Private Lugnutz
Well-known member
It's very well made.
Well that would explain why I wasn't able to find any info on Huot porta-power units. ;-)No. That is a Blackhawk brand name for hydraulic body work spreading etc and jacking tools.
You would win that bet.![]()
Nice snag on the box. Those are hard to come by. Also those Lectrolite pliers have a very nice logo. I have not see. That style before. Is it a later logo?We found a couple of estate sales to check out this morning. The one in Hayward seemed more promising so we went there first. I checked out a shed and my wife was going through the items in a toolbox. When I joined her I noticed that the toolbox was a fairly early S-K two drawer box and it wasn’t missing either the tray or the front cover. There were also quite a few interesting tools that we brought home. The first picture is the toolbox, the second is the rest of the tools. The next shot is the Plomb and Proto including my second dual marked wrench in as many weeks! The next four are S-K/Lectrolite, Thorsen, Barcalo and a Snap-on Ferret extension from 1945.
-Don
Yes, it was.I'm guessing it was all jsut jumbled up in a box?
Nice snag on the box. Those are hard to come by. Also those Lectrolite pliers have a very nice logo. I have not see. That style before. Is it a later logo?
Looking for the following Plomb Pebbles Wrench 3061



Bit of a disaster here.
I see what you did there!Mourned the loss by listening to “Little Talks” by Of Monsters and Men...[ ]...Meanwhile, good news: LesserSonsDottir2
Needless to say, you don't let her get near the second one!I am glad there were two, as my wife dropped one.
Why yes my eyes did go to that immediately! Double-offset, too. Nice....hand-forged Billings double-end single-hex socket wrench...
RS, better pics of the Homecraft? Looks to be a good size for most light work - If I had an in-the-house workroom I'd have one about that size in it...
Thanks, Outlaw! We've always had similar aesthetics.Lugz, I didn't say so here, but again, I love the oilier!
The other classic was the 1/2 drive old snap-on that literally fell out of the bottom of the tool box.
That photo is one of the best photos I have seen all year! Without the explanation, I would've guessed that the box had been sitting there for 70 years and it literally disintegrated around the tools it was holding, the tools outlasting the box!

I guess technically LED "Lanterns" ARE lanterns, but they saved 3 whole letters by not including "LED" in the ad? :no:Hit only one garage/estate sale today on the other side of my small city. The sale had been last weekend and of course this weekend. I had seen the ad and talked to folks that went last weekend and both indicated little in the way of tools so I went to search for other stuff of interest. Come to find out the guy had been a GM engineer at the local plant so I was on the lookout for technical books and GM related stuff.
House is in a really old not so nice part of town so all I can figure is the house was in the family for generations. No sign of any significant tools so I hit the house which is full of knick knacks and such all over. In a bedroom I pick up a small box which is covered in masking tape so you couldn't tell what it was for so I open it up to find an unused 1/4 drive SAE Snap-On socket set. Really weird that all the indications on the box of Snap-on are covered in masking tape and not even taped on the creases where you would expect damage to occur first. Anyways my only purchase today.
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The boards have a mahogany look to them.Estate sale score: 1952 Delta Homecraft drill press (perfect for my needs), 2 large clamps, a 2-9/16 Williams wrench, easy outs and taps, and two nice pieces of wood (oak?) for $60.![]()
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There's no way to make the chemical reaction work faster or better. You basically just immerse the tools and let it do its thing. To conserve it, I only use a little at a time in the amounts I minimally need to fully immerse the tools and no more than that. And, after I remove the tools, I filter-siphon that liquid into a second empty container with a twist cap, keeping the fresh unused liquid in the original container until I need it. I will use the old stuff I have siphoned into a second container many times over until it's spent before I go to the original container for a fresh batch. It works a lot faster than it evaporates, so, while I do use a container with a tight lid to immerse the tools in, it's not really something to worry about. I am usually taking the tools out completely stripped of rust in a matter of hours or over night for the worse cases.looks like I'm headed for my first foray into the world of evaporust. any tricks to recommend to maximize the effectiveness?
Nothing wrong with that! We have a Vlchek thread when you're ready to post them. See the Sticky Index.outofbounds said:most the wrenches are turning out to be old Vlchek
