bmwrd0
Well-known member
I never knew why people would use a penny to bridge a fuse...
A .22LR works so much better!
A .22LR works so much better!
Thanks for the tip on that! I never could find out how you know if cylinders are rentals or owned. Neck is clean on the oxy, thank goodness. Where would a mark be on the acetylene?If the bottles have a company name (usually forged or cast into the surface) on the ring surface below the valve, they are rental tanks. That ring is unmarked on private bottles except for an occasional hand stamping.
If they are private bottles, you **** for that haul!


















And those old fuses were terrifying...
Had a pretty good day.
8 ft werner yellow fiberglass stepladder (like new) : $25
6" no-name vise (wing bang industries?): $15
397 cu ft "jumbo" acetylene tank (full "owner" bottle): $40
4 gallon benchtop liquid safety cabinet (lock needs repair): $5
Not pictured - ancient Gasboy piston lever fuel pump - missing hose: $1
The 6 items at the bottom of the picture are cleco's for sheet metal work. You need a pair of cleco pliers to use them



Anything Klein or Channellock!If there's anything in particular you're looking for, I'll keep an eye out for you.
You got it Jeff. I'll snag whatever I see for youAnything Klein or Channellock!
@mikeinri I have no reason to expect that silly amount of money, but will enjoy whatever I get......






Good eye/instinct! Congrats. I hope a serious collector digs deep for it!The winner of the day though was "Rip van Winkle" dating from 1971.
Nice find. Wartime correct. I find the early Bakelite handles to be much more common. And I vote for "leave".Alemite 5585 grease gun in the cosmoline. Was planning to remove that, but may leave it.
On Friday Pep the dog and I drove far too far, to look at far too gone antiques, that were far too high priced for the condition they were in. Which was too bad, as there were a good half dozen barristers book cases, vintage barber benches, and other interesting things. But it looked like they had been stored outside under a carport for too long, and he had too much of a memory of what he paid however many years ago.
So it goes.
But I made a couple stops along the way there and back, and picked up the following:
vintage bicycle wrench, early Lectrolite, Snap-on linesmen dykes, Goodell Pratt push drill, and wartime Bonney ratchet (which needs a dip in Evaporust.) Also included was a large sheet of clear Plexiglass I need for a project. $17.25
Today, Saturday, Pep the dog and I went to four sales, two of which were great, two of which were nothing to write home about. The first sale was for a heavy truck mechanic that passed suddenly, and his children knew he would want to have a pragmatic sale:
There was a ton of stuff there, and a ton of people, so I only picked up a few things, Proto dead blow hammer, Proto socket rail (metric), Armstrong brace, and Chevron driver (looks kinda familiar, no?) $15 total.
Then we hit a family run farm sale, were I found the following:
Of course I picked up this tool box, and after looking around, I found some Keen Kuter tapet wrenches, a Craftsman mt0 chuck, and a unknown rotohead hex drive ratchet.
Also, when paying the man, I spotted a few old radios, and when I asked about them he gave such a ridiculously low price (of course, the one I was really interested in had sold over the phone) that I picked this up this:
A 1924 WorkRite Super Hetrodyne Neutrodne Reflex tube radio. And I have never seen a radio of this vintage with this clean of internals:
I don't think it has been opened or touched, so, no, I wasn't going to pass it up! And I paid 1/4 of what they cost in '24! So, $30 for all of that.
But I couldn't shake the feeling that there was more to the first stop I made, so I went back up the hill. And I think I made the right call.
I started out asking the price of a toolbox I was interested in, and they made a very sweet deal on it, and then I took another look around:
Some Morse thread cutters, Starrett punches in wooden tube, Williams superatchet, two Starrett drill gauges in original envelopes, and a Proto brass hammer. Oh, the toolbox I asked about? The top box here, but they assumed I was asking about the whole stack, so I got the Kennedy roller throw
Pretty sure that roto head ratchet is a Peerless.On Friday Pep the dog and I drove far too far, to look at far too gone antiques, that were far too high priced for the condition they were in. Which was too bad, as there were a good half dozen barristers book cases, vintage barber benches, and other interesting things. But it looked like they had been stored outside under a carport for too long, and he had too much of a memory of what he paid however many years ago.
So it goes.
But I made a couple stops along the way there and back, and picked up the following:
vintage bicycle wrench, early Lectrolite, Snap-on linesmen dykes, Goodell Pratt push drill, and wartime Bonney ratchet (which needs a dip in Evaporust.) Also included was a large sheet of clear Plexiglass I need for a project. $17.25
Today, Saturday, Pep the dog and I went to four sales, two of which were great, two of which were nothing to write home about. The first sale was for a heavy truck mechanic that passed suddenly, and his children knew he would want to have a pragmatic sale:
There was a ton of stuff there, and a ton of people, so I only picked up a few things, Proto dead blow hammer, Proto socket rail (metric), Armstrong brace, and Chevron driver (looks kinda familiar, no?) $15 total.
Then we hit a family run farm sale, were I found the following:
Of course I picked up this tool box, and after looking around, I found some Keen Kuter tapet wrenches, a Craftsman mt0 chuck, and a unknown rotohead hex drive ratchet.
Also, when paying the man, I spotted a few old radios, and when I asked about them he gave such a ridiculously low price (of course, the one I was really interested in had sold over the phone) that I picked this up this:
A 1924 WorkRite Super Hetrodyne Neutrodne Reflex tube radio. And I have never seen a radio of this vintage with this clean of internals:
I don't think it has been opened or touched, so, no, I wasn't going to pass it up! And I paid 1/4 of what they cost in '24! So, $30 for all of that.
But I couldn't shake the feeling that there was more to the first stop I made, so I went back up the hill. And I think I made the right call.
I started out asking the price of a toolbox I was interested in, and they made a very sweet deal on it, and then I took another look around:
Some Morse thread cutters, Starrett punches in wooden tube, Williams superatchet, two Starrett drill gauges in original envelopes, and a Proto brass hammer. Oh, the toolbox I asked about? The top box here, but they assumed I was asking about the whole stack, so I got the Kennedy roller thrown in also:
$25 for all of that.
tks, but one could argue the acetylene as best of my day.I'll say... I was home alone as a teenager once, managed to blow a fuse while vacuuming with the stereo cranked up as loud as it would go. When I went to change it, my thumb got caught between the fuse and the socket, and my entire arm started shaking spontaneously. Scared the daylights out of me.
"Pretty good???" You **** for the ladder and flammables cabinet, at a minimum!
Mike

On Friday Pep the dog and I drove far too far, to look at far too gone antiques, that were far too high priced for the condition they were in. Which was too bad, as there were a good half dozen barristers book cases, vintage barber benches, and other interesting things. But it looked like they had been stored outside under a carport for too long, and he had too much of a memory of what he paid however many years ago.
So it goes.
But I made a couple stops along the way there and back, and picked up the following:
vintage bicycle wrench, early Lectrolite, Snap-on linesmen dykes, Goodell Pratt push drill, and wartime Bonney ratchet (which needs a dip in Evaporust.) Also included was a large sheet of clear Plexiglass I need for a project. $17.25
Today, Saturday, Pep the dog and I went to four sales, two of which were great, two of which were nothing to write home about. The first sale was for a heavy truck mechanic that passed suddenly, and his children knew he would want to have a pragmatic sale:
There was a ton of stuff there, and a ton of people, so I only picked up a few things, Proto dead blow hammer, Proto socket rail (metric), Armstrong brace, and Chevron driver (looks kinda familiar, no?) $15 total.
Then we hit a family run farm sale, were I found the following:
Of course I picked up this tool box, and after looking around, I found some Keen Kuter tapet wrenches, a Craftsman mt0 chuck, and a unknown rotohead hex drive ratchet.
Also, when paying the man, I spotted a few old radios, and when I asked about them he gave such a ridiculously low price (of course, the one I was really interested in had sold over the phone) that I picked this up this:
A 1924 WorkRite Super Hetrodyne Neutrodne Reflex tube radio. And I have never seen a radio of this vintage with this clean of internals:
I don't think it has been opened or touched, so, no, I wasn't going to pass it up! And I paid 1/4 of what they cost in '24! So, $30 for all of that.
But I couldn't shake the feeling that there was more to the first stop I made, so I went back up the hill. And I think I made the right call.
I started out asking the price of a toolbox I was interested in, and they made a very sweet deal on it, and then I took another look around:
Some Morse thread cutters, Starrett punches in wooden tube, Williams superatchet, two Starrett drill gauges in original envelopes, and a Proto brass hammer. Oh, the toolbox I asked about? The top box here, but they assumed I was asking about the whole stack, so I got the Kennedy roller thrown in also:
$25 for all of that.
Great haul. Victor regs alone are worth at least that much.Picked up this little score of stuff yesterday and fit it all in my MK4 Jetta lol. I don’t know much about the tank stamps etc. to know if they’re still within date, but oxy has ~1500 psi in it and haven’t checked the acetylene. Victor regulators (VTS 400 D and VTS 410 A) and torch (CA1050 torch and 315 body) and all on a nice sturdy home built cart. Does need new hoses and flashback arrestors. 2’ square for size reference. Neat little craftsman toolbox and some USA c clamps and some hammers and puller. $110 for everything, so I felt pretty good about it!
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Private Lugnutz said:"...an "S" wrench that is a first for me, but others, including LesserSon and 4.c, have several, and are attributing to Eberhard..."
DudeOn Friday Pep the dog and I drove far too far, to look at far too gone antiques, that were far too high priced for the condition they were in. Which was too bad, as there were a good half dozen barristers book cases, vintage barber benches, and other interesting things. But it looked like they had been stored outside under a carport for too long, and he had too much of a memory of what he paid however many years ago.
So it goes.
But I made a couple stops along the way there and back, and picked up the following:
vintage bicycle wrench, early Lectrolite, Snap-on linesmen dykes, Goodell Pratt push drill, and wartime Bonney ratchet (which needs a dip in Evaporust.) Also included was a large sheet of clear Plexiglass I need for a project. $17.25
Today, Saturday, Pep the dog and I went to four sales, two of which were great, two of which were nothing to write home about. The first sale was for a heavy truck mechanic that passed suddenly, and his children knew he would want to have a pragmatic sale:
There was a ton of stuff there, and a ton of people, so I only picked up a few things, Proto dead blow hammer, Proto socket rail (metric), Armstrong brace, and Chevron driver (looks kinda familiar, no?) $15 total.
Then we hit a family run farm sale, were I found the following:
Of course I picked up this tool box, and after looking around, I found some Keen Kuter tapet wrenches, a Craftsman mt0 chuck, and a unknown rotohead hex drive ratchet.
Also, when paying the man, I spotted a few old radios, and when I asked about them he gave such a ridiculously low price (of course, the one I was really interested in had sold over the phone) that I picked this up this:
A 1924 WorkRite Super Hetrodyne Neutrodne Reflex tube radio. And I have never seen a radio of this vintage with this clean of internals:
I don't think it has been opened or touched, so, no, I wasn't going to pass it up! And I paid 1/4 of what they cost in '24! So, $30 for all of that.
But I couldn't shake the feeling that there was more to the first stop I made, so I went back up the hill. And I think I made the right call.
I started out asking the price of a toolbox I was interested in, and they made a very sweet deal on it, and then I took another look around:
Some Morse thread cutters, Starrett punches in wooden tube, Williams superatchet, two Starrett drill gauges in original envelopes, and a Proto brass hammer. Oh, the toolbox I asked about? The top box here, but they assumed I was asking about the whole stack, so I got the Kennedy roller thrown in also:
$25 for all of that.
Yes. I always post photos in an appropriate Vintage Board thread after clean-up. Look for them soon.That IS a "circle E" on that unit, correct?
I also got the craftsman spinner handle for $2.00 believe it or not. The little vise hasn't any name or numbers, but look kinda similar to a Stanley I have.I had a decent day yesterday, got some more S K Wayne sockets to fill out my set. A few Snap On wrenches and a couple of other goodies.


Zip code places it after 1963. I did find this in the 60A catalog (1982), Socket set was top of pg 4. Priced at either 39.92 or 44.46 (not sure what the SLR means on the second listing).This weeks haul....
Duro-Indestro 16pc set #7608. I'm guessing it was near the end of their existence as its odd they used foil stickers on the a couple of the sockets as well as the oddballish font and graphics on the placard.



Very early, but 2nd generation. Mine is still the only one I've ever seen with a plain brass plate, and I believe it's 1st generation (1925), so, after that. But early. Nice find.Lugs can probably say how old the Wiggy, is.