And the big items. The side box is a 72 and the top box is a 70. The Williams needs some work but I haven't seen another one.
I've been known to clear rooms and bleachers seats five rows in front of me!
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That's what I had to do, too. SWMBO's been expanding my knowledge ever since I meet her.LOL, had to look that one up.
Noun. clowder (plural clowders) A group of cats.
http://www.todayifoundout.com/index.php/2011/07/a-group-of-cats-is-called-a-clowder/ says it could also be called a "clutter of cats".![]()
No guesses? Okay, your future thread host will embarrass himself without company.![]()
Full admission: this thing, marked "STEELCRAFT" on the shank, had me stumped at the flea market. I honestly thought it was an ingenious pencil sharpener! (And even now when I know what it is, I still think it would make an ingenious pencil sharpener!)
My first thought was a ratcheting screwdriver, but it's so toy-like cheap (so much so that a toy toolset tool was actually my second thought!), made with cheap materials, it can't weigh more than a few ounces, and I couldn't see any way the end would accommodate screwdriver bits, that I really couldn't bring myself to believe this was meant to be an actual ratcheting screwdriver.
So I had myself convinced that the idea was to put a pencil in the hole in the top and push the end of the ratcheting shaft against a desk a few times to turn the shavers that must be located inside the green wooden compartment.on me!
Turns out the painted wooden compartment with the little rotating lid is for the extra bits. The nub at the end screws off. I'm guessing you put the bit through the back end and screw it back on.
The coolest thing is that STEELCRAFT MFG CO was located in the "BRITISH GERMAN ZONE" (which I found on the shank when I got it home and cleaned up), created to aid in the reconstruction of the economy of occupied Germany after WWII.
See thumbnails.

lay an acetone rag over it for a minute, and see if the paint wipes off.
Dry erase marker over the sharpie on the Proto box will make that eraseable.
Tin Medic, is that a military Volvo tool?
Definitely has that action, toppop. It was the wood compartment, the grade school-like green paint, the overall cheap quality of the thing, and the fact that I couldn't see a way to open the chuck that all had me thinking ingenious reverse Archimedean pencil sharpener. (If anyone still used pencils, I swear I'd look to patent the idea!)Archimedes drill... ?

No guesses? Okay, your future thread host will embarrass himself without company.![]()
Full admission: this thing, marked "STEELCRAFT" on the shank, had me stumped at the flea market. I honestly thought it was an ingenious pencil sharpener! (And even now when I know what it is, I still think it would make an ingenious pencil sharpener!)
My first thought was a ratcheting screwdriver, but it's so toy-like cheap (so much so that a toy toolset tool was actually my second thought!), made with cheap materials, it can't weigh more than a few ounces, and I couldn't see any way the end would accommodate screwdriver bits, that I really couldn't bring myself to believe this was meant to be an actual ratcheting screwdriver.
So I had myself convinced that the idea was to put a pencil in the hole in the top and push the end of the ratcheting shaft against a desk a few times to turn the shavers that must be located inside the green wooden compartment.on me!
Turns out the painted wooden compartment with the little rotating lid is for the extra bits. The nub at the end screws off. I'm guessing you put the bit through the back end and screw it back on.
The coolest thing is that STEELCRAFT MFG CO was located in the "BRITISH GERMAN ZONE" (which I found on the shank when I got it home and cleaned up), created to aid in the reconstruction of the economy of occupied Germany after WWII.
See thumbnails.
Lugz, does it have a reversing switch? if not, its for drill bits... (Or assembly only...)
Yes, that makes more sense. No reverse. Teeny tiny (resisting the urge to add toy) drill bits. Point is, it is a real tool. Not a very substantial one, but it is. (I still like my pencil sharpener idea!)![]()
Ragtop, you may have got the last USUCK of the year with that haul!
Ragtop, you may have got the last USUCK of the year with that haul!
Agreed! It seems that I can consistently find odd ball stuff but it ends up being 1 or 2 items per sale.
You and ragtop end up with whole crate each sale!!
YOU **** RAGTOP!
lay an acetone rag over it for a minute, and see if the paint wipes off.
Dry erase marker over the sharpie on the Proto box will make that eraseable.
Tin Medic, is that a military Volvo tool?




A bit too fast for big bits in steel, but the big motor and crank table are both nice things.
Having the instructions and the table not being frilled to hell are both good signs it isn't used up. IMO solid machine for the money, at least in my hood.
No problem. And mine too!Sorry, Lugz, I missed this entry over Christmas. Mystery tool commentary is one of my favorite features of this annual thread.
That would've went home with me in a heartbeat. So much character in that data plate. Never seen anything like it before, which are my favorite finds!It's a Steelmaster box...
"INDISPENSABLE FOR THE HOME, OFFICE, HOMEWORK SHOP, GARAGE, FISHING TACKLE, STOCK ROOM, NURSERY, SEWING ROOM, ETC.
As some of you guys know, throughout the year I occasionally snap photos of things I spot on my flea market jaunts but don't buy. Some of these things are too expensive. Some of them are mystery tools. Some of them are just interesting, but not enough to want to own. And some of them are just plain weird.
I was going through that folder tonight, self-satisfying myself for some restraint, and just re-living the year a little. Here are some I haven't shown before...
Pic 1 and 2: APCO-Mossberg torque wrench
Pic 3: DUNLAP grinder
Pic 4: vintage vise jaw caps
Pic 5 and 6: Unknown machine (CHAMPION)
Pic: Fantastic British car restoration (Morris, IIRC)
And some more...
Pic 3: A good example of things you should never do to a Ford Thunderbird
5 & 6 is a bead roller, it looks like to me at least. I wouldn't mind owning one myself!
And some more...
Pic 3: A good example of things you should never do to a Ford Thunderbird
I saw something similar done to an MG-B up in Maine.
It was a crime scene on wheels.

And some more...
Pic 2: Despite what it looks like, NOT a yard ornament!![]()

Pic: Fantastic British car restoration (Morris, IIRC)
I would love to get my hands on one of the mini Brit trucks!As some of you guys know, throughout the year I occasionally snap photos of things I spot on my flea market jaunts but don't buy. Some of these things are too expensive. Some of them are mystery tools. Some of them are just interesting, but not enough to want to own. And some of them are just plain weird.
I was going through that "LEFT BEHIND" folder tonight, self-satisfying myself for some restraint, and just re-living the year a little. Here are some I haven't shown before...
Pic 1 and 2: APCO-Mossberg torque wrench
Pic 3: DUNLAP grinder
Pic 4: vintage vise jaw caps
Pic 5 and 6: Unknown machine (CHAMPION)
Pic: Fantastic British car restoration (Morris, IIRC)