Old Radar
Well-known member
The second tier mentioned above was a big deal, 80 years ago. Nowadays these 2nd tier saws are better than anything you could buy at the big box stores.
Agreed!
The second tier mentioned above was a big deal, 80 years ago. Nowadays these 2nd tier saws are better than anything you could buy at the big box stores.
These saws are for sale locally $5 each. I am shopping for a neighbor that needs one and maybe one for myself. I'll look for USA brands/markings. But outside of that I am not sure. Definitely an interesting variety there.
Which one would you buy?
Todays finds:
![]()
I had to buy a really beat up bit-brace to get the flex, but worth it at $5. Then again I paid way to much for the Billings box at $20, full of sockets. Two dollars got me two 3" v-pulleys, one craftsman marked, and the wood handle. I have no idea what it is for, but at .50 I figured why not.
If you are looking for a user, take a look at identifying crosscut and rip saw tooth geometry. They work best when used for their proper task. Modern saws have a combination tooth geometry, which has led us to forget the importance of grain direction. Old saws will remind you. So you and your friend should really have one of each.
Impressive haul at an even more impressive price. Well done.Three estate sales today with interesting things at each. First stop I pulled in a lot of wrenches and sockets. The gray box was chock-full of wrenches—most were CM DBEs and combos =V=,-V-, =VV= & -VV-. About a third were Taiwanese Alltrade and ProMate (the two baskets on the right). The rest were a set of Indestro Select Steel short offset box end wrenches and then ones and twos of Proto, Vlchek, Bonney, Blue Point, Duro Chrome and unbranded. $18.
The socket rails were $3 each—one had ½ inch Thorsens and the other a few 3/8 inch CM=v=, Thorsens and some from Taiwan. The ½ Thorsen 77C ratchet was $5.
Everything else was in a $5 bag and included the 3/8 Duro Chrome ratchet, a few Bonny sockets, some Ace branded sockets and a ¼ inch set from Taiwan.
![]()
Second stop provided more wrenches from Herbrand, Indestro, Bonney and Armstrong. Also an English TW spanner and a small W&B 21. W&B is Whitman & Barnes—they were bought out by J.H. Williams in 1920.
The cutters are Snap-on Vacuum Grip #386 from 1946. L26 Thin nose slip-joint pliers from Crescent Tool Co. A nice Greenfield Tap & Die tap handle No.5. and a Lufkin Mezurall 926 6’ steel tape measure. $14 for the lot.
![]()
![]()
At the third stop $7 bought a couple items from a Ford Model-A tool kit; an original patent Allway Saw handle (1935-6) and three blades—the coarse one is designed to fit the “improved” handle; three North Bros. Yankee Handyman Drill Points; a no-name steel file handle and a two-bladed screwdriver from “StewarT” that I can find no information on.
Can anyone give me a vector?
![]()
![]()
This (Lugz 2020_31) is my kind of flea market haul...
The old British saw (pun, given the recent dialogue, very clearly intended...), "money for old rope", cannot be taken more literally than when I convert this $10 75' coil of genyoowine 3-strand 1" hemp into $150 worth of three wartime jeep bumper tow-ropes.
![]()
The smaller stuff includes a massive brass drift (in need of de-mushrooming), future potential Donlap trade bait, a few unidentified wood-handled nut drivers, slip-joint pliers with an unusual logo I am not yet sure about, an old 0-25 lb. scale, and an early Indestro pressed-steel offset DBE set. Oh, and there's a nitrogen thermometer in the wooden tube.
![]()
slip-joint pliers with an unusual logo I am not yet sure about
See end of Herbrand thread. I never saw your earlier comments there until a few minutes ago, but yeah, you nailed it. And you nailed it before AA, which has now updated their Herbrand pages.Now I remember the CFT logo happens to coincide with the initials of Creighton Fuller Thompson. Whether it is intentional or accidental, I do not know.
But? BUT? Issues schmissues. Who has ever even seen one before? Ratchet, yes. A few tools, maybe. Toolbox? No. Nice find.Artisan toolbox (SK made) Mid '50s I think, has some issues, but...

Three books and two little booklets today. One of the booklets was on coppicing and my wife snagged it straightaway for her collection.
Not a cheap purchase, but I'm happy.
The wheelwright book was one I was looking out for, it's the first edition that was paperback, 1963. The lathe book, well just because, is 1964.
And the one I really like is the Stedall book. Some great stuff in it, here is a link to a listing on it I found, it give a few pages.
https://vintagetoolshop.com/products/vintage-stedalls-small-tools-catalogue-27718
Can't find any reference to a year in this, but covers Colchester lathes, Richmond milling machines, Harrison lathes etc. Hardback, just over 300 pages
Fun things include:
Coleman 501 in great shape with cook kit, box, etc. If you know the story of the 501, they're the "bomb".






I can not speak for what the USPTO did a hundred years ago but current state the UPSTO will send out one copy to the patent inventor or assignee if there is multiple inventors. The new cover pages do not look too far off from the original design. I attached a copy of what they look like now.And here is the item that has me scratching my head. A copy (original?) of a patent from 1903 - US Patent 732,870 awarded July July 7, 1903 to H Lemp for a "self propelled vehicle".
The cover of this packet looks OLD!! I have not taken a loupe to it yet, but I believe it to be all hand done. The inside has the diagrams and text portion of the awarded patent. The inside contents are clearly printed, but the cover that I call the "presentation" is hand done, and has a seal of the US Patent Office.
This is my new rabbit hole. All new to me. Was this a certified copy from long ago? An original awarded to the (fairly famous) inventor? This should be good for some research in a new area for me. Any and all info on what i have or how to research it is appreciated.
Here is the full patent PDF without my "presentation" page: https://patentimages.storage.googleapis.com/46/cc/de/c5bc4bf42a1978/US732870.pdf
![]()

Holy Crud Duddly! That's an incredible find! you definitely ****! that is HISTORY!
I can not speak for what the USPTO did a hundred years ago but current state the UPSTO will send out one copy to the patent inventor or assignee if there is multiple inventors. The new cover pages do not look too far off from the original design. I attached a copy of what they look like now.