3baygarage
Well-known member
Some of those tiny knives were souvenirs. I have one that says Niagara Falls on it. One of these days I’ll round up the couple I have to see if they look like the same maker.












Try turning your phone off then back on and also see if clearing the cache in your browser app....or since you have a Samsung try their internet browserI was using "app" generically or even mistakenly. I, too, just use the desktop website on my phone browser. Same set up. Samsung Android and Chrome. Maybe it's my phone or my connectivity. I haven't had any problem until a few weeks ago. Now it hangs up on everything for 30 seconds to a minute. Alerts. Page change. Insert quotes. Post reply. Doesn't matter. Takes forever.

Multi tool looks like a tire balancing tool. Hammer side to pound on the weights and the plier side to remove them or crimp the clip on the lead weight. Use one of these more times than I can remember.....Thanks @Bockscar, I will.
We're supposed to get 5-7 inches of snow tonight, wiping out the weekend, so I was hoping to find something today. It was slim pickins (Lugz 2022_8), which is not unusual for winter flea season. No idea on the windmill tool. Not marked. It doesn't look antique, maybe vintage, I'm just a sucker for multi-tools. Taking guesses on the other thing. I know what it is, but only because it's marked on the other side, to be honest. Just thought I'd let guys have some fun.
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I think you're more correct than me. The plier end usually has pointed ends to grab the weights....It kinda sorta does, I agree. But there really isn't a cutter/clipper, and I'm not used to them being adjustable or the jaws opposed to the hammer looking more like water pump plier jaws. Also, did you see the hand vise jaws at the top? But I could be wrong.
That's what drew me to it from afar and what I thought it might've been when I picked it up, except for the second weight (instead of a handle) and the color (usually brown). I would love to find an affordable genuine slapjack. When I see them and they are marked with a police dept name or "M.P.", they are $100+. I keep hoping to find one the seller doesn't know what it is.if it has lead shot at each end it would make a great sap/blackjack...
"Close enough for horseshoes and hand grenades," as my old man used to say!Looks like a weight for a drafting table to hold down curly paper.
Apparently, it's for holding a book open. I know. Isn't that what hands are for? But I guess it's for when you're eating or perhaps working on something, the book is open as a reference, and your hands are full of tools and parts. That's what I intend to use it for anyway. It says, "Levenger / Tools for Serious Readers" on it.
It’s a book mark. Weights down the left and right pages.Thanks @Bockscar, I will.
We're supposed to get 5-7 inches of snow tonight, wiping out the weekend, so I was hoping to find something today. It was slim pickins (Lugz 2022_8), which is not unusual for winter flea season. No idea on the windmill tool. Not marked. It doesn't look antique, maybe vintage, I'm just a sucker for multi-tools. Taking guesses on the other thing. I know what it is, but only because it's marked on the other side, to be honest. Just thought I'd let guys have some fun.
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Maybe. Why the hand vise jaws and the pipe/burner type jaws though? I'm not overly concerned with ID'ing it, but if you want to take a closer look, check out the "Gimmicks" thread on the VB.The Pliers - Lugs look close to the joint? I think I see s crud cutter there? the ones for tire weights are pretty crude.
Traditional would be rosewood. Ebony tends to ship too easily. Sorry though, I have no clue otherwise.Do any of you sawdust makers recognize this square by its features? No markings other than graduations (8ths). Wood is very dark. Perhaps ebony. Similarly, not overly concerned with ID'ing it, just mildly curious. I'm assuming it's run of the mill unless I hear otherwise.
Lugz, the pliers are Plammer saddle fence repair pliers I believe.Thanks @Bockscar, I will.
We're supposed to get 5-7 inches of snow tonight, wiping out the weekend, so I was hoping to find something today. It was slim pickins (Lugz 2022_8), which is not unusual for winter flea season. No idea on the windmill tool. Not marked. It doesn't look antique, maybe vintage, I'm just a sucker for multi-tools. Taking guesses on the other thing. I know what it is, but only because it's marked on the other side, to be honest. Just thought I'd let guys have some fun.
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The cast iron grid platform looks like a lapping plate. Its used for creating very flat surfaces on cast iron or most often granite inspection surface plates. You charge it with lapping compound which is either silicon carbide abrasive or diamond depending on the plate you're lapping. You then work the plate in a pattern over the other plate to remove high spots. We're talking deviations in the millionths of an inch.Anybody recognize what this steel grid platform thingy is part of?
Hey that‘s a Mexican Proto! Pre Urrea. Good find.Yard sale season is a little slow getting started here in TX. Nevertheless, a couple of nice scores. Some random tools including a Proto 3/8 drive ratchet and KD little pliers. The whole lot for $2. And this Dewalt brushless blower for $8! Pretty happy about that one as I have some 20v Dewalt batteries.
Lugz are you looking for info on the manufacturer?Do any of you sawdust makers recognize this square by its features? No markings other than graduations (8ths). Wood is very dark. Perhaps ebony. Similarly, not overly concerned with ID'ing it, just mildly curious. I'm assuming it's run of the mill unless I hear otherwise.
I've got an unmarked one just like that. Doubt it's ebony. Like someone above said probably rosewood. I can't recall if mine is marked with 1/8" graduations. Someone also said they thought it was Stanley but I'm wondering how often Stanley didn't mark their products. Maybe it was OEM'd by Stanley.Do any of you sawdust makers recognize this square by its features? No markings other than graduations (8ths). Wood is very dark. Perhaps ebony. Similarly, not overly concerned with ID'ing it, just mildly curious. I'm assuming it's run of the mill unless I hear otherwise.


Anyway, hit a bunch of sales yesterday, only two had anything interesting. The first sale was listed as having tons of tools, and it did. Only they were rusted-out junk. But, I did manage to find a couple things of interest:
Snap-on multibit driver set, Blackhawk 7/16 drive deep, NHRA pin, Bridgeport pressure gauge, APEX short bit driver, and an Elora ratchet.
They are very likely military surplus. Here are a few Vlcheks. All the same ALLOY STEEL 731-A wrench.Strange, a bunch of Vlchek dupes

Thanks, ff. I can kinda sorta see that....the pliers are Plammer saddle fence repair pliers I believe.
I'm fairly certain its Stanley. I have a 6" model with the same brass features.
Thanks, Arne! Those are precisely the features I was hoping would help ID it. In reply to your first reply I was going to say "I'll take your word for it! It's not that cold here, but we did get about 6" of snow last night and I am staying put, too. Stay warm." But I see you went outside and retrieved it, which I appreciate! The only thing that has gone outside here today is the dog!Here's the one I have. Stanley #20.

I'm having deja vu all over again.Doubt it's ebony. Like someone above said probably rosewood.
We just went through this with the mortise gauge I found last year. Like that piece, this one seems black to me, not merely dark, without a trace of any reddish hue in it. I scrubbed the heck out of it with a little spirits. If it's stained, I'd be shocked. Moreover, it has a few deep gouges and they seem just as indelibly black inside. But, like that gauge, I am no expert, and would quickly defer. I gave the gauge to LesserSon at Jake's last year and he seemed to agree it was ebony. I'll have to give him this square when I make a trip to Jake's this spring and he can bring a monocle, which would accentuate his Vise-Helmet (picturing a mad German Wehrmacht scientist), and make an assessment! 



I'm thinking that's what Arne73 meant.Someone also said they thought it was Stanley but I'm wondering how often Stanley didn't mark their products. Maybe it was OEM'd by Stanley.
Do any of you sawdust makers recognize this square by its features? No markings other than graduations (8ths). Wood is very dark. Perhaps ebony. Similarly, not overly concerned with ID'ing it, just mildly curious. I'm assuming it's run of the mill unless I hear otherwise.
Lugz-
Here's the one I have. Stanley #20. When acquired the handle was slathered in bright blue paint.

It’s a book mark. Weights down the left and right pages.
Even though you guys chimed in after the big reveal, I'm figuring you answered before reading up to that part, so kudos are in order.It is a book weight, Lugz.
Thanks.Asian import on the multi tool. It’s missing the hand grips. Used to see them at the flea or sales,
It is. I explored that a little further on the Gimmicks thread...neat in how it functions.
Me neither, hence my interest! I'm pretty sure they were original to each other. The fit was perfect and the "West Germany" marking was the same on the clip and the wrenches. While there are certainly DOE wrench sets out there with clips, and some of them are made in West Germany, usually 5 or so wrenches. Now that we're talking about them I have regret. HAHA.I haven‘t seen the set of adjustables in a clip, if they came that way.