You ****. I see some holesaws for steel and a unibit. Either of those would have justified the purchase. The rest is icing on the cake..
Thanks to the addition of Roy Olson's ratchet, my 14-piece 3/4" Firestone Socket Wrench Set is complete! Thanks Roy!!
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Since the box has less than 5% of the original paint left--and what's there is deteriorating fast, and the inside sticker is gone, I'll probably end up painting it in the future. For the moment, I'm very happy with it. Thanks again Roy!
Thanks to the addition of Roy Olson's ratchet, my 14-piece 3/4" Firestone Socket Wrench Set is complete! Thanks Roy!!

Is that 3/4 or 3/8???
I don't know that I've ever seen a 3/4 speed wrench......
Nice set, either way!!!!![]()

Are these saws worth anything? Inheritance pieces (courtesy of ongoing basement cleanout), the Sears one was may Dad's, the Rockwell was probably my Grandfather's.
Mike
Picking Up this week.
Already Paid Via PayPal.
$100.00
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OMG amazing at what people throw away.I have the same base that was about to be tossed in the dumpster at school
3 Phase though. Next in line for restore, and a VFDI have the same base that was about to be tossed in the dumpster at school

Picking Up this week.
Already Paid Via PayPal.
$100.00
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bubinga, you ****!!!!
$100 and that's running?!!!!! Did I mention you ****? I'm still hoping to come across one of the old Delta grinders with stand. Very nice! 3PH?

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BlueBomber, there is no way out now! Please make pictures while you restore it!!!
To you seasoned tool junkies out there, what can you tell me about the Irwin screwdriver, Japanese (maybe?) wrench, funky cast aluminium expanding pliers,
What can you tell me about the Japanese (maybe?) wrench and the age of those snapon wrenches? Teach this grasshopper some things!
Are these saws worth anything? Inheritance pieces (courtesy of ongoing basement cleanout), the Sears one was may Dad's, the Rockwell was probably my Grandfather's.
Mike
I have 12 mowers, a tiller, a snow blower, and a pressure washer. I also have 4 mowers in the garage that needs little things or just waiting to sell it.........
.....Between me and my daughter we've sold 14 mowers, and she's gotten a bit of folding money for it all.
Just a overall view of our lovely pile.....
The possibly Japanese logo isn’t quite clear enough in the photo, but it doesn’t look like one I recognize. I may be imagining things, but it looks a little like a Kirin. Usually, made in Japan tools say Japan on them.
The Snap-on will be easier to date if you find and post he date code stamps that may be on them. They are usually single-character stylized numerals. There are a couple charts of the codes floating around. Here’s one. Without the date codes, I’d guess 1950s/1960s. The box end wrench looks to have a nickel finish, so maybe the oldest of the three.
The Craftsman underline looks nice too.
To you seasoned tool junkies out there, what can you tell me about the Irwin screwdriver,
Between me and my daughter we've sold 14 mowers, and she's gotten a bit of folding money for it all.

I'm thinking some very fine steel wool and WD-40?
The expanding pliers are Battery Terminal Clamp Spreader Pliers.
From what I've seen online, they appear to be from the 1950s.
That will work on almost anything metal.
I’m not generally so gentle on wrenches, because they are usually banged up already. I use a fine wire wheel on a bench grinder. If I’m trying to preserve the natural darkening of bare steel, I’ll scrape the rust down with a plain steel screwdriver then use a hand-held stainless bristle brush. I use a cylindrical battery brush for box ends and socket broachings. More often lately, I apply a VERY THIN coat of BLO (boiled linseed oil) to most things if they can bake in the sun, because handling them bare-handed leaves perspiration salts that can undo the work you put into them. If the tools are chrome-plated without serious chips or dings, skip the BLO and just keep them clean.



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A new junk shop opened up in town, but for reasons we all know too well, I had not been able to visit. Well, I changed that today. Decent place, with a room full of tools in the back. Mostly well sorted, but with random boxes on the floor, I found the above for $15. Snap-on ratchet ($10), a Proto 4", Plomb pebble breaker bar, Plomb LA DBE, Hinsdale 11/16 and no name stubby bit driver. All those for $5. God, I love junk shops.
f.f.:
That’s quite a bargain. All the better being that your wife picked them up for you. In case you haven’t realized it yet, she sounds like a “keeper”.![]()