outofbounds
Well-known member
A couple of very old Lectrolite Defiance, O. Tools surfaced recently. A single pivot “parrot head” pliers and a nice DOBE
I have the wrenches from 1/2-9/16 to 15/16‐1Got couple of more wrenches Lectrolite Tru Fit 3005 (got two more of the same size which are bare metal but no pictures yet - one still needs to be cleaned and one needs a shot together with 3001 (3/8-7/16), 3004 (3/4-25/32)
... I guess since I have 3001, 3005, 3005 I will need to keep an eye out for others on yard sales:
3002 (1/2-9/16)
3003 (5/8-11/16)
3006 (15/16-1) - Interestingly, I have a rusted Precision Bilt in this size number 3006 with L mark (produced by Lectrolite)
3007 (1 1/16- 1 1/8) - this one will probably be hard to find
P.S. The ones I posted will probably end up on CL - I will keep the other two once cleaned. Interesting that I got all 4 of them on the same yard sale - PO really found one of the offset sizes useful (I suspect 11/16...)


That top Herbrand screams Utica circa 1939 made.
These are from the Lectrolite Corp "T" series wrenches. These appear to be from the two different "T" series sets--the 4pc T22 tappet wrench set and the 4pc T14 "check nut" set. Both sets came stacked in a narrow plastic sleeve. These were first made after the re-design of the Lectrolite wrench line sometime in the late 1940s. When LC partnered with SK circa 1952, these particular wrenches were not re-labeled "SK-Lectrolite" like most of the premium wrench models, but remained Lectrolite labeled with no "SK." Based on available catalogs, they were sold through the last year of LC before being bought out by Symington Wayne in 1962, so circa 1948-1961. SK-Wayne continued to sell these same sets but without the LC label, switching the model numbers to 14-T and 22-T. I believe they continued through the Wayne era, but I don't know whether they persisted through the Dresser years.What do you make of these lectrolite tappets. Can’t find any info on these particular ones.
Nice collection. I think I only have one LC tappet myself buried somewhere.I have one of that style in with my Lectrolite tappet wrenches.
-Don
You know what, you’re probably right. Kind of a bummer tho.Those look to me like they may have been made from modified double box end wrenches. If so, somebody did a nice job. I’ve never seen a factory Lectrolite flare nut wrench.

You are correct in that the shortage of catalogs makes it difficult to nail down certain details. LC had two tiers of quality: the Lectrolite premium brand and the TruFit budget line. The Post-R period saw the change to the Lectrolite model numbers given letter prefixes: C=combo, O=DOE, B=DBE, T=Tappet. This numbering system was maintained through the SK-Lectrolite collaboration. The TruFit had no letter prefixes. Prior to Post-R, the Lectrolite branded wrenches also did not have letter prefixes. I'm not familiar with a 2X16 format--as sizes changed, it was the last digit that typically changed, the first three digits would have stood for the particular wrench series.Initially posted on the Garage Sale thread, my estate sale find led me to this interesting thread. I found this Lectrolite 1711R roll, missing the four smallest combos C-12, 14, 16, & 18. This caused me to spend 30 minutes searching for them, but to no avail. Wrenches and roll are in great shape and cleaned up nicely.
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My initial research found that AA proposes manufacture dates between the late 40s and very early 50s--just prior to the association with S-K. Several of the later S-K/Lectrolite catalogs have the 1711R set depicted and they certainly bear a striking resemblance to S-K wrenches--right down to the numbering system--even the roll number--I have a 1714 S-K roll (14 wrenches) and this 1711R has 11 wrenches. Without an early Lectrolite catalog--prior to the early 50s, I don't know of a way to date these before the S-K association.
After reading through this thread, and according to DadsTools, these may stem from the "that brief Post-R period just before the LC/SK era." This seems to jibe with what I found on AA.
I also noted up-thread many examples of this style combo with different number markings. Whereas mine are all marked C-**, others are marked 2X16 or have only the size. Can anyone say if this variation indicates an age progression in the "Post-R" period? If I had to guess, I would say (without proof of any kind) the C-** would be closest to the S-K association and may even indicate (again without proof) the earliest S-K association, but prior to labling the tools as S-K Lectrolite.
Thanks for any insight!
Thanks for the reference to photo on post #29. I hadn't looked at the post-reformation style combo wrenches very closely because I assumed they were all the Cxx number format. I have a copy of an LC catalog that appears to be circa 1947 at the very beginning of the line re-design. The combo wrenches are the 4-digit as per some of d42jeep's wrenches. Apparently, d42's set was very early in the re-design period, as it has three diffeent numbering systems as you say. Actually two numbering systems and some with just the size markings. As I mentioned in my original post, LC was kind of scrambled eggs with their wrench designs and labelings until the post-R period when they finally stabilized. I can say for certain that the Cxx numbers are the later of the three. The 2x16 resembles the old numbering system, which leads me to suspect that the no-number wrenches were a transitional version between 2x16 and Cxx.Thanks Dad! All your info tends to support that this set was made very early on in the LC/SK relationship. Since I am unfamiliar with any Lectrolite logo beyond their actual name, it seems reasonable they would be open to incorporating the S-K diamond into their name.
As for the 2X16 format, see Don's (d42jeep) photo in post #29 for examples of all three numbering formats--including three combos marked 2316, 2416 & 2616.


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