Oldtuleguy
Well-known member
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- Nov 4, 2017
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Tiger was a gambles brand. Gambles sold spark plugs, oil and tools from various suppliers branded tiger.
The "chrome alloy" is S-K ? I did not know that.
Note that we have a second SK thread here on the VB started by Drivesitfar dedicated exclusively to the topic of the multitude of SK brands and third-party branding. He uses post #1 to keep a running list (including Chrome-Alloy and TIGER) and the rest of the thread is for discussion and new contributions etc. That's not a nudge or in any way to suggest it's not appropriate for discussion here. Just a reminder for those who may have forgotten, and a tip for those who don't know, that it's a very good thread for future reference. See Index in Sticky. The 'S-K Main' link is to this thread. The 'S-K Contract Production' link is to the thread I am talking about.Is this an SK brand?








No worries, thanks for checking! I'm sure I'll find one eventually.saukit, I checked and I don’t have an extra 7/8” socket. Sorry.
-Don



My question for you is about the spinner. All of my amber handle S-K spinners have the brand and part numbers cast into the handle. Can you take a close look at your new spinner with the large shaft and see if you see any markings? I assume that the extensions don’t have any part numbers which is to be expected with prewar or wartime examples.


-DonOf course, and thanks. I only meant the fact that I haven't called more attention to the removable sliding tee head. It might've saved you that time.Don’t be sorry, I appreciate the contributions!
Sure enough, it comes apart just as described. Lugz bailed me out. Again.So I recieved that set and its definitely awesome! Very clean! The sliding Tee is really cool and I've never seen another like it, yet... 1 side of the Tommy Bar has a spring loaded detent ball and the other is just a stop, just like a normal bar. The business end of the tool has a detent ball to keep pressure on the Tommy Bar and hold it centered in the middle of the bar. Very cool and heres some pics.
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How hard is it to find 3/16” and 7/32” in black oxide? I got a 3/16” cadmium when I bought this spinner, it’s the only one I have ever seen until I saw yours.




I was watching that set on eBay too, mainly for the box, it's in really good condition. I just counted nine sockets and thought it was a complete set, I went back on eBay and looked and there it was.Mine has the 3/16 as well but no 7/32. In already looking for one! Lol!
That is exactly the kind of box I put my cad sockets in, Thanks for the info.The 7/32” wartime sockets are almost impossible to find, whether plain steel, cad plated or black oxide. The wartime 3/16“ sockets are difficult but can be found occasionally. I think that during WW2 most of the sets sold were ones that only went down to 1/4” as shown in this wartime photo and the wartime S-K catalog.
-Don

Not relevant to your discussion, but my brain does a full stop when confronted with “Carb-o-mang”. The mang part leaves part of me flapping in the slipstream saying what??? Please send help….what does that mean? In today’s world advertising fortunes hinge on minuscule details smaller than a gnats ***, but here we have a large ad with a made-up word in it?Before anyone gets the wrong idea, Ordnance Dept specs for the 41-W-2615 midget socket set in the GMTK included 3/16" and 7/32" 6-point sockets, especially late war, when there were eleven (11) sockets, as opposed to early war, when there were only nine (9), and we regularly find them in other brands (Walden, DI, NB, etc). Don knows that. I just want to make sure that nobody misreads the SK box and set that Don is circling in that inspection photo as representative on that subject.
Wartime SK 40906 (3/16"-6) and 40907 (7/32"-6) are rare and extremely rare, respectively, and I have always tended to agree with the implication Don is making above that it could be related to SK not making those sizes for their regular commercial 1/4-drive production, whereas other suppliers (again, e.g., Walden, etc) were making them for theirs, prewar and wartime. They do exist, though. Don and UNIAU may remember that I had one 7/32"-6 black ox socket and I sold it in the set it was in a long time ago. I'd have to dig really really hard for photos.
And, what's odder, is that SK was clearly tooled to make them and was making them, for their economy line cad-plated Carb-O-Mang sets, advertised in the same 1943 catalog.
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Manganese. Very probably AISI 1340. It was a popular economy line composition especially as a replacement along with "New Emergency" triple alloy formulas for precious alloys that were either severely restricted (nickel, chromium, and molybdenum) or outright forbidden (vanadium) during WWII.but my brain does a full stop when confronted with “Carb-o-mang”. The mang part leaves part of me flapping in the slipstream saying what??? Please send help….what does that mean?
Wow. I wasn't aware you had one. That set is more vivid than mine!makes perfectly good sense to me!
So they thought it made sense to name a tool set to be sold to knuckle-draggers who likely have so little edumacation that they can’t spell carburetor even on a good day, and so much brain damage from tetra-ethyl lead poisoning that they are lucky to find a 9/16 wrench in the garage to know why a set of tools has the (very weird and personally offensive) word in it?