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Anyone know what this craftsman tool 43295 is

GlennyBoy

Member
Joined
Jun 13, 2026
Messages
5
Bought this tool recently. The number references a craftsman scraper, but that’s not what this is. Anyone have any ideas?
image.jpgimage.jpgimage.jpg
 
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OP
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GlennyBoy

Member
Joined
Jun 13, 2026
Messages
5
Haven’t been able to find much information about this particular tool online. Wonder if it’s rare or not?
 

RTM

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Joined
May 13, 2019
Messages
13,116
Location
SF Bay Area
Well let's see, I last saw a drain pipe caulked with lead and oakum sometime before 1974. Will go poking through the Sears catalog CD, see what I find.

Used to be putting a 9 in front of your parts # would make it pop up in Google, but that didn't work today.☹️

More later, but the lead packing makes most sense to me, in case that wasn't obvious.
 
OP
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GlennyBoy

Member
Joined
Jun 13, 2026
Messages
5
Well let's see, I last saw a drain pipe caulked with lead and oakum sometime before 1974. Will go poking through the Sears catalog CD, see what I find.

Used to be putting a 9 in front of your parts # would make it pop up in Google, but that didn't work today.☹️

More later, but the lead packing makes most sense to me, in case that wasn't obvious.
I appreciate the help
 

neophyte

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Joined
Apr 23, 2012
Messages
9,583
Location
Pennsylvannia
Could handle have been cut off? Apparently same part number. Business end looks similar.

This is a gasket scraper, and there is little likelihood that OP’s “chisel” is or was ever a gasket scraper.
Some manufacturers reuse old product model numbers for items that have been discontinued for a while, with Starrett being an example.
A “chisel” for tamping in lead and oakum packing material for waste pipe joints would be concave down the length, to fit the rounded opening between the wider bell on the ond of waste pipes, and the waste pipe being inserted and sealed.
This type of tool would have been a standard plumbing tool any supply store carrying plumbing tools would have wanted to offer.
Philadelphia and New York City both required cast iron waste pipes for commercial buildings, at least up until recently, and cast iron was the standard for quality if you go back a few decades.
 

cgrutt

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 4, 2016
Messages
8,205
This is a gasket scraper, and there is little likelihood that OP’s “chisel” is or was ever a gasket scraper.
Some manufacturers reuse old product model numbers for items that have been discontinued for a while, with Starrett being an example.
A “chisel” for tamping in lead and oakum packing material for waste pipe joints would be concave down the length, to fit the rounded opening between the wider bell on the ond of waste pipes, and the waste pipe being inserted and sealed.
This type of tool would have been a standard plumbing tool any supply store carrying plumbing tools would have wanted to offer.
Philadelphia and New York City both required cast iron waste pipes for commercial buildings, at least up until recently, and cast iron was the standard for quality if you go back a few decades.
Yeah I didn't notice shape in OP's pics I thought it was flat.
 
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Debcrow

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May 14, 2019
Messages
4,034
Location
New Mexico
Neither if it's guided by loving hands.------ what a bunch of animals on here. I'm offended. This thread is gone to ****. 🤣
Your sheep has loving hands? or is it some other "animal"???
Wait a minute, I do not even want to know. We don't kink shame, no matter how ***** wool is!


:)
 
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