Prichman38
Well-known member
- Joined
- Sep 10, 2016
- Messages
- 81
I would not use them for anything heavy or you want a nice finished cut on. Sheet rock, Masonite, softwoods maybe...
I have some, but I don’t recall actually ever using them. I have used solid spade bits. The advantage is, you can change direction while drilling, to avoid obstructions. Disadvantage is, it’s nearly impossible to drill a truly straight hole. And on thin goods, the tearout is ridiculous.Has anyone tried those craftsman power wood bits? They look very thin and dangerous.
Sorry for:
1. Being so far off topic, although these will be in a garage sale shortly after my burial no doubt.
2. Lousy picture.
Bruce
We must be similar in age...I still have my Matchbox 'briefcase' full of cars from when I was a kid, and I have most of the same ones you do.

Any other numbers on it under the rust? Certain Caterpillar tool groups used this style.
3bay, a 25/32 hex was standard for 7/16" U.S.S. bolts (not "cap screws", which were 5/8" hex) before SAE took over. Now it is 5/8" hex for bolts and 11/16" hex for the nuts. If you had the original nut on there, it would also be 25/32" hex.








Oily nice finds! Guns of Navarone is always good...... One thing, Plumb is not Plomb, which is what everyone goes crazy for.
Just one grab today...this older oval logo, Proto Professional 15 piece satin chrome SAE long pattern combo wrench set, 5/16" to 1-1/4". Non-ASD open ends. Unused.
All have L after part number except 5/16 which appears to be a factory std length included by mistake as it matches. The 1-1/4" wrench is 20" long.
With vinyl roll. Maybe 90s-00s?
$80
Just one sale this weekend. Found this set of 8" casters, two fixed and two swivel. Heavy duty with grease fittings for the swivels as well as the axles. $8.00 for the set.
BFBOBYes, but is that October Second or the Tenth of February? I can never remember which is which on your side of the Pond.
...and of course,the year could be 1808 (approximately when steel started taking over from iron) 1908 or 2008!


Marked or not, that looks like Starrett’s US patent 672424 of 16/04/1901.

Nice! I'm a sucker for wrenches in their original tool roll, though I don't tend to retain them for some reason.
Oily nice finds! That Tarzan has a cover I am not familiar with, is it the British edition? If so, who was the publisher, and is a date listed?Cheers LesserSon interesting design for sure, guessing it was thought to be a quicker way to gauge something without fiddling with a threaded winder.
Not sure what happened to the group shot so here it is again:
That Letter Opener isn't the easiest thing to use if your trying to cut with the knife, guess it was intended just to cut string on parcels.














Cadmium-plating was used as an economy line finish well before, and then again after the war. Whether Sears Roebuck did that or not, I don't know. If you have cadmium-plated =V= tools, it would seem to prove that they did.One question: Did Craftsman make cadmium plated tools from this era? Some of the =v= DBEs and various extensions look far different than the slider bar at the top of this picture.
There isn't a thread I know of, but I found one last year, and I posted it on the 2018 Garage Sale thread, linked here, as well as the 'Show your Heritage Logo Love' thread, linked here. Congrats, by the way. Yours is in much better shape than mine was. Mine did have some cool vintage stickers though!Boofer said:Also, is there a thread for these wall cabinets and does anyone know how to date them? The first catalog I found it in was a 1954 mechanics tool catalogue, but I know the Circle U tools predate that.
Hi bmwrd, no problem at all. It was the cover that caught my eye.
Publisher: Methuen&Co. Ltd. London
Collection/Series: Methuen's Cheap Novels
Published: 1920
(original story published 1917)
Edition: 8th