A two-photo haul from my Friday flea market!
Pic 1: Top to bottom, left to right…
- The WWI bacon can is for the next time I run into a first generation Herbrand socket set. (Only twertsy, who doesn’t post in this thread, Provincial, and maybe a handful of other GJ’ers will get that inside joke, so
here is a link! )
- Brown fiber fuze pullers grow on trees, but when I saw these red ones with finger holes I had to stop and look. Glad I did. Sun Electric Company. I am not a Sun Worshipper, but they are out there! I will be flipping.
- No markings on the cast iron spring clamp. I am going to use that.
- No markings on the offset DBE hex wrench.
- The double alligator is a Forsythe with one of my all-time favorite logos – quite literally a numeral “4” intertwined with a scythe! This is my second one. More flippety-flip material.
- The brace bits are both BELL SYSTEM B. The flat head screwdriver bit is IRWIN, the square socket is A.W. MACK Mfg Co Poughkeepsie, NY.
- The hugeass hex throated 22-1/2* angle DOE wrench is a Vlchek.
- The push drill is Goodell-Pratt. Complete with bits.
Pic 2: Left to right, top to bottom...
- The iron garden stepping stone frog is for the CINC HOUSE. (Say it with me fellas, “Happy wife, happy…”)
- The meter is a gas tester. Davis Emergency Equipment Corp in Newark NJ was a massive WWII supplier. Everything from FAK’s to gas masks. The box is two compartments. Electronics in top half, text chamber in the bottom half. There is an input line into the bottom half. A steel plate from the electronic component in the top sits just a hair over a black chemical plate in the bottom. The scale (SAFE - DANGEROUS – EXPLOSIVE) is in voltage. Looks like Weston supplied Davis the electronics. I’ll have to put my thinking cap on to figure this one out. But I am pretty sure it’s military (finish is OD green) and I am hoping it’s WWII.
- The marking on the wood-handled screw-wrench is Collins & Co (I think, partially worn), late 1800’s. Gotta study it more.
- The other one is “(BRITISH MADE)” – probably Abingdon (maker of “KING ****” tools), which ripped off Billings’ US 1884 patent in England in 1888.
- The little black box is empty, but it’s for an L.S. Starrett test indicator. I liked the “LAST WORD” marketing on the lid.