bmwrd0
Well-known member
Picked this up from the dollar table at an old tractor swap meet this weekend. A little beat up, but I couldn't let it sit there any longer
I just posted these on another thread for help in IDing, but since they're long-C, I guess they should go here too. Apparently a very rare surviving machine file set, circa 1945(?)-1949.

Here are the pliers and cutter I have. Do all "nested diamond" handles count? Whenever I can find one, I buy it because of the cool handle pattern, hence the duplicates. Lineman's detail Vanadium on left, both with circle c mark on inside handle.

The so-called "Nested Diamond" grips on Long or Geometric C Craftsman era pliers don't look anything at all like the "Headless Arrow" (for lack of a better description) grips on Chanellock pliers. I'm confused. Why are you making the comparison?The pattern on your craftsman handles are different than the pattern on my Channellock tools. What do you guys think?
Is the 'C' inside the handles a manufacturer code by chance?
Yes the Indented "circle" C is Channellock.
I'm confused. Why are you making the comparison?

??? Are you looking at the tools in photo 1 (all of which are Craftsman) compared to the tools in photo 2 (all of which are Channellock)?I think its the angle and the smaller size of the dykes. Looks the same to me taking that into account.
I've got no skin in the game here, but I'm not sure that Champion DeArment made those long C pliers.![]()
??? Are you looking at the tools in photo 1 (all of which are Craftsman) compared to the tools in photo 2 (all of which are Channellock)?
I've got no skin in the game here, but I'm not sure that Champion DeArment made those long C pliers.![]()
The assertion has been made that Champion deArment (Channellock) was the manufacturer of the Craftsman. Based on the handle patterns, I’m just not seeing it. That’s why I posed the comparison. Like Username, I don’t have any of those patterned Craftsman tools.
-Don
Thanks for explaining. Personally, I'm not seeing enough distinction in the patterns. I just pulled out a mess of lineman's pliers (Channellock, Utica, Diamond, Craftsman and Crescent), and I can't find any that did NOT use a cross-hatch pattern jaw grip, and when I "blind tested" myself (mixing them up without knowing the brands), I had a hard time identifying them from each other by the jaw grip. But I'm not going to argue with you. Your theory does stress that whoever made the pliers for Craftsman did not use the same "Nested-Diamond" pattern grip on their own pliers, so you do have that going for you, and that's very unusual. You can always identify the pliers Crescent or J.P. Danielson, for example, made for others by the grip.The page 4 comparison is of the detailed jaw/cutter forgings and jaw patterns... I think those are more telling.
Is that the original roll? Nice!
That has always been part of the conundrum for me, Outlaw. Does it make sense to contract with a pliers mfgr for only one type of pliers? And, hypothetically, if you were going to do that, and for linesman pliers, why Champion DeArment? They were not the industry leader.LS Keep in mind, I'm not claiming CL made ALL pliers for Sears. just the Circle C, as They didn't use the same mark for different MFG's (barring a couple of acquisitions...) My dykes for instance don't have a circle C marking.