Old tool guy
Well-known member
- Joined
- Apr 13, 2023
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- 3,262
Evaporust may work if you can get circulation of fluid in the gaps, which may not work on the rivet end. In theory, removing the rivet and peening a new one should be easy, but my attempts in the past have looked like hell. (Theme here on rivers, more practice needed). I have a few jars of misc rivets, always grab them at GS and ES.I have this Walworth Stillson wrench that i want to clean up. I would like to remove the bracket that holds the moveable jar so i can get to all of the concealed surfaces, problem is the bracket is secured with a peened fastener. I could easily grind off one end, but i don’t know what to put back, and indon’t really want to do that. Suggesstions? Would evaporust be the right process? The area that has been cleaned was done with a nylon wheel on a grinder.
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Has a 10 stamped on the jaw face, but comes in somewhere over 9 when closed.
So even 100 yrs ago people were saying “you call that 10”? Hahahaha”
Maybe onset "Tool-Flation?? Or another kind of Wrench Adjustment?So even 100 yrs ago people were saying “you call that 10”?








Looks like it’s time to stop buying pipe wrenches. Or buy another tool chest.After finding the 24” Trimo above, I decided to unite all of my Trimo pipe wrenches for a photo op. I posted these on the Trimont thread.
Into the pipe wrench drawer.
Here are several wood handled pipe wrenches of various brands.
All of the pipe wrenches are now in their drawer.
-Don
The "MFD." is a Proto, Penens or Fleet tell.Unbranded 4108



With the caveats that I don't know anything about Jardine pipe wrenches or the manufacturing relationship with Ridge (contract production, licensing the dies, etc), the all-knurled adjusting knob and the squared-off end of the dynamic jaw would indicate production prior to 1948. But it has to be pointed out that the swash plate doesn't look like a Ridge swash plate. If Ridge made it for Jardine they didn't re-use their typical dies, and if Jardine made it, it wasn't with typical Ridge dies. There's a possibility Ridge and/or Jardine deliberately changed the look for trademark purposes. Believe it or not, Ridge actually trademarked the shape of the swash plate.Just curious if any of the Ridgid Tools experts here can identify any characteristics of my 48" Jardine that would match up to the Ridgid branded version?
Yes. With the bottom jaw all the way down, it has a 3" opening. Just open it all the way, insert pipe, then slide bottom jaw to pipe, then tighten the nut. Actually works pretty good. I was a little shocked to see some of the information I found online about this wrench. It says there are only 5-15 examples known to exist (pic below)? Anyone know anything about the rarity of Cressy pipe wrenches?Looks like it could be awkward to get the pipe into the jaw opening because of the amount of hook to the fixed jaw. Or are you supposed to ooen the jaw, insert the pipe, and screw the jaw tighter?