








I saw it, but thought it was needle nose at first. So yeah, I saw shiny, saw a shape, and kinda had an idea what it was, but not that it was vise grip locking pliers lolI don't doubt that you saw something shiny, but your eyes are MUCH better than mine if you ID'd that at 70 mph!
You guys are wearing off on me. At my son's baseball game today, a house across the street from the field had a bunch of stuff on the sidewalk, with a "FREE" sign posted on a tree. Unfortunately, it was all baby toys (we just unloaded at of that stuff ourselves over the past few years)...
Mike
The Key.
And I hear you on the bagged misc. tools. Drives me nuts, though I have grabbed a couple of bags and asked to make up the correct set before. Sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn't. I have tried to tell them that tool people are pretty specific, but I get the feeling that those sellers don't care.
I almost pitched it but decided to run it past Google just in case. Glad I did. It's a terminal board time totalizing meter. It is going for between $150 & $395 on eBay. WooHoo!












That was a great guess! (I wanted to metaphorically throw the largest "cube-like instrument" within my grasp at OR for the minutes and brains cells I burned going through each and every innocuous piece in that photo wondering what I was missing.)The Key.

Nice find.Craftsman Flying V Spinner Ratchet
Hahaha. A big old ugly can of worms. It's from a jeep toolkit. But not the jeep most people think.Irwin Perfect Handle Screwdriver with "Gov. Stock #41-S-1076" (calling Dr. Lugz!)





Yup, nothing here eitherFlyer- can’t see your pics on previous page, is it an issue on my end?
Major Vacuum draw for that spinner! Those sell really well on ebay!The Kennedy key was certainly a welcomed bonus, but not the gem I was referring to. If you look close, set on the stem of the wire bottle brush is a little cube-like instrument I found in one of the Kennedy drawers. Here's a much better picture:
I almost pitched it but decided to run it past Google just in case. Glad I did. It's a terminal board time totalizing meter. It is going for between $150 & $395 on eBay. WooHoo!
On with the show. Thursday was a Snap-on day--and much more!
For the S.O., I scored:
F-720 Ratchet - 1985
F-670 Flex Head - 1962
F-4-L Speeder - 1956
FX-11 12" Extension - 1960
AT-55 1/4" Hex Bit - 1956
FP-42A Phillips #4 - 1960
FS-18 Swivel Socket - 1966
FS-14 Swivel Socket - 1963
PS-12 10" Extension - 1956
F281 thru F081 12pt sockets w/patent number - no date code. This is their "Flank Drive" patent issued in 1966. There is an additional F281 that has a 1950 date.
Next was a box of Thorsen 3/8 drive swivel sockets--missing the 3/4" 424J--followed by an even smaller box of 3/8 drive Wright Hex bits. The two smallest, 3/16 & 5/32 have both been over torqued and sheared from their bases.
The last four items are all first-time-in-the-wild finds for me.
Craftsman Flying V Spinner Ratchet
Crescent Double Adjustable Wrench 4" & 6" heads
New Britain 374 Offset Screwdriver
and finally, a Winchester 7102 3-inch Screwdriver from the late 50s.
$44 for the lot.
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Flyer- can’t see your pics on previous page, is it an issue on my end?
Thanks for the heads-up 3bay & RTM. Hopefully they are now visible. Still getting the hang of the new system and I had my photo album privacy set to me only in anticipation of only myself being able to see the entire album but because the individual pictures were links from that album it looks like that album privacy setting wouldn't let individual pictures show up. Let me know if they are now showing up correctly.Yup, nothing here either
Was wondering where you have been.........can be awfully easy to get carried away buying stuff that is "a deal".........don't I know!I decided not to buy tools for a while for a number of reasons. Going out I saw a GS sign on the corner so I loop around the block. Turns out 3 houses from me there was a driveway loaded with box after box of hardware and tools. Grrrreat!
Ran into a friend there who was about to make off with his haul as I walked up. I feared the prices were high but quickly learned otherwise. Seller offered him an additional whole tub of tools for $10 but he declined. Mostly rusty pipe wrenches and bulky stuff.
I tried to be selective as I looked through every box while they packed up the sale. A number of Craftsman and other tools I normally like but everything was rusted up. Figured I didn’t need any more of it.
Was about to leave empty handed and got to the last table. Finally an interesting bin. Glass door knobs, antique keys, and more. Grabbed some items and seller says $1 each. Pulled out this buried vise. $1 .Needless to say I was thrilled. Bought 5 bucks more worth of stuff.
Hard to find the markings but found them today on the slide. It’s a 2” Stanley Rule and Level #673 jeweler’s vise. Looks like a part of the Stanley “Jersey“ vise line, a higher end line to the Victor Jersey line they offered at the same time. Found it in the 1914 catalog at Archive.org. Interesting the Stanley were offered in nickel as well. Two pages below showing the Stanley line and corresponding Victor line.
You mean the key?


Some measuring tools and meters use battery for "keep-alive" functions, so they eat batteries when left unused. I have some cheap digital calipers like that, and leave the batteries out when not in use.I wouldn't be surprised if someone wasn't taking the battery out every time they finished using it, and it was lost that way. Doesn't help you find one, but it got me thinking about some of the old meters I find.
"41" is hand tools. "D" is a phonetic classifier. Making Jock's seal or bushing Driver guess a pretty good one. You would then look up the precise part number (1540-920) in the Standard Nomenclature List for drivers, drifts, etc....does anyone know what it is?
Details: 8 inches long, 4lbs, knurled handle. Has "AA17" hand engraved, MTM-298882 and 41-D-1540-920 stamped on it.
I couldn't find Lugnutz's thread on how to read government codes....
Thanks, that sounds like it would work. The working end is mostly finished smooth, but has a nub in the middle from where it was machined. Would a seal/bushing driver still have that? Seals/bushings are doughnut shaped, right? I don't do mechanical stuff so I have no frame of reference for one.S&A, that looks like a seal driver to me. It could also be for driving bushings.
I have an older silver smithing book that shows making a custom hammer out of micarta, with the fabric. The book is from before plastics were readily available.I bought a bakelite (Micarta, with fabric reinforcing) hammer at Boeing Surplus many years ago. It had a large-radius cross-pein on one end, and was obviously used for hand-forming aluminum sheet metal parts.
Nice picks! That carburetor syncronizer was a must-have for the multiple-carburetor sports car crowd back in the day!
Thanks Lug!<snip>
What does the business end look like? Is it flat?
That store is very popular with WWII guys. GJ member tin medic raided it quite a few times when he was at Ft Carson.
Yes. Except the ones with attachments. That's why I asked. I'm back on special drift, maybe. ?Seals/bushings are doughnut shaped, right?