Winchester 14 inch adjustable pipe wrench patent date 03-14-22 01 by four.cycle, on Flickr
Winchester 14 inch adjustable pipe wrench patent date 03-14-22 02 by four.cycle, on FlickrSweet, I have an 18 incher.maybe not the best, but this one is still working just fine:
Winchester 14-inch adjustable pipe wrench stamped with patent date 03-14-22
Winchester 14 inch adjustable pipe wrench patent date 03-14-22 01 by four.cycle, on Flickr
Winchester 14 inch adjustable pipe wrench patent date 03-14-22 02 by four.cycle, on Flickr
Davefr said:Speaking of Diamonds, does anyone know if they made one larger then 18"
Davefr: apparently they did make a 24"
http://www.ebay.com/itm/Adjustable-...437828?hash=item2a60aae0c4:g:Y~IAAOSwXshWrzsG
I have no idea! Nothing written on it... it was in my grandfather toolbox when he died 20 years ago...I have one looks just like that, made by Zubi-Ondo?
Al.
I remember being told by my father to only use an adjustable wrench if you have no other option. It was sacrilege in my father's shop to use anything other than the proper sized wrench or socket.
I can clearly remember the day when I had to use his diamond adjustable wrench, which resulted in the green cover becoming soaked in oil. I took a razor blade to it and removed the cover. Needless to say, this caused quite an extensive rant and rightly so.
Today that same wrench lives in my toolbox. The quality is second to none even without the green cover. My vote goes to Diamond.


A few Vintage adjustable wrenches from Saturday's flea.
8" Barcalo, 1945 dated 8" Danielson, 1952 dated 6" Vlchek, 8" Blue Grass
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Diamond. Diamond was Snap-on's adjustable source from the mid-1920's through the 1960's, at least.The one I keep in the shop says "Snap-on" and "Bluepoint"...[ ]...Not chrome and the forging is totally different, I don't know who made it. It's pretty old, it's been around the farm many years.


I am curious to know who y'all think made the finest adjustable wrenches - fit, finish, function - back in the day.
Very good question.As a Plomb collector I'd say it's a heavy weight battle Diamond vs. Plomb/Proto ... but here's my list:
Diamond
Plomb/Proto
Utica
Crescent
My question concerns the flipside markings of Diamonaloy / Plombaloy / Crestaloy ... who was the engine and who was the caboose on the 'aloy' train?
Those Penncraft are soooo sweet! I only have a Penncraft 1/2 ratchet,its great because the drive is 1/2 but the head is only as big as a 3/8 drive. I need to search for a Penncraft adjustable.WANTED
6" Penncraft
Obviously, I need one desperately!
Very good question.
As you may know Plomb didn't make their own adjustables.
The started out with Utica and switched to JP Danielson during the Plomballoy days.
Alloy artifacts has what they claim to be the only example of a Diamond contract production for Plomb.
Being so close to Duluth. Diamond is a house hold name up here. Flea vendors with have litterly hundreds of diamond adjustables and pliers.
Looking for the following Plomb Pebbles Wrench 3061
If you have a Plomb tool made by J.P. Danielson with a date code earlier than October 1946, when they were acquired, I'd like to see it, please. If you're repeating what you read on AA, I think they're wrong, I have explained to them that they're wrong, and why they're wrong, and I have challenged them to produce a tool earlier than October 1946, and they have not done so. Unfortunately, they also haven't corrected their website, because they have a bad habit of not accepting critiques.As you know, Plomb acquired JP Danielson after contracting with them for a bit...
As always thank you for the insight. I guess don't trust everything you read on the internet.Plomb was very late to the "-aloy" compositional branding craze, and it didn't last very long, either, due to the lawsuits. But they weren't the only latecomers. Fairmount, Billings, and Bonney didn't introduce Fairalloy, Vitalloy and Bonaloy, respectively, until the late 1930's, just before the war. On the other hand, they used their monikers on a wider variety of tools than Diamond or Crescent.
If you have a Plomb tool made by J.P. Danielson with a date code earlier than October 1946, when they were acquired, I'd like to see it, please. If you're repeating what you read on AA, I think they're wrong, I have explained to them that they're wrong, and why they're wrong, and I have challenged them to produce a tool earlier than October 1946, and they have not done so. Unfortunately, they also haven't corrected their website, because they have a bad habit of not accepting critiques.
Here is the issue in a nutshell:
The earliest example of a J.P. Danielson made wrench in the AA collection is date-coded December 1946. AA uses that to presume, erroneously, that Plomb must have been buying wrenches from J.P. Danielson under contract, because they didn't acquire them until 1947. Therein lies the source of their mistaken analysis. Plomb acquired J.P. Danielson in October 1946, not in 1947.