Private Lugnutz
Well-known member
I picked up this U.S. Army General Mechanic’s Toolkit (GMTK) Contents Layout last week.
View media item 80920
It’s hard to tell in the light and faded now with age, but it’s NATO green in color. These were made of some kind of waterproofed fabric. If you’ve never seen one before, the silhouettes are actual size. It measures ~40” x 44”. These were folded up and kept with the GMTK and used for inventories and inspections. You’d literally lay the tools out on each outline to make sure (and demonstrate) that you had them all.
I have another one that I got from GJ member HeelSpur dated May 1980 from my Army regular duty era.
View media item 80921
After doing a detailed one-for-one comparison between the two, the number, types, and sizes of every tool is exactly the same on both layouts. So the faded NATO green one is exactly the same GMTK from the same era. Late 1970’s to early 1980’s. The layout is different, but the tools are all the same. Eighty-eight (88) of them on each sheet.
I don’t collect that vintage, but it might be fun at some point in time to try. Ironically, I have put five WWII-era GMTK’s together in about seven years, and this one would definitely be much more challenging for me. I’d be starting from scratch as a collector in this 1980 era.
For now they’re just neat wall hangers.
View media item 80920
It’s hard to tell in the light and faded now with age, but it’s NATO green in color. These were made of some kind of waterproofed fabric. If you’ve never seen one before, the silhouettes are actual size. It measures ~40” x 44”. These were folded up and kept with the GMTK and used for inventories and inspections. You’d literally lay the tools out on each outline to make sure (and demonstrate) that you had them all.
I have another one that I got from GJ member HeelSpur dated May 1980 from my Army regular duty era.
View media item 80921
After doing a detailed one-for-one comparison between the two, the number, types, and sizes of every tool is exactly the same on both layouts. So the faded NATO green one is exactly the same GMTK from the same era. Late 1970’s to early 1980’s. The layout is different, but the tools are all the same. Eighty-eight (88) of them on each sheet.
I don’t collect that vintage, but it might be fun at some point in time to try. Ironically, I have put five WWII-era GMTK’s together in about seven years, and this one would definitely be much more challenging for me. I’d be starting from scratch as a collector in this 1980 era.
For now they’re just neat wall hangers.
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There's got to be a lot more photographic evidence available. I mean, Kipper and Armstrong have GLOSSY COLOR photos of the current "GMTK" versions on their web sites.