ooba tooba
Well-known member
- Joined
- Jan 13, 2014
- Messages
- 744
Here is a couple of Snap on metric sockets. no date codes Tapered, no knurling, 12 point. 1/2 drive.......
Looking at an odd lot of vintage Snap-On. Generally nothing super special, but a decent size random acculumation of 1940s-50s drive tools. Beating it back and forth with the seller on price. Curious if this LA-52 3/4" F x 5/8" M has any particular place in War Era sets. Seems these command pretty well in general, and wondering if the "G" designation helps. Might push me over the line to make a deal......
I think I see a 1940 date code on that one so it’s prewar.
-Don
Is this an O with a line through it? I thought I saw a "G".
Recent pick up
Snap On
1/4 drive
MV-5 T handle
MV-71 ratchet
MVN10A breaker bar
MVX6 extension
1/2 Drive
25/32 SV251 socket
SVX25 extension
Sorry, some extras in picture to and MVX6 extension is missing (the ball is stuck inside, trying to free it by submerging it in ATF
Advise to everybody: if you ever take apart to clean MV71 ratchet, do not rotate the pawl 180 degrees to clean everything perfectly prior to lubrication. In my case the ball somehow flew up promptly and caused some searching for it (it's tiny)... Putting it back together without special tool and removing the pawl is complete pain in the ars!!! While trying to pit things together, the ball decided to roll off the table (working inside the plastic bag with such tiny peace did not work well for me). Darn, the search after it's attempt of quantum tunneling was extensive (as I quickly learned that kits are NLA). With a lot of swearing, wet napkins cleaning the library floor to kitchen table shine, magnet, little luck and Gods help I found it in the opposite side from where it rolled off the table. It somehow bounced 180 degrees and rolled away...
The only way to out it back together which worked for me after two search parties and multiple attempts was to chew on paper towels, create a leveled surface which is at the level of the hole (so it would not fall through as the hole is in the middle of ratchet, then carefully holding it and rotating the pawl 180 degrees back...) Wasted 2.5 hours of my life, but now it works like new after complete cleaning and lubrication!
...please click on the picture to enlarge it. I still did not learn how to attach larger pictures...
“Nutria,” eh? I remember seeing them on vacation as a kid, thought they were semitropical. I did not realize they had expanded in so many areas.