I agree! King **** are really on their home ground making the 3/4” drive tools and they do them very well.
I agree! King **** are really on their home ground making the 3/4” drive tools and they do them very well.
I’ve been on the lookout for some used, but they hold their value surprisingly well for 3/4” drive!
Thank you for the answer, sir.
I have 2 old (not sure how old) stubby ring spanners from Britool. I have no idea if they were my father's or grandfather's. They are excellent tools! I will post photos and would love to know the date of manufacture. I also have a Britool torque wrench (made by some Italian company) that is also very good.I was planning to write something about Gordon next! Trouble is I need to take more photo's and all this stuff is scatterred about!
Yes, it's interesting how good manufacturers seem to end up producing very similar tools! I'd noticed it with regard to old Britool / new Snap on, but not the Hazet. Well spotted! (I've recently acquired a couple larger Hazet wrenches and really like 'em!)
I'm afraid I've never researched any of this stuff. it's all based on what I was told by family etc, the tools I've got, and whatever I can glean from old catalogues!
The exact type of combination spanner you like (don't blame you by the way - fantastic tools) are shown in the Britool catalogue of 1973! I bought a couple in the mid 80's and they are the later pattern so that gives you a start! Maybe somebody here knows more!
It's worth bearing in mind that in this era Britool offered two styles of, for example, open end wrench. The 'slim pattern' are the ones most commonly found, whereas the 'engineers pattern' are much heavier and are to be preferred! If you didn't know two types were available you could easily get confused!
I still consider that my Britool ring spanners of the 1980's set the standard by which I judge all others!
Yes, those short ring spanners are excellent tools. It’s a pattern that relatively few manufacturers offer, but my Father used to use his extensively, and I find myself using them more and more on modern engines where space is often so limited.I have 2 old (not sure how old) stubby ring spanners from Britool. I have no idea if they were my father's or grandfather's. They are excellent tools! I will post photos and would love to know the date of manufacture. I also have a Britool torque wrench (made by some Italian company) that is also very good.
Norbar torque tools are good and competitively priced.
Highly recommended.
Ahh yes, that’s the place.Here is a link to some history
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The Demolition of Leytool January 1985
Leytonstone Jig & Tool Company (Leytool) The Leytool factory on the Hollingbury Industrial Estate was constructed in 1949. The company’s origins were ...www.mybrightonandhove.org.uk
Those red handled chisels were made, pretty much unchanged, for decades. I still occasionally see them new.Here are some chisels I picked up in Perth in 2017 3 types of Footprintchisels .
Iam not up on my chisels but I purchased a identical red one 40 plus years ago ( my first wood chisel)
I have a Footprint knife somewhere, but it’s a different design.FootprintRetractable knifes,Beautifully made quality item found in the outback.

I will take a few more photos of the middle chisel and it’s markings,I have not seen footprint stuff since the late 80s over here, I have found some interesting British stuff lately . British brand eclipse made in New Zealand.Those red handled chisels were made, pretty much unchanged, for decades. I still occasionally see them new.
The chisels with the wooden handle in the same shape are relatively common too, but I don’t think I’ve ever seen the type in the middle of your picture. I wonder if they were made primarily for the export market?
The quality of the Footprint chisels was definitely “acceptable”. Compared to some of the dross available now, they were pretty decent.
Unfortunately, there was traditionally a huge amount of domestic competition in the wood chisel market. As well as Footprint, you had Stanley, Marples, Henry Taylor, Robert Sorby, Crown (and probably some others) all making chisels in the U.K. Despite having a decent product, Footprint were never considered to be quite “up there” with Marples, and their marketing wasn’t great either.
If they’d managed to hold it together, they could have cleaned up when Marples were taken over and nosedived the quality, but there you go!








Nice little set. Similar ones are still available, although not with the box spanners!Recently purchased 1950s king **** set.
I think this is set tks411, or maybe tks414.
BA, whitworth and square sockets. BA tubular spanners, screwdriver bit, spinner, T bar, 5" and 2" extensions.
Has one presumably home made socket extra stamped JASON.
Also has an unusual ratchet. I can find no reference to this as being king ****, but the T bar isn't stamped either.
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I havs found pics of other T bars that are exactly the same as mine, so im sure its genuine, just not stamped. The spinner isn't either.Nice little set. Similar ones are still available, although not with the box spanners!
The King **** 1/4” drive sockets are not bad.
Although not stamped, the sliding T looks like a King **** to me, and of that era. I’ve seen others similar.
I can’t say the same for the ratchet. I can’t recall seeing one exactly like that before.
I do continually find tools from King **** (and others, such as Britool) that I’ve never encountered before, including many ratchets with female square drives. I suspect that the majority were made for some specific purpose, now largely forgotten!
I’ve seen a lot of odd little King **** ratchet’s with female square drives. I’ve seen them turn up with what are obviously refrigeration tools, and also with plumbers tools, which suggests the purpose.I havs found pics of other T bars that are exactly the same as mine, so im sure its genuine, just not stamped. The spinner isn't either.
The ratchet though, I'm just not sure. It's either an odd style they made briefly (I keep finding slightly different ones from this era), or it's home made.
Maybe.I’ve seen a lot of odd little King **** ratchet’s with female square drives. I’ve seen them turn up with what are obviously refrigeration tools, and also with plumbers tools, which suggests the purpose.
Some years back, a surplus tool supplier that I frequented had some very comprehensive sets of plumbers tools. They were obviously ex military as all the tools were marked and dated.
Among all the adjustables and pipe wrenches were sets of King **** open enders in BS sizes (for BSP pipe threads) and sets of these little King **** female square ratchets. I think there were maybe four sizes, but they were very different to the ratchet you have.
I’m leaning towards home made, or at least shop made. Not sure why as “off the shelf” tools were so readily available. A student piece perhaps?
If you were making the ratchet, the detents within the square drive would have been one of the more difficult things to make.The other thing I've noticed with the ratchet is the male square drive has 3 balls, but the ratchet female square is smooth. I assume it would have indents for the balls to slip into?
I'm not sure I've ever seen a ratchet where the head and handle aren't one piece either.If you were making the ratchet, the detents within the square drive would have been one of the more difficult things to make.
Far easier to put 3 balls on the male connector, so they locate either side of the tool.
That, together with the slightly amateur staking of the balls, were factors that suggested to me that the tool was home / shop made!






I know the type of ratchet you mean, but the same set in the 1947 catalogue shows another type. I can find no info on this other type though, so it may not actually exist.@Graeme I'm fairly certain I watched this set on eBay very recently. I thought it was a TKS411 with a home made ratchet, the only push through King **** 1/4 drive ratchets I've seen were supplied in refrigeration sets. An interesting early set you have.
The King **** ratchet to make this set a TSK414 would have been aluminium as shown in the catalogue. I've never seen one switched with the switch on the steel plate side in 1/4 drive as illustrated.

Yes, I've seen that style too.@Graeme had a good look in my recently viewed and watch list and can't find it. I'm sure it made more than £15 so it can't be the same set. £15 is a good price,
I too have never seen a ratchet like the one illustrated above. The oldest King **** ratchet I have, I estimate to be late 1940s, is 1/2 drive and made of riveted steel plate with an external ratchet' I think I have also seen this style in 1/4 drive but it was a mess and the push through bar was missing so I didn't bid on it.
