Day 3 pickings from the estate sale stuff at my favorite flea market...
The [PLUMB] ball-pein (didn’t get it on a scale yet, guessing 8 oz.) has a martial mark.
The CRAFTSMAN BE 1/2-inch sq dr double-end offset (or “T-L”) handle is rare in my experience so I was happy to see it. The rest of the Crafty wrenches (No.1, No.2, and No. 3 tappets, combos, DBEs, and the 1033C DOE) are all “CI”.
The heavy duty offset socket wrench at the bottom is a Blue-Point X-360 (1-1/8”), with a phosphate finish and 1942 date code. I couldn’t find the danged handle for it, but I don’t really plan to use it anyway.
The looooooong (20 inches) extension next to it is a Plomb WF-36.
Perhaps the most interesting piece in the bunch was this…
The rest of the daylight shots were terrible, so I took some others…
Anyone seen one before?
Frank Livermont and P.A. Sturtevant each had a number of torque measuring related patents to their name before they joined their companies in 1974. This thing looks like it must be one of Livermont’s early patents for a torque wrench calibrated to 135 inch pounds.
I’m guessing from the name that it’s supposed to tell you when to stop turning, but I don’t see an indicator. Maybe it’s a click-type. I’ve seen modern versions, but the wrench and the device were integral to each other. This thing looks like it was meant to take different size single end box wrenches, which are removable. That set screw holds the shank in at a little notch in the shank. I guess you’d need a bunch of them for different size fasteners, but I’ve never seen one before.
On top of that, I’m not sure this wrench – which is most likely Wright Aeronautical, not the tool company in Barberton, Ohio – is original to the tool. It looks to have been modified (cut off, grinded down, and notched) to fit inside the opening of the Torq-Stop.
If anybody knows anything definitive about this Torq-Stop, please chime in.