bmwrd0
Well-known member
I think I have about six or so of them, Proto and P&C versions. When I get a chance I will get a pic for you, although one is on the wife's keychain so that might be a bit of a chore.
I think I have about six or so of them, Proto and P&C versions. When I get a chance I will get a pic for you, although one is on the wife's keychain so that might be a bit of a chore.
This is one I found at the bottom of an old toolbox I bought at a garage sale. I.A.M. Local 311 is in Los Angeles.
Yes! As promised, here's a photo of the 6 blank J100s I bought last year.
Cheers!
Brian
There is a Mooney Aircraft keychain screwdriver on eBay.
Mooney Aircraft, Inc. was incorporated in June of 1948 and made light aircraft. It never gained financial strength, and went through a constant changing of ownership and management. The screwdriver would have been a give-away promotion item. Mooney did not distribute tools, nor was it a dealer for Proto.
Upon further thought, Mooney engine cowlings were held on by one-quarter turn Camloc fasteners. I believe that the early ones had straight slots, and know for sure that the later airplanes used phillips head versions to keep the screwdriver from slipping out and damaging the paint.
A straight slot J100 would make sense to hand out for the early fasteners. I don't know when they made the change, but it should have been in the 1960's.
Mooney would have purchased the J100's and given them to owners of Mooney airplanes for access to their cowlings and likely other access panels. Just the sort of advertising that Proto promoted.
Airplanes are inspected before flight, and have periodic inspections of greater detail on regular intervals. Having a device in your pocket to gain access is valuable. Handing these out as a promotion piece would be very logical.
Do you know if Plomb's J100 was a FOAK? In other words, the first ever keyring screwdriver? I have a few Craftsman (the disk-shaped 4-ways...) from the 50s and some older generic examples from car dealerships. As a category, the J100 keychain drivers are not unique, but I'm wondering if they were the first.But one thing is for sure, and that is that it was great marketing to put your name on a quality tool that people would hang onto and carry around...
Do you know if Plomb's J100 was a FOAK? In other words, the first ever keyring screwdriver? I have a few Craftsman (the disk-shaped 4-ways...) from the 50s and some older generic examples from car dealerships. As a category, the J100 keychain drivers are not unique, but I'm wondering if they were the first.
Secondly, in a brief cursory attempt to quickly gather some context for that question, I ran into an article on the history of the J100 from 2014, written by a fellow aficionado named Travis Raynes, published on a pretty splashy advertising-supported blog site called "Tools In Action." You two are clearly kindred spirits. Check it out here.
Funny you should mention Stanley. I have a marketing keychain screwdriver from the other Stanley (the door to door appliances company from the 20's).
Nothing revolutionary here, I'm sure, but I finally dug these out for you.
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Yep.
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I'm sure you realize, but just in case not, that's the shape of the entire P&C logo. It can be seen on tools, in catalogs, and cool sewn-on patches that GJ member tin medic scored not too long ago. Having said all that, I can see why you'd exclude them. They really only conform in purpose, not shape or construction, with the, er, "in-house" examples.They have a distinctively different shape than the traditional J100s ("pear-head" style).
I'm sure you realize, but just in case not, that's the shape of the entire P&C logo. It can be seen on tools, in catalogs, and cool sewn-on patches that GJ member tin medic scored not too long ago. Having said all that, I can see why you'd exclude them. They really only conform in purpose, not shape or construction, with the, er, "in-house" examples.
I just ran across mine today. It is the Proto Los Angeles USA model.
My only contribution is weird story. Never even heard of these things til i saw your post. Next workday, i go in to find one on my desk. Helped our shop tech with his dads estate tools, and he came across this and thought id appreciate it...he's right! Looks like you already have a few examples, but thought the timing was worth the post anyways!
Here's an image seen in a FB for sale ad. Back side says "R.Timmings"
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