebble, Armaloy, Dunlap, and Barcalo scoop wrenches.
Assorted vintage None Better, Cornwell, Plomb, Mustang, Blackhawk and D-I sockets.
Friday Estate Sale - $15 all; not bad!:
2 Proto deep sockets, Proto 15 in punch, Proto LA extension, pipe tool, Burndy calipers - never seen any like this with cable conversions - , paint brush, Millers falls protractor head, a Renold chain breaker, made in England.
Nearly full DNA, Craftsman hatchet needs de-rusted, Conger Lantern Co battery lantern, the battery was inside, but was dead and rattled? I suspect the AA or AA batteries inside were falling apart... I'l test this, but this could be fun as an LED conversion? have to see what 6V LED lamps are available if it works.
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Here's the hits from the mystery box I bought.
Left to right:
Fiat wrench, 2 unmarked older wrenches, Langline 11/16x7/8 ratchet wrench, CMAN 9mmx10mm offset ratchet wrench, miscellaneous SK/Husky USA/CMAN USA sockets, CMAN stubby flathead, CMAN USA extensions, GM Goodwrench small 2" extension (made in Taiwan but thought it was cool), CMAN 13mm combo, Barcalo DOE, forged USA offset SAE, Fairmount 9/16"x1/2" offset DBE, Dunlap USA offset DBE, SK 10mmx12mm line wrench, 2 Blackhawk SAE line wrenches, Matco 18mm combo, Snap On T8-T50 tamper proof Torx socket set, Blue Point 19mmx21mm offset DBE ratchet wrench, Snap On 14mm and 17mm 3/8" drive impact swivels, Snap On FBP1 pocket spark plug gapping tool, Flex-Hone (marked Snap On Tools Corp), Snap On 3/8" extension, older looking unmarked screw clamp, 2 Proto 3/8" pear head ratchets, SK 1/4" locking extension, and Billings No. 8 adjustable pliers. Not the greatest score but I think overall I did well for $50. (There was equally as much Taiwan junk that got tossed).
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Alcohol and power tools, what a great cross merchandising idea!![]()






The evaporust will be busy tonight.
I did the same once.........I probably looked through 500 sockets and came home with these.
-Don
Wow!I did the same once....
A Seller at the Flea Market had buckets, and buckets, and boxes of old sockets
A gigantic hodge podge mix of everything and more than a fair amount of Made in China ****
But it was worth the effort as I was able to put together an almost complete set of Craftsman C-series sockets
Complete, except I couldn't find the 13/16....
I wish that I still retained the patience to do this......

Recently, the estate sale people around here have started dumping sockets, wrenches and assorted stuff in stapled closed zip-loc bags and selling them for a set price. Usually, the bags are sized to make it difficult to see what's exactly in the bag.
Have you guys seen this yet??
Only seen it once or twice, worked out for one wrench bundle. The sockets, if I can’t read a few, I pass and move on.Recently, the estate sale people around here have started dumping sockets, wrenches and assorted stuff in stapled closed zip-loc bags and selling them for a set price. Usually, the bags are sized to make it difficult to see what's exactly in the bag.
Seems to be the new normal. Of course there is one rusty socket in there that destroys the bag/ability to read the sockets. Or they are taped/sealed tight for no movement of shifting. See it with wrenches often as well.Wow!
While I've always considered myself a patient person, I've never made it to that level. I've watched others do it, but after a few handfuls of cheap china **** I'm done.
Recently, the estate sale people around here have started dumping sockets, wrenches and assorted stuff in stapled closed zip-loc bags and selling them for a set price. Usually, the bags are sized to make it difficult to see what's exactly in the bag.
Have you guys seen this yet??
It's the norm here and I've dug through a whole barn packed with boxes over 3 or 4 days, a whole house/garage/workshop/shed/shed/yard combo that took a literal week, 20 40gal tubs filled to the brim in a day, a 5 gallon bucket of sockets dumped on the floor, etc...While I've always considered myself a patient person, I've never made it to that level. I've watched others do it, but after a few handfuls of cheap china **** I'm done.
Here's the complete (visual) inventory of contents, minus a lot of rusty screws and several tiny broken lightbulbs: no extra Heyco, sadly, and the crossbar was either broken short or replaced, but there a total of three Phillips, two slot screwdrivers, a thing that looks like a screwdriver but is just an undifferentiated rod instead of a bit (I think it was marked Vaco, I'm assuming electronics), and more allen wrenches than God. (Both that Little Fuse tin and the extremely scuffed one next to it are full of them.)I believe I see tools that came from the factory beetle tool roll. There is the lugnut/generator pully socket, the combination pliers with the black handle, the wooden handled screwdriver with the odd longish blade, and the double ended Heyco wrench. There should be at least one more heyco wrench, a philips screwdriver (Edit: or did the old ones with wooden handles include two sizes of flat blade drivers?) and jackhandle/crossbar for the socket, that might be hidden in there.
I was sitting around waiting for a phone call, so I opened the bag.Wow!
While I've always considered myself a patient person, I've never made it to that level. I've watched others do it, but after a few handfuls of cheap china **** I'm done.
Recently, the estate sale people around here have started dumping sockets, wrenches and assorted stuff in stapled closed zip-loc bags and selling them for a set price. Usually, the bags are sized to make it difficult to see what's exactly in the bag.
Have you guys seen this yet??
I might look at one, and if I don't see anything I want within a minute, I put it down.
The exception to this is on the last day of the sale when everything is usually 75% off. I've bought a couple of bags, but I still limit how much I'm willing to spend. I have gotten lucky a couple of times with some SnapOn, SK and some Long C Craftsman.
Haven't opened this one yet, got it for $6.25.
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No picture?Here's the complete (visual) inventory of contents, minus a lot of rusty screws and several tiny broken lightbulbs: no extra Heyco, sadly, and the crossbar was either broken short or replaced, but there a total of three Phillips, two slot screwdrivers, a thing that looks like a screwdriver but is just an undifferentiated rod instead of a bit (I think it was marked Vaco, I'm assuming electronics), and more allen wrenches than God. (Both that Little Fuse tin and the extremely scuffed one next to it are full of them.)
Also! I got my new giant clunky blue Mastercraft toolbox open. It was filthy, but did contain its own keys, multiple springs, four screw extractors, DOE and combination wrenches (a couple of Indestro, mostly Gray), and what I think might be a few planer blades.







Nice score for the box and tools!Plumb
Lol… I spell like chit!Nice score for the box and tools!
but Plumb, or Plvmb? (Plomb)
Been stalking this RemLine for a few weeks. The ad and the pics didn’t do this box any justice. By far one of the cleanest box's I’ve found. The painted on initials wiped right off. I was able to wipe the box down with a Tub-o-Towel and then some detail spray. The drawers got a vacuum and the tools got a wipe down. The best tools were from Craftsman, Plvmb, Thorson & Proto. Some real early Irwin adjustable bits, a ton of USA hex drive bits, some early Japan sockets in SAE & Metric, Nicholson files & a cherry PlumBob…All in, $40 and a 10 min ride.
Steve![]()
Hex wrenches and glass cutters are almost a gimme in every box….Ooh! Three glass cutters!
Thanks for posting your RemLine box. It had always been a mystery to me who supplied my Powr-Kraft box to Wards.Been stalking this RemLine for a few weeks. The ad and the pics didn’t do this box any justice. By far one of the cleanest box's I’ve found. The painted on initials wiped right off. I was able to wipe the box down with a Tub-o-Towel and then some detail spray. The drawers got a vacuum and the tools got a wipe down. The best tools were from Craftsman, Plvmb, Thorson & Proto. Some real early Irwin adjustable bits, a ton of USA hex drive bits, some early Japan sockets in SAE & Metric, Nicholson files & a cherry PlumBob…All in, $40 and a 10 min ride.
Steve![]()



100% RemLine!!! Glad this helped answer the questions. I’ve been searching for a date, nothing behind the tag as seen on other RemLines… any thoughts? I'd speculate early 70’s???

^ That's what my buddy used for years.mobile work bench
I like to saturate those chipboard tabletops with BLO for water resistance. I use one when camping on occasion, and it stays out in the rain without damage.^ That's what my buddy used for years.
Whatever you do, do NOT let the chip-board base get wet or damp.
^ That's what my buddy used for years.
Whatever you do, do NOT let the chip-board base get wet or damp.
I like to saturate those chipboard tabletops with BLO for water resistance. I use one when camping on occasion, and it stays out in the rain without damage.
It will soak up a LOT of BLO.
More like fiberboard without the hard surface of Masonite. At least, my Handy Table is.Aren't most of those maisonette?
Well, I mean, it has to be the home of SOMETHING, doesn't it?Masonite (originally from Ukiah, California) is pretty much the same in respect to absorbing moisture and then gradually deteriorating.
(You didn't know that Ukiah, California was "The Home of Masonite", did you?)
and their website makes absolutely NO mention of it. or their starting date.