What kind of sale has ***** and tackle boxes and why wasn’t I invited!I did PU this **** and belt tackle box:



2021-07-31_03-41-11 by Aaron Warfield, on FlickrThanks for the info. I really enjoy Diamond Calk, I have a quite a bit of their products, great quality. Did they make anything else like that? Mattocks don't sell for much money so I will be on the lookout for them.Thanks for that! I found the same thing while looking yesterday, but couldn't find a document I could use to screen shot and post.
You may well be right...it's kinda long to be a bottle opener. Today is half price day, so I may swing by and pick it up, just as a curiosity.
Toolmiser, here's a closeup of the markings before I got it cleaned up. Note that this is around 12" long, not the ~24" mattock which would be issued with a vehicle.

Name-Nurl!... but didn't spot a maker until I started to put them back when I noticed the maker:
I use Remoil for all my ratchets and ratchet wrenches. Great stuffThese items were missed when I took photos of my estate sale finds that I showed in post #3175 last week. These were $7.00 of the $19.00 total at that sale.
All of them are full, or nearly so. The Kano "Weatherpruf" is sold by the company that makes Kroil penetrating oil, so it was worth a try. I have used the Rust-Oleum Light Gray on my Ford tractor, so this will be useful.
Try super lube…. Works much better.I use Remoil for all my ratchets and ratchet wrenches. Great stuff
Yes - that flat-top aluminum-bodied grinder is a “block.”Craftsman grinder, I believe this is one of the so called "block" grinders but I'm not positive. It is filthy and needs some TLC, which it will get! This one cost me $15.
Also got a toy bowling set for my grandson, missing 1 pin. $5 for all of it.

My brother adn I got rockem, Sockem Robots for Xmas one year - my dad and uncle busted it the same day...
Big kidsThe headset and amplifier were in the fiberboard box together, with nothing else (well, some totally unrelated things) and are only marked Western Electric, who made Bell system parts. But there is no Bell marking on them, unlike the desiccant, which specifically states that it is for something in the Bell System, what I don't know.Name-Nurl!
Are you sure the headset, desiccant, and maybe even a few of the other things weren't originally in the fiberboard box? As part of a maintenance kit? Even if they weren't together? My Bell System B box is black fiberboard.
After my childhood, which explains why I didn't remember them. I didn't see Hasbro on them. I shouldn't have said that so cavalierly. I didn't look at the markings at all. Sorry for confusion.Google and YouTube seem to indicate that these were made by Aurora in 1975. Not sure if they were made later, and/or Hasbro bought them later.
Thanks for the info LS, that is helpful. I did turn this one on briefly before I bought it so I know that it runs. I’m hoping I can get most of the rust off without painting but we’ll see how it goes. I’ll probably pony up for new wheels also as they look pretty trashed and I’m not sure I want to trust them.Yes - that flat-top aluminum-bodied grinder is a “block.”
A schism exists as to what to call the round-top aluminum-bodied grinders, because while they generally pre-date the flat-tops, they are not the even earlier iron-bodied ones many call “pre-blocks.”
$15 is an excellent price for a 1/2hp block, assuming it runs. I picked up a very similar-condition 397.19340 on a C‘man stand (blurring which held the value) and paid $60. I was trying for an original look, so bungled repainting the steel-steel cover, but was very satisfied with the match of Rustoleum Universal matte metallic gunmetal gray I used on the body and wheel covers (for this generation grinder). Yours looks about the same age.
Nice Snappy haul and Union box, too!
I think the association of everything 'phone related' in proximity is too strong to ignore, but hey, maybe my curator association tolerance is lower than yours!...there is no Bell marking on them, unlike the desiccant, which specifically states that it is for something in the Bell System, what I don't know.
You ****! Nice name knurl pliers!It turned out that we aren't going out of town this weekend, so I immediately made a beeline to the hoarder estate sale I was at yesterday. It seemed there was still as much there without a dent put into it. Here is what I picked up:
A damaged but fixable Proto 5295 socket box, and an old fiberboard box that I stuffed full of goodies.
A package of Chapman bits, a tin of Bell System Desiccant, five Marples carving chisels in a homemade roll, a nice unmarked level, Starrett jewelers screwdriver, Plomb combo wrench I didn't notice someone had cut the box end, pair of battery pliers, Williams mini pliers, and three Black and Decker hole saws.
In the box itself was a Western Electric operators headset and amplifier. While not marked Bell System it was probably used by a private party operator, such as at a hotel. Pretty happy with that! When I picked up the battery pliers, I noticed the number but didn't spot a maker until I started to put them back when I noticed the maker:
2021-07-31_03-41-11 by Aaron Warfield, on Flickr

I could never have left that nice S-K set behind in the wild unless it was wildly overpriced. I actually have two complete versions of that postwar set plus another wartime one. But that’s just me.I did have a couple LEFT-BEHINDs. The rather complete SK 1/2-inch drive set, just because I'm not interested enough in that era myself or in having yet another socket set to flip, and the Hasbro Karate Choppers, because I wasn't interested in it more than looking at it once and smiling. I don't actually remember these. Were they a later Martial Arts version of the Rock'Em Sock'Em Robot boxers?










