Private Lugnutz
Well-known member
Not all the "G" codes in my collection are alike, and not all look like the example on the chart. I have "G" codes just like that, that almost look like they could be a "0" (1940), which had a European/military/scientific strikethrough through it, but if it was a mis-struck "0", lifting the strikethrough on the left, the left side of the "0" wouldn't be struck either. I think it's a "G".I'm going to have to ask the Snap-on crowd about the G date code. It doesn't look like the "G" for 1945 on the SO date decoder. Too round.
There are more than a few variants of the WF-8 and WF-8S (1/4-inch drive). I don't think anyone has worked out a definitive number or timeline.Old Radar said:I know the Wright Field tools were made between '42 & '45 but is there a way to narrow that range? Alloy Artifacts shows this ratchet with cover plates having a pinched waist instead of oval. Is that indicative of a particular production year?
FYSA, Plomb's first Wright Field contract was actually issued in June 1940. You won't see that on the old Ed Boudinot/Van Natta brothers site, which is no longer being updated, or on AA, which refuses to make the update, but it's a fact. I have the contract records.

to that ^^^^^^^^

What ever happened to his place? Looking back, there had to have been some real treasure in that dilapidated mess...