ooba tooba
Well-known member
- Joined
- Jan 13, 2014
- Messages
- 744
Awesome old box! I’d hit it with Gibbs oil and very fine steel wool (after using mild soap and warm water getting off rust flakes and grime) It will make that cool logo pop!
Hi all,
Reading the earlier post on the mechanics tool chestmade me want one for my collection.
I spotted this toolbox for sale today. I reached out to the owner and he is willing to hold it for me. Not as nice as sawdust’s but pretty cool!
Thanks for the tip Ooba. I want to preserve as much as possible.
Hey smokes, I pick it up Wednesday after work. Hopefully there is a story that goes along with the box.
Here’s a pic of the ad on offer up:
Hi all,
Reading the earlier post on the mechanics tool chestmade me want one for my collection.
I spotted this toolbox for sale today. I reached out to the owner and he is willing to hold it for me. Not as nice as sawdust’s but pretty cool!
Thanks for the advice. I was just so excited That I couldn’t wait to share with you guys. it’s sad that there are people like that.
The seller was kind enough to remove the ad and I shared my contact info with him.

Is this an old craftsman, or something else?
Looks like a 45-48 Heritage chest made by AMD. In 49 (or more likely late 48) they went to one pull per drawer. Nice that it has the tray. Many are missing it. EDIT: Or...it could be an AMD chest not marketed through Sears. Are the what looks like two holes drilled all the way through? I have an AMD chest that has dimples where the Heritage logo would go that were never drilled through and side handles that differ from what Sears sold. Can we see a pic of the side handles?
More pics
The side handles and square corners are exactly like my prewar AMD boxes. The red paint on the interior has me scratching my head a bit. If original that box wasn't sold through Sears (unless there's something out there we don't know about). Need a good close up shot of the front cover right above that hasp loop. If it's a Heritage it's an early one before they rounded the corners and changed the side handles.
No drawer slides.
I highlighted the area in the pic. I appears that they punched a hole at the top to create a tab so the drawer doesn’t slide out completely. They repeated the process for the lower drawer. Hope that makes sense.
Ah OK. It does make sense. I have one identical to yours with no drawer slides. Not sure what's going on the the hole punches from a PO but sounds like you'd just need to bend the deformed metal back into shape best you can to remove the drawer.
Thanks! Model number indicates 1/3 hp. Nice work on yours! I would very much like to restore it like yours. Did you have to find parts like the shields or light for yours? If so, do you have a link? Thanks!
Thanks for the info!ooba tooba--the oval brass tag is an asset tag attached by the company that owned it. The number would correspond to a listing and description of capital equipment owned by the company. BTW, a great old grinder!
Tom B.
No, mine came as you see it. Cracked glass and everything. The light I found later on eBay, but I have never been happy with it.Thanks! Model number indicates 1/3 hp. Nice work on yours! I would very much like to restore it like yours. Did you have to find parts like the shields or light for yours? If so, do you have a link? Thanks!
I was considering doing the same. I have 3 grinders now. A 1725 rpm 6” Westinghouse, the 7” Long C 3450 rpm and a Baldor 6” 3650 rpm.I also have one in the garage, restored by Red Leader on here (1/3HP). Got it in a trade. Missing one outside guard, but he mounted a buffing wheel on that side.