It's been a very quiet time for tool accumulation, and no way am I going out just to crowd into a garage or estate sale with our current COVID rates here. I've gone to a few deserted ones, with the expected results. I've bought a few things from previously established sellers, but recently found some things on CL and an auction. Even convinced the CL seller to ship it for a few extra $$.
First off was the auction, found it on a FB Tool page, and the seller was courteous and actually posted a few dozen pics of interesting tools, instead of furniture and clothes to whet the appetite. I forget how many lots, somewhere around 700, and I scored three. As I am having things shipped, I always assume a 100% increase in total cost to me, and only look at small, light things. Shape recognition was key to winning these lots.
First lot I won was listed as a Wood Pike Hook Pry Bar (needs new wood handle)
Second was a Bag, Level Bar Piece, Dremel Bits
Third was Bag, Assorted Starrett Measuring Tool Pieces
In this pic, they are top (1), Left (2), and Center and Right (3)
At first glance, the 1st item could have looked like a pry bar (Lady's foot design), except for the need for a new wood handle. Turns out to be an unmarked 1/2" lock mortise or swan neck chisel. 17-1/2" long, and about 2#, still reasonably sharp.
The second listing looked suspiciously like a set of Starrett Ball Gauges, for measuring ID of holes. The level bit is modern, and Dremel bits are pin lock wrenches. The Starretts were 829 A-D, and a broken #229.
The third listing struck me as a die makers square, and thread gauges. Starrett 453 square, and #4 & #5 V thread gauges. No idea what the pieces in the center are. Appreciate any input on what they might be. Not seen in B&S or Starrett catalogs from the 1930s. The 6 identical bars (1 cut short) fit through the hole in the one wrench like piece.
Happy with the overall cost to my door.
I bid on a few other lots, only because they were at reasonable prices at the time I bid. Two of them were bracket parts for surface measuring tools, and they both went nuts in the last few minutes. A small set of Stanley 45 blades was nuts even before I was to bid, and went up to 5x my bottom feeder limit. Others were 2-3x what I would have bid, so someone must have recognized things I missed.
This pic of the CL haul was listed as 2 Cherries carving gouges, and included the Millers Falls #107 carving tools, from a 1959 catalog it seems. The Two Cherries edges need a bit of touch up, and one gouge is wallowed out in the handle, so I may make a new handle, since I need to make a bunch of them for some other handle-less carving tools. Since he was willing to ship, I was quite pleased.
That's all for now, hope you all are staying safe and sane!