OP
Private Lugnutz
Well-known member
To heck with the anvil, I'm impressed you have a Tuesday flea market!!Was out today at a flea market and spotted an anvil.
To heck with the anvil, I'm impressed you have a Tuesday flea market!!Was out today at a flea market and spotted an anvil.
I'm one who NEARLY lost his garage to a rag-in-the-can-caused fire. See my sig line for a link to the damage and rebuild...Also, if you use BLO, be very careful of the rags. They can simultaneously combust.
No joke, a member here lost his garage to this.
Yes, I've heard that is a risk with any oil-based substance on rags (motor oil, oil-based paint/stain/finish, etc). Scary stuff. To my understanding, the thing to do is spread the rags out flat/hanging until they're dry - it's the instinctive throwing of used rags into a pile that sets up the combustion-prone environment, as vapors get trapped within the pile.
Not altogether true. Motor oils won't spontaneously combust. BLO will, and its probably the most notable one.
Oil biased paints/stains etc often had BLO or LO in it, so more probably.
I'm one who NEARLY lost his garage to a rag-in-the-can-caused fire. See my sig line for a link to the damage and rebuild...
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So, for inquiring minds (sorry for taking so long to answer), when I do batches of ammo I have a powder pan on the bench (think balance beam scale pan about 4” dia) and I use it to dip a pre measured scoop from and refill the trickler. I had dosed about another ounce or so of powder into the pan finishing my charges just prior to cleaning up. Took my ground straps off, went outside with a blend type material pullover on. When I came back to start cleaning up I didn’t put the straps on and reached for the powder pan and whoosh. Which wouldn’t have been so bad if it hadn’t been so close to the plastic 1lb container of powder that the two were touching and the lid was off if I remember right. So, in all, it was just over a pound of powder that flashed. Wife saw it happen and said I was standing inside a fire ball. I’m lucky..... learn what not to do from me.
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Snow=slow I guess. Only two sales this past weekend, only one with anything of interest. I managed to spend all of five dollars on this:
Full/nearly full rattlecans, two rolls of sandpaper, empty crown logo Craftsman box- maybe a jigsaw box? Slide hammer nail puller, Moore wrench, Bet-R Grip wrench, Craftsman snap ring plier, some 1/4 Craftsman sockets, SK handle, some Stanley 6" clamps, Craftsman screwdrivers, Craftsman ez outs, and some new door hinges. Plus a few other odds and ends.
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...empty crown logo Craftsman box- maybe a jigsaw box?
See the date code near the hanging hole on the J.P. Danielson BET'R GRIP wrench? What does it say? Also, what brand are the water pump pliers?Bet-R Grip wrench...[ ]... Plus a few other odds and ends.
I suspect so that it swung more freely in its own longitudinal axis. Or he though that would be less risk of bunging up the 12-point broaching?Minor question: Any idea why the previous owner put a wire ring through the wrench end? (If to hang it, why not just through the existing opening they put the ring through?)
Minor question: Any idea why the previous owner put a wire ring through the wrench end? (If to hang it, why not just through the existing opening they put the ring through?)

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The guy was a janitor and kept the wrench on his key chain.![]()
See the date code near the hanging hole on the J.P. Danielson BET'R GRIP wrench? What does it say? Also, what brand are the water pump pliers?
Thanks, JD. 1946. The last year they operated as an independent business entity (before being purchased by Plomb).As close as I can see maybe L 1 6 with a V and upside down V above it? Or V A?
Close ups please.A couple Walden Drag links
Totally would not have expected that either.3baygarage said:old Snap On folding hex keys (almost didn’t pick it up to look at the name)
It’s a drill index from the Cleveland Twist Drill Co and when I removed the corrosion from the corner turned out to be made of copper. Drill indices are one of my many weaknesses. I’ll post another shot after I finish cleaning it up.
-Don

Ill save you that task Mine sat in the garage for longer than I want to recall.
Although you gave me incentive to go out and look for it .
I never knew it was gold![]()
So I lost some sleep last night because of you
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So, for inquiring minds (sorry for taking so long to answer), when I do batches of ammo I have a powder pan on the bench (think balance beam scale pan about 4” dia) and I use it to dip a pre measured scoop from and refill the trickler. I had dosed about another ounce or so of powder into the pan finishing my charges just prior to cleaning up. Took my ground straps off, went outside with a blend type material pullover on. When I came back to start cleaning up I didn’t put the straps on and reached for the powder pan and whoosh. Which wouldn’t have been so bad if it hadn’t been so close to the plastic 1lb container of powder that the two were touching and the lid was off if I remember right. So, in all, it was just over a pound of powder that flashed. Wife saw it happen and said I was standing inside a fire ball. I’m lucky..... learn what not to do from me.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Snow=slow I guess. Only two sales this past weekend, only one with anything of interest. I managed to spend all of five dollars on this:
Full/nearly full rattlecans, two rolls of sandpaper, empty crown logo Craftsman box- maybe a jigsaw box? Slide hammer nail puller, Moore wrench, Bet-R Grip wrench, Craftsman snap ring plier, some 1/4 Craftsman sockets, SK handle, some Stanley 6" clamps, Craftsman screwdrivers, Craftsman ez outs, and some new door hinges. Plus a few other odds and ends.
Isn't the D.B. the Dodge Brothers mark?
3bay,
Aren't those banded sockets the ones that came with the stainless and lifetime ratchets?
Tom
3bay- too bad that Mac is missing the selector. I like those red hard handles, I have a Proto in 3/8 with one. Nice haul!
JD Suckage awarded for the $5 score!
And I can't believe no one noticed the poundted flat wrench racks in the small grey box?
That could possibly have been a Long C carry box for DBE or DOE, wrenches? What are its dimensions?
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Man I just realized its thursday already! Didn't even look at any sales yet! Ugh I'm dragging...

Walden sockets close up.
Walden Worcester 1129 and 1131
Thanks, 3bay. Sometimes the stars align! Believe it or not, I have a Walden Worcester 1130 (15/16" blade). And I need the 1129 (47/64" blade) and 1131 (1-3/16" blade) to complete a brand-matching 3-piece WWII GMTK set. Second PM sent.Walden Worcester 1129 and 1131
). I said todo (all) so he knew I got it. He says yes. I think I was actually saying todos (everybody). Ignorant Gringo! 
At this point in your story I was thinking, "Oh boy, look at 3bay the wily veteran already setting me up for steep trade terms..."Ok. You don’t know what I went through to buy those and the Proto bit socket.

Interesting that it's a gunsmith website. Saying they were used "to get the drag link off" is misleading and incomplete. They were used to make adjustments to the steering linkage by turning a large threaded plug with a slot in it located at the end of the drag link. These threaded plugs were holding in a cup with a spring-loaded ball stud connected to mating parts in the pittman arm and steering control arm. Turning the threaded plug one way or another would increase or decrease the pressure on the entire steering linkage. You could also use a big offset screwdriver for the same job....found out what they're called / what they're for..
Most of the time I hang my rags off the side of the shop trash can for a few days to let them dry out. If I'm going through a lot of rags on a project, then I use the disposal can.
JD Suckage awarded for the $5 score!
And I can't believe no one noticed the poundted flat wrench racks in the small grey box?
That could possibly have been a Long C carry box for DBE or DOE, wrenches? What are its dimensions?
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Saw an ad for a woodworking vise this afternoon on CL. I take a look and there is a blue vise looking at me. I'm thinking it can't be but it is a Record No 52 woodworking vise. The guy is asking $30. Ad has been posted for 20 minutes. Short story long, he agrees to hold it until I can get there. The vise checks out all good. As I'm reaching to get the money out of my wallet I see on the shelf above me red Starrett boxes piled one one top of another. I offer $60, he counters with $70 and he throws in the crate and the bucket. Two Brown & Sharpe 0-1" micrometers, Starrett 1-2" & 2-3" micrometers and a Starrett protractor and depth gauge. Oh yeah, that was $70 total. I'd have paid $70 for the vise. A lucky day!
Mike
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