Most of the ones that were included in sets were lost, put aside to rust, or scrapped. You just don't see them at sales or flea markets. I've only been able to find 1, and that was on ebay. They're like the T-bar that is used in the hole at the end of a breaker bar, a forgotten tool that most people can't identify and is easily tossed.
I've only got one in a 1/2" and I found it at a garage sale. Did they make them in 3/8" or 1/4"?

Nice!I have a craftsman "set" in 1/4, 3/8 and 1/2. Don't ask me where I got them or to purchase them. They belonged to a now deceased family member. In the old craftsman catalogs they are listed as a spark plug accessory.
EDIT, I had to go look. Mine look similar to the OP's but have one - on each side of the craftsman instead of =. No other numbers or the like. Mine also seem to have a different almost smoother surface finish.
That's more like a sliding t- handle. Looks beastly. I like that it has knurling on one end too.Wright Bull Bar in 3/4" drive--modern ell handle?
jakemac said:Most of the ones that were included in sets were lost, put aside to rust, or scrapped.
Yup. And definitely not easy to find. I've seen a fair amount of single-ended L-handles at flea markets over the years, but I pass them up because they are usually too old (1920's or 1930's) for my collection niche (wartime), and because the single-ended L-handle does not meet the wartime GMTK specs.Anyone...collect them?









Yup. And definitely not easy to find. I've seen a fair amount of single-ended L-handles at flea markets over the years, but I pass them up because they are usually too old (1920's or 1930's) for my collection niche (wartime) .....
Great topic, ganymede.
Thanks for your appreciation.Fantastic museum quality set !
Definitely, I was thinking a short double-drive piece or L-shaped adapter could be functional, as part of something else. The one inch ells are all pretty long now, whereas that one looks shorter. I guess the double 3/8" are somewhat short, and could adapt a 1" extension for a substantial handle. Just a thought, well I think 1-1/4" is more like the ideal sized handle for me (got a Titan wrench that big around on the end, it's just a bit large over all for adapting to smaller things). Guess I'm weird that way, in thinking hand tools should have a handle on them (something palm sized even if they're micro drive). Perhaps it applies more to turning things (found a door knob sized palm ratchet the other day). I don't know it's kind of funny, you'd think a 1.25 inch drive square was huge, but as a handle diameter it's nothing out of the ordinary (where those are applied). My half-inch socket spinner has that size handle too. Add an L-shaped adapter there and it would be a little more functional. Seems like half-inch spinners are even less common than ells, except I doubt there are any L-adapters. Actually, there's an offset drive adapter, well no, that makes a Z-handle. Might try that though... zee, yeah "offset" is a more general term then, isn't it (and where's the rest of the alphabet)? Let's see, T, ... could call this a J-handle (just hold it underhanded, sure, the offset adapter could invert it from overhanded too, except they made the connection sideways, hmm I'll sidestep that).This ones a little heavier than what we're talking here but I think the principal of function applies.
I have a craftsman "set" in 1/4, 3/8 and 1/2. Don't ask me where I got them or to purchase them.
I guess they come and go, it only took me around a year of looking, now and then, to find what would be the three most common sizes. Not to say I'd have come across the set at local stores or garage sales in however many years, or really had to. It was just hard to believe that these were adopted by the culture of India (since 1970, or some such thing), end of story.After 30+ years of all sorts of sales, I found one 1/2 ell.
Or it could be an international game of keep away (I'm beginning to wonder), but judging by what Ace Hardware sells in Indonesia, which would be any and every thing they can, above and beyond what they offer in the USA, I'd say it simply can't be done, in such a traditional way as where the tool originated.