Wow, nice stuff. 2 hours from me. Doubt I can make it, but Thanks!
Wow, nice stuff. 2 hours from me. Doubt I can make it, but Thanks!

The other turns out (after scraping with a putty knife) to be a 1920s “Plain” No2 (tooth-spacing, not model number).
ca1956 Whitney No5 metal punch set missing female 9/32 die - if it is up to the task, I will pair up a few orphaned handsaw blades with handles
Nice haul Don! That's a good friend you've got! Are those Starrett squares? Look forward to seeing and hearing more on those braces after you clean them up.
The square parts are Starrett but the attached rules aren’t. The little caliper is General. Here are some pictures after cleaning.Don, you definitely ****! Or maybe your buddy *****, either way...
I am hoping you will post another pic or two of those calipers once they're out of the evaporust.







Don’t guess you would want to get rid of that long Craftsman screwdriver would you? I don’t have one like that in the collection yet.

Spoke pointer is the common name. Can be used to reduce the tip so it will fit in a hollow auger, or just to put a point on something.
Thank you for the tip!Your Punch is much more capable with a bench mount. I've got mine attached to a 2x4 that I toss in my vise, and it works much easier. I may have a spare die, can look later, but mine is a #5Jr. I bought a new set of dies I had so many pieces missing.

Thanks. I knew one of you saw dust makers would help me out. Are they common? Have you seen one in person before? This one is late 1800s I'm guessing. Havent tracked down mfgr yet. I'll post photos later. Probably hand planes thread. Unless I'm wrong, we don't really have a catch-all thread for woodworking tools.Spoke pointer is the common name.

Sometimes I think y'all're just trying to push my buttons on purpose! It's in the Thread Index in the Stickie!!!Edit: I can't find the S-K tool thread. Can anyone provide a link?
Are they common? Have you seen one in person before? This one is late 1800s I'm guessing. Havent tracked down mfgr yet. I'll post photos later. Probably hand planes thread. Unless I'm wrong, we don't really have a catch-all thread for woodworking tools.
The mfgr's marking is very legible. I just haven't researched it yet.With better pix I can probably decipher a mfg for you.
What gauge is that shade roller ? Did you cut a piece off and measure?You meant to direct this at Outlaw. I have no opinion in 'The Great Roll Shade Debate' of 2021, I'm only an innocent bystander, reading along with glee, and maybe a little hope (there are encouraging signs!) that it finally replaces the sarcastic echoes of 'The Great Jerry Can Debate' of 2018.![]()
Hee hee. Troublemaker.What gauge is that shade roller ?
Spoke pointers aren't really rare, but they aren't particularly common either. I also have two I've picked up over the years, and perhaps passed on a few really trashed, overpriced or badly "fixed" ones too.Are they common? Have you seen one in person before?




That’s very pretty Lugz - reminds me of the Liberty Bell, LOL.Thanks, P. I couldn't resist the marking. I'll just post it here.

Yup, I was getting the same and did not try any other sources.Googling Bates Manufacturing gets me a bunch of stuff from a company and the College in Lewiston Maine, not Philly
That's the second set I have seen here over the years, but I forget who found the first and when. (EDIT: Scratch that. It was UNAIU! Haha) That's the same Welsh as the famous safety glasses (see Pic 1), if you didn't know it. The fed spec and the black oxide are strong WWII indictors, and Welsh did have wartime contracts (see Pic 4), for glasses and "tools" (likely the jewelers' screwdrivers), but they could be immediate postwar into KW, too. The 1944 Navy ASO Class 41 supplement for jewelers' tools shows a 3- and 5-pc set (see Pic 3)....and some military jewelers screwdrivers. The drivers are interesting as they are not the standard chrome or nickel, but black oxide.
On mine, it's 41-S-1325UNAIU/Beemer: What is the stock number? I can't read either one.
Hahaha. It ***** getting old. Thanks for the reminder.On mine, it's 41-S-1325
We've done some research on the G503 already HERE.
Yes, I suspect they re-used old stock typeset. Seems early for relaxing the restriction.Interesting that the '44 Navy ASO Class 41 supplement specs the 5 piece set as "chrome plated".
No matter which wood it was, when you yank one off the window and it hits your sister in the head, the decibel level and amount of drama is well beyond description.On the shade rollers, Fir, Pine, and Beech were popular (not Poplar!) and all were of similar "gauge."

I have a draft hard copy from 1989 and it simply cites "spokepoint" in the 'Types of Tools' column. Either that's all they ever made, or it's all that has ever been found/reported.I then dug into the DAT*, and here is what they have for Bates in Philly "They made a spoke pointer", a bit underwhelming.
I have a draft hard copy from 1989 and it simply cites "spokepoint" in the 'Types of Tools' column. Either that's all they ever made, or it's all that has ever been found/reported.