OP
Private Lugnutz
Well-known member
That might be how he got from there to LOC-RITE!I have a 1/2" Cam-Lok wrench. that was rusted solid, with none of the rollers moving.
That might be how he got from there to LOC-RITE!I have a 1/2" Cam-Lok wrench. that was rusted solid, with none of the rollers moving.





...and pleased you included Walter and the British 'Fastnut' branch of the story!
The surpans/flats/flank openings evolved from/with the ratchet action openings. Like two genera of the same family. Or maybe two species of the same genus. In conversations here on the GJ VB, all the odd milled openings on end wrenches tended to become mixed up and even conflated, and not without good reason it turns out, because the inventors were using the same principles and citing some of the same prior art. Hence my asterisk in the chart.ref. the Snap On combination wrenches, I have 4 of the 'Flank Drive Plus' ones with the open end is also formed in order to grip on the flats of a hex. Mine are marked 'Patent Pending', so early on in the production... [ ]...Is this the time to include examples of those? Not ratcheting type of course but they do have the feature of gripping the flats.



Oh, he's Mr. Find-It. He probably rues the day he gave me his phone number.Username already in use kindly found my pictures and post from the past...
I wouldn't know.They have a 1991 date code so must have come out around then.









Well, you do now! Another instance of what my family refers to as "clogging their minds with esoteric knowledge" This time i have got some of it in to your thread too..I wouldn't know.
Sorry.Got it. Oh yes, I noticed the USA Bicentennial thing. I remember the occasion, I managed to get included on a school trip to the exhibition in London, and also saw the Greenwich Meridian and the Cutty Sark sailing ship. Drove the teachers mad by leading the teenagers astray by also looking at things outside of the exhibition...I started this whole investigation with the Evans T&R adjustable wrench you see on the right (with the USA 1776-1976 Bicentennial Celebration logo underneath it) in the photo of my Curator's Corner #9 title post (#923 on page 24) and worked my way back to the Carpenter "Cycle- Grip" you see on the left (with the USA Centennial 1776-1876 Celebration logo underneath it..., cheating by a few years!) in the same photo. Those were my bookends, so to speak, for everything in between.
Yup, the modern times are full of c**p like that!It strikes me that if someone were interested in taking it from 1976 to the Present (not me!), he'd probably end up with another whole chart filled with interconnected patent triangles and citation lines, which is where the Craftsman Quick-Wrench would be placed, too.
Same as mine.PATENT PENDING
The set of four came in a green plastic pouch.
Nice.PATENT (third) 3762244
The set of four forged wrenches came in a red plastic pouch
Of course you outdid me with the pouch! Love it.PATENT (third) 3762244 METRIC
The set of four stamped wrenches came in a purple or lilac plastic pouch
Interesting. I don't know if that's by design, largesse, or de facto fait accompli - because they were always essentially in a state of having patents pending! Seriously. If you break it down, there was not any time in their existence and production where that would not have been true.All of the pouches I have seen are marked “PATENTS PENDING” on the back side.
Wow. That would be hard to argue with.BARCALO SUPPLIER ?
It is awfully tempting to simply pronounce Barcalo as the maker of these forged wrenches for Specialty Tools.













I have only seen the ##107 and the ##244 in the wild.We're beginning to wonder if they second and fourth patents were ever made.
.....
Ohhh, I wasn't think about snap-overs. I found and sold a set of the Imperials a couple years ago for a bunch of pretty pennies. And I still have a full military Herbrand set. They don't ratchet, but they do grab flats.The Imperials
and outside Lugz's Waves; the Gearwench:
Oh, I saw it. Someone should do 1976 - Present! Metrinch, Quick Wrench, Gear Wrench, etc.and not talking about the Box end - Look closer:
Ohhh, I wasn't think about snap-overs. They don't ratchet, but they do grab flats.







