I have a red and gray and a red Dayton branded pair, also made by Waterloo, of around the same vintage.. The Dayton has the slab sides. They just reversed the sides so the box frame is on the inside instead of the outside. That means most of the drawer slide is floating, with only the front and back attached. It also means that the side handle has to stick out beyond the box, instead of just being a flush bar with room for your fingers in the recess. I think it was just for a different look. I also think the outside box frame is a better design. The drawers on the CM and the Dayton interchange. The Dayton also has grip drawer handles instead of the top edge grip. Waterloo made similar boxes for a lot of companies. Waterloo stocks touch up paint but I am not as tight with the Waterloo lady as the previous poster. When I asked for paint for the red and gray it was not sufficient info. I used the Rustoleum hammertone and the effect does not match that well for touchup and the Rustoleum red that everybody suggests is going to be a bit off but it is mostly inside the drawers. Just having them clean is an improvement. They went from the garage to an easier life in the basement. Their old job is now being done by an HF 44", series 1 with the old sand finish. I hope I never have to touch that up.What's baffling is the roller has plank sides instead of the usual recessed sides, the handle is wrong and the garage door lock is in the door instead of the cabinet itself. I just wonder if it's an early roller cabinet.
The drawers definitely look correct, but the cabinet looks totally incorrect.
I'm a newbie on these old boxes, but can someone explain this box listed on the Facebook marketplace? Top is ok, but the roller baffles me!
I'm a newbie on these old boxes, but can someone explain this box listed on the Facebook marketplace? Top is ok, but the roller baffles me!
As I said, Waterloo made boxes in that period with the box frame on the inside. I have one. Whether they made one for Sears is another story. In any case, the Sears drawers fit in either style cabinet. I swapped drawers between both styles and they fit. You would need to check the Sears catalogs of the period to see if they were ever sold ar Sears. If not, somebody did some Waterloo swapping between different brand labels and maybe some repainting.[emoji106]
Yeah, mist be a "Frankinstien" craftsman Box.

The drawers definitely look correct, but the cabinet looks totally incorrect.
I have a red and gray and a red Dayton branded pair, also made by Waterloo, of around the same vintage.. The Dayton has the slab sides. They just reversed the sides so the box frame is on the inside instead of the outside. That means most of the drawer slide is floating, with only the front and back attached. It also means that the side handle has to stick out beyond the box, instead of just being a flush bar with room for your fingers in the recess. I think it was just for a different look. I also think the outside box frame is a better design. The drawers on the CM and the Dayton interchange. The Dayton also has grip drawer handles instead of the top edge grip. Waterloo made similar boxes for a lot of companies. Waterloo stocks touch up paint but I am not as tight with the Waterloo lady as the previous poster. When I asked for paint for the red and gray it was not sufficient info. I used the Rustoleum hammertone and the effect does not match that well for touchup and the Rustoleum red that everybody suggests is going to be a bit off but it is mostly inside the drawers. Just having them clean is an improvement. They went from the garage to an easier life in the basement. Their old job is now being done by an HF 44", series 1 with the old sand finish. I hope I never have to touch that up.
Sent from my SM-G900V using Tapatalk
AMD (Advertising Metal Display Co) made the bulk of the Heritage era boxes. They later turned into (or were purchased by) Remline, whom I opine made the transition boxes (those with the Crowntop logo, not the Chevron. I believe the first gray & red boxes with the Chevron logo were Waterloo). Pressteel was rumored to have made the early and pre-Heritage boxes, but I have owned both and see no similarities - not even close!The cabinet is correct. The top corners where rounded not angled in the new boxes. The center bar above the storage is correct for early 1960’s boxes. The logo being on right side is correct. The handle on the side and also the punch out for electrical outlets is also there. Imo that’s a legit early 1960 to say 1965 bottom roller. You can verify the date in same location above the right wheel. This early boxes are stout and bigger than the later boxes that came later from this era box.
I’m still not clear would exactly built these early version. My thought and theory was they kept box from the heritage era and added different drawers. I off hand can’t remember the maker of the heritage boxes but I been told they weren’t the manufacture of these earlier versions. So that leaves Waterloo to be the manufacture.
Just remembered.... presteel was rumored to make these because of the simple fact that the early boxes have similar roller slides as them. I never confirmed this.
Thanks. I haven't used the red yet. I'll look for the one you suggest.I can't take credit for this as someone in a prior post used it first. The best color match for the red is Rust Oleum Tractor and Implement paint, Massey Fegurson Red.
The only place I see the Rustoleum aerosol is HD and you have to buy a 6 pack. There are several other brands making Massey Fergussen red aerosol, Krylon, Majic, Sparex, ValsparThanks. I haven't used the red yet. I'll look for the one you suggest.
Sent from my SM-G900V using Tapatalk

Jealous....I want that middlePosted in the Garage sale thread, figured it deserved a post here. I now have a matching set. First got the 10D top, then the 5D bottom, and now a 3D middle! 11/74, 08/75, and ? for dates (the 3D Middle was only offered from 72-75, so decent chance they are all within 12mo of each other). Family pictures below. Came with two Crowntop keys. Guy almost couldn't understand I was asking about it, wasn't sure anyone would want it. Price: $50![]()
yeah, you don't see the middles too often.Jealous....I want that middle
Sent from my SM-G950U using Tapatalk
...
Does anyone know who made these tool boxes for Sears? Also, any suggestions on how to flatten the damage sheet metal on the front of the drawers without damaging the paint too much?
txlonghorn1989 - I think you are right that it is Waterloo. I am just more accustom to seeing the 70's vintage ones with the hollow sides.
So I unbent the drawers and repaired the drawer locking clips. With the drawer rollers cleaned and oiled, you really want to lock the drawers when moving the tool box. They come open quite easily. It is clear that the designers copied a file cabinet roller system for the drawer rollers, but it works fine.
I took off the wooden top. The paint on top is as-new, but there are a lot of holes from mounting the wood top, vises, etc.
The 3" casters look factory, but they are all swivel. Two with locks and two without. Usually two are fixed. I may upgrade to better quality 4" casters if I can find some at a good price.
Now to find a key for it. It has a lock number in the 67XX range, for which I do not see listed sources online. I do see companies saying they have every key, but no specifics. Does anyone have suggestions? I hear Waterloo may still sell them.
Overall I am pretty happy with it. After some clean up I think it looks pretty good. I am not sure I overpaid at $50, but it is a nice vintage tool box.
Oh, that's a nice Looking Box buddy.txlonghorn1989 - I think you are right that it is Waterloo. I am just more accustom to seeing the 70's vintage ones with the hollow sides.
So I unbent the drawers and repaired the drawer locking clips. With the drawer rollers cleaned and oiled, you really want to lock the drawers when moving the tool box. They come open quite easily. It is clear that the designers copied a file cabinet roller system for the drawer rollers, but it works fine.
I took off the wooden top. The paint on top is as-new, but there are a lot of holes from mounting the wood top, vises, etc.
The 3" casters look factory, but they are all swivel. Two with locks and two without. Usually two are fixed. I may upgrade to better quality 4" casters if I can find some at a good price.
Now to find a key for it. It has a lock number in the 67XX range, for which I do not see listed sources online. I do see companies saying they have every key, but no specifics. Does anyone have suggestions? I hear Waterloo may still sell them.
Overall I am pretty happy with it. After some clean up I think it looks pretty good. I am not sure I overpaid at $50, but it is a nice vintage tool box.
"I usually prefer tool boxes with more drawers and no bottom compartment,"I recently went to a company that we liquidating some of their equipment. What was not listed was an older Craftsman tool box sitting in the corner. I usually prefer tool boxes with more drawers and no bottom compartment, but on a complete whim I made an offer and picked it up. They also had a Craftsman 05191 vise but that is a different posting. What I was oblivious to at the time was that the tool box had roller not friction slides. I was a bit surprised when they opened so easily. Unfortunately the previous owners have tried to pry some of the drawers open, probably not realizing they needed to open the bottom door to release the locking mechanism. You can kind of see it on the right side of the middle drawer. I see this listed in the 1964 thru 1968 Craftsman tool catalogs (see ad below) as part number 65302. Unlike other Craftsman tool boxes I cannot find a part number or date code stamped on it.
Does anyone know who made these tool boxes for Sears? Also, any suggestions on how to flatten the damage sheet metal on the front of the drawers without damaging the paint too much?
txlonghorn1989 - I think you are right that it is Waterloo. I am just more accustom to seeing the 70's vintage ones with the hollow sides.
So I unbent the drawers and repaired the drawer locking clips. With the drawer rollers cleaned and oiled, you really want to lock the drawers when moving the tool box. They come open quite easily. It is clear that the designers copied a file cabinet roller system for the drawer rollers, but it works fine.
I took off the wooden top. The paint on top is as-new, but there are a lot of holes from mounting the wood top, vises, etc.
The 3" casters look factory, but they are all swivel. Two with locks and two without. Usually two are fixed. I may upgrade to better quality 4" casters if I can find some at a good price.
Now to find a key for it. It has a lock number in the 67XX range, for which I do not see listed sources online. I do see companies saying they have every key, but no specifics. Does anyone have suggestions? I hear Waterloo may still sell them.
Overall I am pretty happy with it. After some clean up I think it looks pretty good. I am not sure I overpaid at $50, but it is a nice vintage tool box.
1971, side of the road freebie!
And the coveted 9-drawer to boot. Nice find! That's worthy of a YOU ****!
1971, side of the road freebie!
Oh yeah ... He defintely *****!
Did I mention I picked up my fourth 9d roller a couple weeks ago? I have no idea where to put it!

Here's a pretty nice top in the Pittsburgh area for $40.00.You do realize that is NOT really gonna get you any sympathy right?![]()

1971, side of the road freebie!