

I have a set of small wrenchs of the same make. Never used them, too flimsy. I guess the only reason I kept them is that my mom got them for me when I got my first car (53 Chevy). Mom was great, but just didn't understand tools.![]()

Picked up a well-used Kennedy box for $10 today. .
Nice collection, Lugz!Those do look pretty flimsy, but as Warrenator indicated and WQ59B implied, they are ignition wrenches and not much strength was required. The earliest ignition wrenches, provided by ignition system mfgrs (i.e., Delco, Bosch, Remy, Eisemann), were all punched out of thin pressed steel. And even when the toolmakers started making them in sets to cover all the sizes to fit a Delco, Bosch, etc system, a lot of them made them the same way (see New Britain, Wilde, etc), not forged.
Kastar (the gage makers) - see the complete Circle K-Star set below - and later Oxwall capitalized on that minimal required style and customers took advantage of the lower cost.
The pressed steel wrenches in the middle in the second photo marked 41-W-900 (Federal Stock Number) are WWII.
I encounter the odd vintage pressed steel wrench from time to time, but I don't collect them and my research on pricing seemed to indicate they are worth next to nothing, so I just toss them into a junk box. It seems that to even those who collect them they're worth just slightly more than zero. I've got a few forged ones laying around, but again, I find individual ignition size wrenches sell for almost nothing too (unless perhaps made by the Great God Snap-On), so I don't mess with them. Nice to see someone taking them a bit more seriously.Thanks. I'm working on completing a few different brands (pic 2), to include this early partial Cornwell pressed steel set (pic 1), shown with a forged steel solo Herbrand to accentuate the difference.
Not entirely true. Snap-On, Williams, and Plomb electrical/ignition wrenches can have decent collectible value, especially whey they come in sets, and even moreso when the set is in a leatherette roll-up.It seems that to even those who collect them they're worth just slightly more than zero.
I been look in for that bottom one for my brother but around here they cost $100 plus in bad shapeA couple of you want to see the $10 Kennedy box. The top box is one I bought last month for $35 and the bottom two-drawer is the one I just got for $10.