Private Lugnutz
Well-known member
Thanks.That thing is GORGEOUS! Love the font they used on these!
Very cool score, Lugz!
On the phones and cords, I wonder if there is a retro market. Or tv and movie production.
Thanks.That thing is GORGEOUS! Love the font they used on these!
Very cool score, Lugz!
Jake -if you didn't look yet, that RI wrench is Rhode Island Tool Company I believe. I Think the other unknown tool you referred to is the piston ring groove cleaner. Uh you **** too! All those Proto wrenches!
Not sure what this was in reply to, jake. Did you mean to reply to someone else? Or did I say something that didn't make sense? I'm just looking at them thinking that the style (shape and color) along with the whole idea of a corded phone (other than emergency function) might be popular with some people who are so into retro style and fashion right now, in a retro furnished home. With egg chairs, bell bottoms, lava lamps and a Thing in the driveway.On the phone thing -
That plug is wired directly to the incoming phone lugs, not through the cable/internet/phone junction.
That set is the definition of clean, lilredex. Nice snag.


Not sure what this was in reply to, jake.
.....
Really?! Who buys corded phones? Maybe I live in darkness here ...
Picked this up today at flea market for $3, diamond tool and horseshoe co, made in usa, in great condition, little to no use on them
Kind of ironic you said this in a thread that's all about buying old stuff, but yes - there are still some of us dinosaurs around who use corded phones.
Whoa! Those single box specialty wrenches are awesome!I decided to skip the flea market this week. Instead, I went to 3 sales. The last two were busts. The first stop was a return to my last stop from yesterday. As soon as I got home yesterday, my brain started to itch. There was a toolbox marked "engine tools" that I had looked at when I first got there, but passed because I wasn't sure what their pricing would be. When I paid for the totes, I should have gone back in and grabbed it, but I forgot. So, this morning I made a beeline for it.
It's a (well used) Kennedy KK19-547270, in red.
And inside ......... Old wrenches with names like :
Billings
Williams
Armstrong
J.A.F.&E. &Co.
(circle-RI) ?????
Dowidat
Fairmount
Ford
and a few unmarked
But wait, there's more .........
4 - ScotchBrite pads
BluePoint piston compresser
Hunter wire stripper
welding magnet
(a Whatsit) ????
SnapOn 1/2dr socket tray (gray paint)
BluePoint valve lapper (missing the cup)
and ...
Proto (USA) specialty wrenches
------- 6556 15/16"
------- 6553 11/16"
------- 6562 11/16"
------- 6576 9/16"
------- (markings illegible)
------- 6961 13/16"
------- 6553 11/16"
All for the grand sum of $5 !![]()
Ragtop - yes, the steel plate vise is a Columbian #804. As far as we've been able to determine, they may have only been available in 1949 (+/-), and only the 4" size was made. IIRC, your vise may be only # 8 or 9 posted on the forum. I own 2 and another member owns(ed) 2 as well.
A rare vise, but not necessarily valuable.
I paid $50 for my 2nd one, but that was because it was the only one I had ever seen in the wild. (The first was my grandfather's).
The original color was a med-deep red.
I can see why someone might want to do that to the selector. It's an extremely thin thumbwheel.I have the same Bonney ratchet. On mine a prior owner ground flats on the selector to make it easier to flip back and forth.
Nice finds - I love the Starrett ruler.
Thank you Jake. I thought I recognized it and thought of you when I saw it laying on the ground at the flea.



I decided to skip the flea market this week. Instead, I went to 3 sales. The last two were busts. The first stop was a return to my last stop from yesterday. As soon as I got home yesterday, my brain started to itch. There was a toolbox marked "engine tools" that I had looked at when I first got there, but passed because I wasn't sure what their pricing would be. When I paid for the totes, I should have gone back in and grabbed it, but I forgot. So, this morning I made a beeline for it.
It's a (well used) Kennedy KK19-547270, in red.
And inside ......... Old wrenches with names like :
Billings
Williams
Armstrong
J.A.F.&E. &Co.
(circle-RI) ?????
Dowidat
Fairmount
Ford
and a few unmarked
But wait, there's more .........
4 - ScotchBrite pads
BluePoint piston compresser
Hunter wire stripper
welding magnet
(a Whatsit) ????
SnapOn 1/2dr socket tray (gray paint)
BluePoint valve lapper (missing the cup)
and ...
Proto (USA) specialty wrenches
------- 6556 15/16"
------- 6553 11/16"
------- 6562 11/16"
------- 6576 9/16"
------- (markings illegible)
------- 6961 13/16"
------- 6553 11/16"
All for the grand sum of $5 !![]()
I went to look at a Craftsman gray & red roller this evening, only to find it full of tools. S-K, Wright, Snap-on, Proto, Craftsman, Mac. The seller had taken everything out of the tool box and said if I didn't want them, he'd take them to Goodwill. The pictures are from the Ad and only show 2 out of 5 boxes/totes of tools.
$100.
Brian
because it looks cool,
found a couple of volt amp meters for $5 each - an Allen and a Weidenhoff model 725 - an interesting ratchet (I usually avoid anything plated, but the art deco styling caught my eye) and a little westcott adjustable.
What's that Radium kit?? Buyer beware!!!
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radium_Girls
Duddly - Are there any markings on the wooden handles or the shank of that screwdriver? Is it 11" long?
Hit up a couple of sales at our neighborhood garage sale, hoping to see some tools. Found nothing, all the good stuff sold in the first few minutes, oh well.
Looking for a DeWalt 735 planer/thicknesses, $599 on Amazon. Decided on one on Craigslist from a tool rental place for about 400, hoping to get them to throw in a one day rental on a log splitter bringing my cost down to 300. Driving out to buy the planer I drive past one more sale and see something dewalt yellow, not sure what....
![]()
$75, good shape, no nicks on the knives.
Sort, had to tell somebody
Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk

Congrats, sometimes the stars just align. Oh, and you **** too![]()
That wrench is in amazing condition, I've never seen one that clean before. I"m sort of a Diamond collector, let me know if you want to sell it.![]()
no markings - I am looking for a set of perfect handles to replace a set my father had when I was young. So far, that is the only thing close that i have found (in the wild) - most of them are in really awful shape. I think it is less than 11" but will measure it tonight.
I think that the bulk of my collecting these days is to get things that remind me of my father. Oh, how I hated those tools as a kid. I only wanted to use the 70s era Craftsman stuff.
true... It is for repainting clock hands... I have had it a while and don't remember what is actually in it. Will look tonight.
Duddly - Are there any markings on the wooden handles or the shank of that screwdriver? Is it 11" long?
I certainly wish you fully cancer-free!Now I am getting worried... here's a pic of want is inside. It is a small tin container that I am not messing with.
I may get it checked out... Unfortunately I know some doctors who use Geiger counters.... (And I got cancer well before I picked this thing up!)
edit: just so nobody worries - I am fine, but the last year sucked and I still have another few months or so to get everything out of my system. I hope to be healthy and a bit more vigorous sometime early next year. I have a late March trip planned to go to Japan and visit my grandkids! My oldest grandson is 10 and enjoys my vintage tool collection.
no markings - I am looking for a set of perfect handles to replace a set my father had when I was young. So far, that is the only thing close that i have found (in the wild) - most of them are in really awful shape.
Duddly,I went back and checked - it is 8 1/2 inches and it IS marked Irwin USA.
Federal Stock Number, late 1930's to 1953, almost certainly military. I answered more extensively in the Plomb thread.Obstruction wrench with only a few numbers on it (Military ?)