Nice ratchets and wrenches. You ****.This bunch from a sale yesterday. Wrench sets; Matco metric, Husky metric, Mac SAE, Craftsman Metric, Snap-on SAE and a Snap-on/Mac line wrench set. Socket sets; Craftsman 1/2d Deep SAE, Mac 3/8dr deep SAE, Mac 3/8dr SAE and Metric in med depth, Snap-on 1/4dr SAE medium depth. Matco locking extensions, kinda rough SK 3/8, really nice 1/2dr's Cornwell & Craftsman. Still got a bunch of pliers and hammers to sort through.
tin medic, that is a really lame purchase. You need to dump it at my place for disposal.
Do you want all the stuff that came on it also?

I’m out of the Blackhawk business. Mostly.Very cool nostalgia there.Although not a sale, my tool finds yesterday were bittersweet. We visited my 87 yr old sister in law in Sacramento yesterday and she let me look through my late brother’s homeowner quality Craftsman stack. I didn’t expect much since his kids and grandkids had already had a chance at it but I found a few early tools to bring home. I was surprised to see the Powr-Kraft vise grips since I don’t have any in the collection but the early =v= metric tools made more sense because at one point he had an early VW Beetle. I took this picture of him in the Beetle with our mother in Lodi, CA sometime in the 70s. If I recall correctly it was a ‘58 VW, the first year with the larger back window.
-Don
My dad picked up this Columbian 204-1/2 at an estate sale for me for $10! It's marked with USN NOD1543 PIPE SHOP. I did a quick google search and it comes back to a Navy contract in 1940 for expanding a shipyard to build more destroyers. I was hoping one of you WWII buffs had some insight on this?
The Two-Ocean Navy Act. Even though we were technically neutral in 1940, FDR had already been working behind the scenes (eking every inch out of his ever-expanding presidential powers, much to the ire of a bipartisan Congress intent on keeping us out of WWII) to do everything he could short of declaring war, beginning as early as late 1939 with the “Cash and Carry” laws, which allowed us to sell equipment to the Allies if they could come and pick it up. The Treasury Dept was ordering tools from mfgrs to ship to the Allies in 1940 well before the Lend-Lease Act was signed in March 1941. When France fell in June 1940, FDR convinced Congress to pass the Two-Ocean Navy Act. That ramped up all shipbuilding 3 fold, including in the Pacific. That kind of ramp up needed new infrastructure. Facilities and tools, including vises, to outfit all the new shops. In April 1941, a month after Lend-Lease, well before Pearl Harbor, obviously, FDR also extended the Pan-American Neutrality Zone so that the Marines could occupy Iceland. By that summer, Americans were effectively fighting alongside the British and Royal Canadian Navies in the North Atlantic to keep shipping lanes open and we were building ships on the west coast like mad. More than you asked for, sorry. But yeah, definitely a product of Two-Ocean Navy Act of 1940....Navy contract in 1940 for expanding a shipyard to build more destroyers. I was hoping one of you WWII buffs had some insight on this?











Whoa. That was a weighty haul!got some stuff the other day from an Auction.







I stared at him in disbelief, so he reduced the price to "Eight dollars." I kept the one in much better shape than the other two, and paid the two dollars! 
I'm getting caught up today. I took a trip to Florida the last half of January, and met up with CBacres, 3baygarage, Shortykorte, and Ed at the Florida Flywheelers meet in Central Florida. The wife and I had a great time and it was a lot of fun to meet other GJ'ers face-to-face. I even bought the Proto 9788 #4 phillips screwdriver (shown in photo #1) from Jwitt at the meet!
The day after getting home, I attended the local monthly flea market, and found the following items:
Photo #2 ($5.00 in a bundle sale):
Knipex snap ring pliers
Bondus Allen wrench set
Snap On FM71M 3/8d ratchet
Barcalo Buffalo 7/16x1/2 offset shorty DBE
P&C #22 center punch
Snap On PO 205 punch
Plomb USA 50 punch
2 WF Craftsman screwdrivers
Round chainsaw file with handle
9 new 3/16 drill bits
Metric screw/bolt gauge
Photo #3 ($12.00 for the bundle):
P&C 6215 1/2d spinner
P&C 2525 3/4x25/32 DBE
P&C 2529 13/16x7/8 DBE
P&C 2532 15/16x1 DBE
BlueBird battery terminal puller
Proto 5249 3/8d ratchet
Long C 1/2" screwdriver, with a circle-G mark still visable
Williams 1090-D 1/2x9/16 tappet DOE
Blackhawk 9207S 3/8d hinge handle
I noticed the Long-C screwdriver from the Rileysan discussion last month. The markings are still (barely) legible, and the circle-G is prominent.
There is a story behind the Proto 3/8d ratchet. I saw a pile of three of these on a table. I picked up one, and asked the price. "Two dollars" was the price. I picked up the other two, and asked the price for all three in a bundle. "Ten dollars" was the answer.I stared at him in disbelief, so he reduced the price to "Eight dollars." I kept the one in much better shape than the other two, and paid the two dollars!
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Very cool.Photo #3 is the set of P&C Short Bend Offset Socket Wrenches (Set #12 from the 1927 catalog
That is sure a nice stack. Well done and to have a roto thrown in makes a You ****.Well, I hemmed and hawed about this purchase--strictly on the basis of having nowhere to put it--but in the end, it came home with me. $85 plus $5 for the Millers Falls No.5A hand drill. They threw the S-K 3879 Swivel Head ratchet and a bag of rotary wire brushes in as sweeteners. I'll post more on the MF and SK threads and more pics and detail on the Vintage Toolbox thread.
This is a 1958 CM Crown set made by the Advertising Metal Display Company of Chicago. The outside shows some wear but not too bad, but the inside is fabulous! The PO lined all the drawers with orange foam padding and except where a couple of spills soaked through, the finish is perfect--even the top of the roller is unmarked due to the piece of carpet between it and the top box.
Under the tote I found the tags for each piece--No. 4070 2-Drawer Chest and No. 4358 3-Drawer Roller
Besides three pounds of scrap metal and broken parts, this is what was in the drawers.
These are some of the more interesting pieces:
- A Fuller Brush, man!
- An unmarked bit holder. Not hollow, so no bits.
- A pinky finger "Handy Twine Cutter"
- A circular screw driver
- An AC spark plug gapper
- A set of four spade drill bit heads--looks like they screw into a handle or holder--maybe the thing to their right which I cannot identify
There were also some Bell Systems items but seven pics is all I can post so look for them on the Bell Systems thread.
Nice on the early P&C stuff.I saw an old Kennedy hip-roof toolbox on Marketplace the other day. When the ad mentioned "grandpa's tools" I checked out the other photos. Photo #2 caught my eye. It took a couple of days to get together, but Tuesday evening we met in a parking lot and I bought the lot for $40.00.
Photo #1 is the outside of the box.
Photo #2 is what was in the bottom of the box.
Photo #3 is the set of P&C Short Bend Offset Socket Wrenches (Set #12 from the 1927 catalog, missing the 3/4", and with an unrelated Long Bend 9/16 Hinsdale on the top left)
Photo #4 are the other tools in the bottom (not counting scrap copper pipe and a couple of dirty files):
Old Screwdriver (?) or something
Sparta 3/8d ratchet
Bog 5/8 socket wrench (perhaps Model T Ford rear connecting rod nuts)
Vlchek 33C 15/16 x 1 DOE
"->Blue Points <- Chicago" No. 2225 11/16 x 25/32 DOE
The seller told me that the tools were given to his grandfather by someone who said they were for working on Model T Fords.
The box is dark olive drab, and is likely military surplus unrelated to the set of tools.
I'll post details in the P&C and Kennedy box threads soon.
Ha ha. Fine, here’s the ****.
Truth be told, I’m quite intrigued by the little chisel plane on the left. And to a slightly lesser extent, the Flash Gordon looking plane under it. The burgundy-handled jack planes on the right look serviceable, but if they are Stanleys, they’re not very old. Post-WWII, anyway, right?
Just a tote (Lugz 2020_10) from the flea market today. But one can never have enough totes, it's OD green, and it's a Lyon.![]()
A blast from the past!! I remember when Wen was what you got if you couldn't afford the Weller 100/140 watt gun. My grandfolks got me the Weller at about age 9 - I still have it- still works, even though epoxied back together after several drops. That thing built a bunch of screaming slot cars- remember those??