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A mysterious vintage tool.

woody 73

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The Great State Up North
Ok I admit when I am stumped I will throw in the towel because this tool would make for a great story but I can not find the patent, the company, or the inventor...So I turn to the GJ hive for answers and yes I think this will be another American company to be added to the wonderful list on the GJ.

So my first problem is what do I call this tool ?

A Pin vise?
A sliding pin vise?
A pin vise collet?
A pin holder?
A vise pin holder?
A syringe Holder?
A push in syringe type holder?
A screw holder?

I have no idea what it is used for until I can see the patent.

So it could be for a watchmaker?
Clockmaker?
Car tool?
Machine shop tool?

What I can tell you is several things:

First it reads C & R MFG. Co. St. Louis mo.
A little smaller then a pencil
One heavy duty mother of all springs
The collet runs the entire length of the tube.
Well made.
Very vintage (just from the writing alone).
Chrome plated.
Pat. pending.

That's it for clues.

Like I said I would love to do a story on it but I am in the dark on this one, thanks for any help in this puzzle.

Woody:)
 

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Private Lugnutz

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I would definitely call it a pocket or pin vise, Woody. I get where you're going with the other names because of the way it works on the back end, but its function appears to be the same as a more typical pocket or pin vise, and the business end is exactly like a pocket or pin vise.

Kind of nifty. Like a cross between a pin vise and a pickerupper or magic fingers tool for retrieving that small part you just drooped inside the carburetor! :lol:
 

4xdog

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Aug 18, 2012
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5,617
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Santa Fe, NM
Not some funky holder for drafting leads, 'cause that would probably have a no-roll feature of some sort.

I wouldn't put that imprint as seriously vintage. I could see that being from the 1980s, even.
 

StinkinEngine

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Jun 16, 2018
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Magnolia, TX
What pokes out the end of the tool when pressed?

Looks like a mini metal fingered pickup tool.


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W

woody 73

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The Great State Up North
First let me say if it were more modern in nature I would have found the company on the web by now, so that makes me feel in my gut (having seen enough vintage tools in my lifetime), that it is vintage but I could be wrong.

More pictures for you of it taken apart.
 

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ttpete

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Mar 8, 2011
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Dearborn, MI
The hole in the tip, the reverse thread, and the marks on the shaft make me wonder if it was for twisting wires

I think you've got it. Notice that the slots in the jaw are not symmetrical so it could be used with several sizes of safety wire. It's for wiring in restricted places.
 
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quattro_sinko

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Upstate NY
Ok if it is for wiring in restricted places what about the company I am not having any luck.

Thanks for the additional pictures. What I thought was the reverse thread was actually the spring.

I don't think its for restricted places, I think you put two wires in across the tip, hold the outer barrel, spin the knurl and the wires are beautifully twisted either clockwise, or counter clockwise, depending
 
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woody 73

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Spinning the knurl is like trying to take off a stuck lid on a jar your wife just handed to you, oh sure it can be done but the darn thing is tough as all get out to turn. One reason is that spring is the mother of all springs, like I told you in the very first post.

Whatever it clamps on to you can be sure it is not going to move on you! :wtf:
 

matt stott

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Sep 11, 2013
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148
Location
Boston, USA
It looks like a watch/clockmakers pin vise for holding hands while you broach the holes to size. It also looks like it is custom made for one size of hand, probably for a production line environment, or a repair dept of one company.

Search for K&D watch hand holding vise- looks very similar.

Matt
 

notlob

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Aug 19, 2013
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norcal
It looks like a watch/clockmakers pin vise for holding hands while you broach the holes to size. It also looks like it is custom made for one size of hand, probably for a production line environment, or a repair dept of one company.

Search for K&D watch hand holding vise- looks very similar.

Matt

Good job! If it's not for the same use, it's mighty close:

https://www.ebay.com/itm/K-amp-D-Specialty-Pocket-Watch-Watchmakers-Hand-Holding-Broaching-Pin-vise-Tool-/372477502820?item=372477502820&ViewItem=&nma=true&si=tCeGIGqDQyjjx0zXVjx2THPgxJs%253D&orig_cvip=true&nordt=true&rt=nc&_trksid=p2047675.l2557

s-l1600.jpg
 

StinkinEngine

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Jun 16, 2018
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Magnolia, TX
It looks like a watch/clockmakers pin vise for holding hands while you broach the holes to size. It also looks like it is custom made for one size of hand, probably for a production line environment, or a repair dept of one company.



Search for K&D watch hand holding vise- looks very similar.



Matt



Good info, thanks Matt. K&D Tools always seemed to think outside the box on their tools.

Top quality tools and underrated in my opinion.

My goto Snap-Ring pliers are the interchangeable model 445.
I’ve made a few sets of custom jaws to disassemble various ratchets.


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twertsy

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Jan 5, 2014
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Reedville, VA
Looks like there was a G & R (are you sure it's not a G??) Mfg. Co. on Washington St. in St. Louis in the '20s, and the name changed to G & R Garment Mfg. Co. around 1936. They made silk underwear. Could it have held a needle??

Looks like they lasted into the '50s.
 

Hchrist

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Dec 8, 2016
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S.E. NC
My guess is that it is a watch or clock spring holding, mounting or winding tool. That's the best I can do.

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