Old Radar
Well-known member
Don, those Powr-Kraft nut drivers cleaned up nicely!
^^^ThisDon, those Powr-Kraft nut drivers cleaned up nicely!
Nice haul, LS!The other stuff I purchased separately at Jacktown this morning.

Correct. Big Hint: The COO of the mfgr (the "J&S" on the flip side) would give the "En" away...Obviously Ford, but not Edsel...




It is a Credo. Not exactly a household name but they may have made the Craftsman ones. I spent the afternoon cleaning up yesterday’s rusty finds.
Have you seen other companies that Stanley OEM'd these for as well? I'd be very interested in knowing who they were.




yay, and a really nice Wright 3/8 screwdriver socket set. Park bicycle tools, pretty complete sets of 3/8 and 1/4” vintage Mac Sabina sockets with extensions, misc Snap On, interesting Proto half moon wrench, some Craftsman,Williams,Allen,Herbrand,Husky, Kobalt, S-K, master Mechanic,Ace, Klein, eskilstuna chisel, Perfect Handle lever missing the handle!, Dunlap Mic in the case, British punch, Blue-Point tubing cutter, Vise Grips.






Those are great for old tool/parts catalogs and reference materials! I like that the hinges never wear out like the plastic covered cardboard type do.Got 5 of these aluminum 3-ring binders for a dollar each.
Here’s two of them after de-stickerification.


Thanks, Mike! The palm of your hand part was obvious. The use of that hook not so much!The Boss is a palm of your hand corn shucker.
I know it’s been a while, but I spotted/left behind this critter yesterday. It adds onboard tool storage. UK and WG design patents with a Hong Kong COO sticker.First thing I hit googling the patent number on that little pistol grip ratcheting bits screwdriver is a piece on Gerald Van Wyngarden's "Progress is Fine but..." vintage tools blogspot from 2014 wondering the same things as me, linked here.
Based on the comments, I guess it was part of a set that either came in a pouch or deluxe wood box. Neither Gerald or his followers located the patent, but like me, all seem to be guessing British Hong Kong.
It's pot metal and plastic, but I kinda like it.![]()


Haha! In defense of the farm boys (slur: heevahavas) all we townie coalcrackers (less of a slur: hunkies) went to school with (granted, mainly dairy farmers), we had plenty of cornfields in Carbon County, Pennsyltucky, but the closest I ever got to them was dodging buckshot while stealing hard late autumn feed corn, which we would put in paper bags and walk around town this time of year and especially on mischief night avoiding the patrol cars throwing handfuls of it at big picture windows! It made a helluva rattle and scared the bejeebus out of whoever was sitting inside that room. It was so dry and hard we easily removed it with our hands.Single hole Sheller, but close enough for you east of the Appalachian mountains.

The sun glare on the plastic shields is deceptive--they're actually quite clear.

Aw shucks, thanks for thinking of me, LS.but I spotted/left behind this critter yesterday.
I watched a few videos. The metal went into your palm and the leather strap went over the back of your hand to help keep it secure. What I was calling a hook is apparently a peg. There is a different but similar device with a hook. The peg juts out near your thumb. You stick the peg through the husk at the bottom, and rip up the length of the ear, breaking the cob off with your other hand and peeling the ear out at the same time. Or something like that. Here is a description...I de-tasseled corn in high school in Indiana but that corn shucker leaves me scratching my head
Thanks, Mike. One of the videos I found was demonstrating a homemade jobbie. It was basically just a piece of wood that had been sharpened to a point on one end, with a leather strap crudely fastened on both ends.Alot of farmer made ones too.
I read that they were obsolete by the 40s. How old do you reckon "THE BOSS" is?Collectible in the midwest

Haha! I've given several. But it's always the times I don't and I get that feeling I should have that are more memorable. Two instances come to mind. When I picked up the B.S.A. WDM20 from the guy in Virginia and his property looked like a secessionist-hermit's arsenal, my buddy - an old Army buddy - and I looked at each other like, 'maybe we should provide our coordinates to our wives,' and just recently, when a flea market acquaintance wanted to show me his collection of stuff at a hangar he rents at a small, local airport.(including the first GOTWA I've given in 25 years)
Haha! There's only three scenarios for this kind of thing. Vintage spy capers, eerie shut-ins, and COVID-19.it'll be on the porch, put the money under the bear.
Now this is the classy way to talk about prices without talking about prices.Stop for a burger to break a $10 so I'll have exact change to go under the bear,
I can see that. Remember when everyone had brass knuckles and nunchucks?When I entered my weapon-adoring pre-teens, I had to have one, because it seemed an ideal eyeball-gouger to my then-fertile imagination,
I do concur with the phenomenon (of suddenly seeing things by the dozen you've supposedly never seen before), but in this case, I doubt it. The reason I picked it up is because I thought it might be a marlinspike palm. I misplaced my dad's years ago and, hoping to replace it, I always have these beady eyes peeled for leather things in that similar shape.I see those husking aids in virtually every antiques store and flea market I attend - maybe three times more common than oyster shucking knives. I think you will, too, now that you’ve acquired one
Nice snag on that marine expeditionary can! I've been hoping to find one for my collection, but I don't think many of them made it to the midwest.It's been a while since we had a jerry can spasm, so I'd like to fill the void with this FB Marketplace pickup.
This 1943 Marine Corps can was made by CONCO.

I didn't google it, Mike. That was just intuition based on it looking kinda sorta like a few antique hoof knives I have. I don't usually do any research before I post my finds, typically only the group shot, here on this thread, using knowledge/experience or intuition to briefly identify them. My MO is to use this thread to only make an initial report. Before I clean and de-rust. Then I do research, if I have to. Then I post details and individual photos on pertinent brand or type threads on the VB.I'm surprised at your "believing" it being farrier tool when goog images show it by searching "the boss tool".