

It looks like there was something else in the rectangular area next to the screw drivers, any idea?^ There's a similar type promotional set posted just up-thread.
That 1/4" drive ratchet is not Indestro. That kit originally contained a 6072 pear-head ratchet.
The box cutter was a "Walsco". The screwdrivers in those kits were Roscos (black and yellow striped handles.)
The "Select" wrenche on the red tray are all Indestro.
Nice set.
The open space was probably for hex keys. Odd that this set has vice grips but no place for pliers? Concerning the grips, they're stamped "Grip All", would that be Indestro?^ Those sets also included a cheap stamped set of SAE ignition wrenches (which I do not believe were made by Indestro), and a small set of SAE hex ("Allen") wrenches, as I recall.
I was mistaken above. The tape measure was made by Walsco. The utility knife was made by American Hatchet Company.
These are photos from a previous Ebay listing - I do not own any of those blow-mold promotional sets:
:Concerning the grips, they're stamped "Grip All", would that be Indestro?
We don't know who branded them "Grip-All", but they are identical to Bonney. Bonney clearly did not make them. Probably Petersen licensed. Don has an example. He posted it in the midst of my Lugzsonian thread 'Curator's Corner' on locking plier-wrenches, linked here."Grip-All" is a name I do not recognize.
:very resourceful and ingenious, Rube Goldberg would be proud!


Almost assuredly confirming what we suspected about its OEM.it looks like a Visegrip adjustment bolt is a perfect replacement
thanks for the timely information Don. I have one sitting in my To Be Identified box, from a GS a few weeks back, third pic from the bottom of the post here. Dang, a month old post, I better get moving, lots to ID still, though I did find some NB identification.






I don't know that they weren't a set from the factory. I have a set of BluePoint ignition wrenches, with 2 different forge dates, but the first of the above the pocket wrenches is stamped on the opposite site. The set, as found, is shown here. Might not be an OCD compliant set, but it was a set from the factory.The bad news is that these were f$%^ing stamped on opposite sides! As if collecting anything onesie-twosie in the wild, let alone a rare series, wasn't already hard enough, I get lucky enough to find a second wrench, and it's not a duplicate size, but they don't f$%^ing match in orientation as a set! The open ends and the box ends are angled away from each other in opposite directions.![]()

Dang. Really? I've filed down owners' marks before! (Williams Superior jeep set. Took weeks. I covered my work up with black japan, the correct finish, and it was undetectable.) But I'm almost glad I didn't know. Saved some bucks and months and months of hope and onesie twosie suffering. Haha.there was a set of those early "dart" Duro DOEs on Ebay a couple weeks back (in the original roll-up pouch, no less), but the PO had stamped them all with his initials.
Sorry, forgot who I was addressing. In my limited collection of vintage wrenches, easily counted at 3 sets, meaning wrenches found together at the same site, made by the same manufacturer, assumed to be bought all at once, only one had all the wrenches stamped the same way.RTM, you realize how many DOE, DBE, and socket wrench sets I have, right? Too many to count. Easily into three figures. Most of them are consistent, but not all. Many of them have some kind of deviation. And some mfgrs are notorious for it. Of course both of these wrenches came from the factory. And it's possible that in some of the 5-, 6-, and 7-pc sets, only made for a short time in the mid 1940's, that some of the brand markings got stamped on the flip side instead of the top side coming off the line. But that's not typical, from any mfgr, and it's certainly not desirable as a collector.
Some collectors, and maybe most (or at least those I hang out with...) want perfectly matching sets, and will spend years "upgrading" their sets, replacing production deviations (in finish, markings, etc).





