OK Guys and Gals, I have had these for decades and have never found anyone who could tell me what they are for. They were my Fathers and he was a WWII Vet and would be 101 now. It appears they are stamped 38-Y-1605. He was in the Army Air Corp (P38's) and after that he worked for over 40+ years in a Chemical Plant as a Master Electrician.
I "found" them again today and thought someone here may have an answer to what they were used for. I am stumped.
They do not look "ground down" but more purpose built.
I'm getting older and would like a little clarity.
They are 4 5/8" from top to bottom.
I hate to join a forum and make an ask in my first post but here I am.
Thanks in advance.
I do not see that model number in Utica catalogs from the 1910s, 1920s or 1930s (suggested by the forged-in 3-diamonds logo inside the handles). Neither “38” nor “1605” fit into any families of pliers I see there. I suspect the model number may indicate custom work for a particular entity (industry, utility or government, which is hopefully how we might learn more). I see two similar model numbers on the internet, one for a pin for heavy equipment and one for a crimping die - neither seems related to your father’s pliers.
I would say I don’t see the shape of those, but I actually cannot say for sure what the profile is, based on the three images of a single view. Could you post an image of the other face, and one from the side?
Despite not looking “ground down” to you, that is probably how they were made, even if at the factory. Those look ground down from a needle-nose type pliers, probably the type without side cutter, but I’d like to see the two other views I mentioned.
What do they measure from pivot to handle tip, and across the handles?