3baygarage
Well-known member
Some great finds guys.
RTM- nice S-K find!
RTM- nice S-K find!



Sorry for the delay.......Thanks, now got to keep my eye out for that next sale especially considering the cryptic nature of the ad for the first sale.Nice haul! Perhaps the body tools will have some gems!
WNYflyer, you deserve the business end of a vacuum hose for that haul!![]()
.........been extremely lucky so far this spring finding good stuff at private family run salesSorry for the delay......Thanks 3bay. My spidey senses scoping out private sales have been working good so far this year plus not seeing your buddy at the saleSome nice finds and bargains gentlemen.
Flyer- sweet haul there. Heck of a deal at $80 for all that.

Paid $35 for the set in good condition. Typically not many good sales in my town so my travel radius is probably no more than an hour drive but many working man burbs and towns well within that drive time. Also much luck involved along with some decent research put in.How much did you pay for the bp set? The sales I see in lockport are amazing. Im about an hour away from you.
Something I have done over and over with great success is using a little acetone on the painted area with a hand brush to loosen the sprayed paint, then wipe off quickly with a paper towel. try a little spot and see what happens.Made it out to a couple sales this weekend despite the rain. First was an absolutely packed machine shop with tools and parts stuffed into every crack and crevice. It was pretty well picked over as far as hand tools go but I got an old mystery tool box along with a few combo squares and some other random stuff that's sitting in the evaporust at the moment.
Second sale was someone's old garage workshop, the first day I was there they had a few Stanley planes that I wanted but they refused to budge on price. Bought a cool little Kennedy small parts bin for 12 bucks, ended up going back the next day (50% off) and the planes were still there except for the little 220 block plane. Ended up with a Bailey 4 and 5, plus a giant Craftsman jointer for 40 bucks. The 5 is rough but it should clean up fine. I intend to use them so they don't need to be super pretty.
The mystery tool box I got at the first sale is covered in this horrendous maroon paint. Tried some simple green and it doesn't do anything, pretty much seems like the only way to get it off is sanding, but that ruins the original red underneath. Anyone have any suggestions? I'm contemplating just stripping the whole thing back to bare metal but there are no identifying marks and I'd hate to sand off a print or stamp that might tell me what it is. It's damn heavy, that's for sure.
Thank you for the suggestion, I will try that!Something I have done over and over with great success is using a little acetone on the painted area with a hand brush to loosen the sprayed paint, then wipe off quickly with a paper towel. try a little spot and see what happens.
Goodwill don’t even want that shut..Nice man. Yeah i went to a village wide garage sale and went to about 20 sales, not one single tool. Who sits out in the sun all day to sell bowls and glasses and useless worthless shyt.. most of it belonged on a truck to goodwill.
That is correct. Not to be mistaken with the People's Republic of China, colloquially Red China, Communist China, or, more commonly, just China. Note that it says "Made in Taiwan" on the front, which is synonymous with the the Republic of China, although to make matters even more confusing, they often go by the moniker "Chinese Taipei", at the UN, and at the Olympics, for example, to mollify Red China. That doesn't help narrow the date down though.Looking at the bottom of the box it says: R.O.C. Pat. USA
I'm guessing that stands for Republic of China?
Not sure how old you are, but your post and find gave me an earworm that I will now be singing and humming all evening. Nick Lowe's "I Love The Sound of Breaking Glass." One of his poppier, catchier tunes....the sound of breaking glass.
Nick Lowe, Dave Edmunds and Rockpile, 3 underplayed things, tho all sorta the same in a way. Great stuff.Not sure how old you are, but your post and find gave me an earworm that I will now be singing and humming all evening. Nick Lowe's "I Love The Sound of Breaking Glass." One of his poppier, catchier tunes.




Isn't the radiological survey meter also known as a Geiger counter? And Geiger counter is a misnomer anyway? Although, I could be confused on this too.In keeping with the days gone by...
I have been singing the "Duck and Cover" song since I brought this lot home.
I was ignorant of what the contents were, but for 10 bucks, I had to have it
The Geiger counter is missing, & d-cell batteries were left inside the other stuff, so the contacts are shot.
Nevertheless cool to read how after a nuke attack, we will be able to use this stuff to see when it is safe to come outside from our "shelters".
Booklet dated 1963.
Then each priced at $5. A Kennedy box, B & D Workmate box, & a bike hitch rack.
<iframe width="965" height="711" src="I never learned the "duck and cover" song, can't recall hearing it...
I do remember practicing hiding under my desk. More useful for an earthquake than a thermo nuke warhead... I also remember hiding under my drafting table during the Loma Prieta quake...
Isn't the radiological survey meter also known as a Geiger counter? And Geiger counter is a misnomer anyway? Although, I could be confused on this too.
cool "atomic" stuff anyway.
Is this a fam member hanging on my wall? Looks alot like it.OK, that Civil Defense stuff is way cool. You ****!
I stopped by the Restore today, as I needed some hardware (which they had!) I found this in the tools:
Possibly the oldest speeder that I have found. No makers mark, and it might be blacksmith made, but it has a non-spinning wooden ball handle solidly riveted on:
The socket mount point, while definately 1/2" drive looks hand forged to my eyes, and ground down to fit the socket. The detent ball works still:
If someone has more information on this, I would love to hear it.
Outlaw,Don, that underlined Ronsen screamed Ronsen Lighter fluid to me, and sure enough, its the same guy early in his career!
MR W:
This is your Globe (below) but what is the date on the bottom of the fount? the tall vent and yellow border on the label scream 50's to me... Its not a 61 or 62 for sure.
1962-1977: Curved “PYREX” over red Coleman parallelogram. Has the ® and the lantern image in the parallelogram.
That is so cool! I would have bought that in a second for $10In keeping with the days gone by...
I have been singing the "Duck and Cover" song since I brought this lot home.
I was ignorant of what the contents were, but for 10 bucks, I had to have it
The Geiger counter is missing, & d-cell batterys were left inside the other stuff, so the contacts are shot.
Nevertheless cool to read how after a nuke attack, we will be able to use this stuff to see when it is safe to come outside from our "shelters".
Booklet dated 1963.
Then each priced at $5. A Kennedy box, B & D Workmate box, & a bike hitch rack.
Oh man, you ****! Or in this case, reverse **** quite profusely
Thanks. It was on the ocean side of the peninsula. In HMB proper.RTM,
That is definitely a YOU **** haul! What side of the bay was the sale?
-Don
That's correct. replaced after 1961 (The globe could have sat on a store shelf after 77..)Outlaw,
Its May of 1958. Does that mean it's not the correct globe?
| 1958-1962: Curved “PYREX” over red Coleman parallelogram. Has the ® in the parallelogram but no lantern image. |










You have nothing to worry aboutThe break of dawn saw me cruising steathly into the area of the dreaded Smokeshow, on the prowl for tools...
No, not really, but around 9am I was sitting in a dinner, having the old man special of the day, half portion of chicken fried steak and looking through Craigslist ads. And, not finding much in my area, I looked a little further north and spoted a tool sale at a blacksmithing school, and it was not too far from Smokeshows place. So, I hit the road.
It wasn't as great as I had hoped, but I managed to find a few things:
Some Stanley 78 parts, Milwakee Tool and Forge ratchet, early Yankee push-drill with bits, Millers Falls drill-driver with bits, and three Penes sockets. All that for $20
Then I was able to find a barn sale on my way home. I don't usually do barn sales, as farmers want way too and get rid of too little, but this was on the way...
Indestro 1/4" box, Proto flying lady 3/4" box, Plomb wrenches and Fleet sockets, $10
A closeup of the Indestro logo:
Finally, I stopped at a Restore that was in the town north of me, finding the following:
Complete set of SK Wayne Metric 3/8", Proto LA driver with a good tip, and a thing of Barkeepers Friend. I walked away for $6.



