To manually safety wire. ( to get into tighter places that safety wire pliers can't )
To manually safety wire. ( to get into tighter places that safety wire pliers can't )

Sorry, just caught this question.CT, that's an interesting variant of the hand crank grinder. I wonder if it had a specific use case, and if the small wheel was intended?.

Caught this thread but was too embarrassed to reply as I realized that when I took apart the plane I had lost the screw that attaches the chip-breaker to the bladeNever heard of a DHP plane before, sounds interesting, got to read more.
Thanks for sharing. You should add it to the hand plane thread on the vintage board.







cmccuist1 gets a **** from me!



....


Today's flea haul....
First up is a 1/4" dr. set of Craftsman metric sockets on a socket rail.
These sockets are all U.S.A. made - 4,5,8,9,11,12,13mm sockets are -EE- code and the 5.5,6,7,10mm are -G1- code.
Note the color difference in the chrome plating between the 2 codes!
I gave $6 for the set....
Next up is a nice beginner/student 4/4 (full size) violin with a nice padded case with a bow and a few accessories (extra bridge, extra chin rest, and a shoulder rest)
It's a Mendini MV200 brand and sells on Amazon (complete with case and acc. for $110)
I gave $25 (needs a G string)....
I play guitar, banjo, mandolin but I can't play a fiddle.......I'll probably donate this to a friend of mine for her charity fund drive.
If you plan to complete the blue box S-K set, I can probably help you out with missing sockets. Just let me know which ones you need.Here is a stack that 4 of us picked up from the Alameda Point Antiques Faire, a first Sunday of every month event that has been squashed or cancelled by the nasty weather out here the last four months. A group of us have been meeting up 2-3x per year for over 15 years, with the goal to arrive early, and grab the goodies from those who don't know what they have (maybe 1/4 of the vendors). The sale has a formal line up, the closer to the front you are, generally the longer you've been going. Some people kept their old spaces for years, some now seem to be moving a bit. The back of the sale is usually the newbies, the once a year, or once in a lifetime sale types. We try to head there first, but being newbies, they often aren't good at getting set up in a hurry. We pay for early admission (6am), and 7 or so years ago, 90% were setup by then. Now its more like 50-60%. So we go back and repeat the back to see what we missed. Not a bargain hunters delight, but often find harder to acquire tools that one is lusting after.
My stuff is mostly left, so we'll start at the right and talk briefly about the other scores. The big toolbox was an unknown wooden box, my buddy negotiated down to $40, empty, but he had to empty a fed dozen pounds of bits and bobs of a former machinists life, that someone had to use a crowbar to open. The top of the panel is broken, and at least 3 drawers were trashed. But as he finally got all the **** off the bottom drawer, including duct tape, he saw the front, and it had a big Starrett badge. He was even happier. The stone on top is a translucent Arkansas, in near new shape, for $10. The three planes to the left were re assembled from a pile of bits on the table, a few wedges came out in transit, so getting the right front nicker and wedge took a few minutes. The bigger Crescent wrench has two holes in the handle, looks like burned with a torch. The three blacksmith taps, swan neck mortise chisel, and the compass plane were items I had bought for others, and made the swap here.
Here is my haul, spread out a little easier to view.
Starting top left and going CCW:
Davis Inclinometer with an 1890s patent date (120 years old) has a 1" chunk missing out of the back rail, and a corner chipped off, but the price reflected that damage. A Sandusky 99 1/2" groove plane, to be used for drawer and box bottoms, a Shinwa protractor for a good price from a guy with lots of expensive goodies, and a leather heel shave that may get repurposed into a woodworking tool. The compound nipper, brand unknown, look sort of Bernard ish, will take a little while to get the rust off to read who made it. The tapered shaft is a ring sizer, with lots of potential as an alignment tool or circular shape restorer. The US made Vise-Grip 8"?, & 1st Starrett divider came along cheap for $6 for all three. The next few, Starrett outside calipers x2 (left is a thread caliper), and General depth gauge, (1/2" 7/8" open) HD Smith perfect handle wrench in decent shape, & SK box in decent shape w miscellaneous brands of sockets, did not come cheap, but were realistically priced. The indicator snug doesn't match the era of most of the others I own, but came at a reasonable price. Missing the class photo was a 18" long brace driven bell hangers bit, maybe 3/8" diameter, still rolling around in the truck somewhere.

@cmccuist1 ***** big time.Wow, that's an understatement!!! Massive suckage there!
There was a solid carbide drill bit in there, flow through, about 12” long, 14.5mm that I looked up and that thing retails for $550! Don’t even know what that’s used for.Survey says: @cmccuist1 *****!
Your mission is to find someone that does know what it is used for and extract $200 from their wallet and fund your next shopping adventure.There was a solid carbide drill bit in there, flow through, about 12” long, 14.5mm that I looked up and that thing retails for $550! Don’t even know what that’s used for.
Indeed. A while back I found a group of rare Stanley planes, and I just sold one of them for a bit more than I paid for it (8X) and that went to fund one of my other hobbies, airguns. It keeps bills down, the wife happy, and me very happy!Your mission is to find someone that does know what it is used for and extract $200 from their wallet and fund your next shopping adventure.



@alinc100 Your ebay listing "Craftsman Professional Full Polish Flare Nut Wrench Set 942012" made me stop and think if the Polish differentiate between full vs partial flare nut wrenchesOne sale today in a neighborhood near work, so of course ,we cut out early and shopped a bit.
Lots of import,Harbor Freight and rust but managed to sift out a few bits.
Craftsman Combo Wrenches
24mm, 13mm, 10mm, 7/16", 3/8", 11/32''
Craftsman line wrenches 3/8"x7/16" & 1/2" x 9/16"
PowrKraft 11/16" combo
Armstrong 9/16" x 5/8" DBE
Armstrong 13mm ratcheting DBE
1/2" Chrom Vanadium combo
Vise Grip Quick Clamp
Williams ST-1236 1-1/8" 12 pt shallow 1/2'' dr socket
PowrKraft 9/16" ,12 point shallow 1/2" dr socket
I also sold and shipped a Kennedy Cantilever box and the Craftsman All-in-one screwdriver from yesterday and replenished some




12” Bahco adjustable wrench.

Where is the fun in that when your hands can smell like evaporust the rest of the day?Saved me so much time and stress..lol Love mine.
For me it’s dropped nuts and bolts. My left hand is a little less coordinated since the chainsaw accident..lolWhere is the fun in that when your hands can smell like evaporust the rest of the day?

Nice plomb pliers!The local flea market was pretty slow last Sunday. Perhaps some vendors went to the big Portland Swap Meet instead.
$7.00 total, five of which was for the small air compressor:
Thomas 12V air compressor for a project on my road grader.
Plomb USA 268 lineman's pliers (Danielson pattern handles)
Bonney B20 battery pliers
P&C 1196 ratcheting DBE 5/8 x 3/4
quite a find...Speaking of swap meets..... I hit up the big one here in Portland and bought quite a bit. Some is for my personal plomb/proto/ craftsman collection and some of it was just stupid cheap so I bought it to clean and cherry pick the best pieces and then will resell the rest. Literally the best booth we ( myself, BMWRDO, MR.X , RIleysan and Oregon Rock Crusher) hit was pricing tools by the lb. I filled a 5 gallon bucket with proto(la era to modern era) , plomb, snap on, craftsman for $65 and that also included the Hip Roof Crown top box.
Highlights of my finds
-** hard to find GMTK wrench #723 found at the scrapper booth (barcalo buffalo doe wrench)**
- plomb #237 pliers
-various misc sockets/extensions to fill holes in my sets and proto tool boards
-Mobil brand hydraulic brake fluid can for $3
- all the craftsman professional screwdrivers pictured for $5
-craftsman c97 ratchet for $5 (snap on made)
-got my son a ww2 front seam M1 helmet shell for $10. Needs chin straps but is in good shape overall.
-cadmium plated Husky/new britain Fors patent 1/2 drive ratchet
-various Blackhawk bits from BMW including a baldie ratchet and various sockets and a proto torque wrench in yellow box.
I will post pictures in the respective threads once everything is cleaned up. Some of this is pretty clean and some of it makes you feel like you could get tetanus just from looking at it.
Thanks. I’m sorting and clean stuff this weekend! It’s funquite a find...
I haven't tested it yet. It appears that the pump discharges directly to a tank/reservoir and also has that electric solenoid valve. The seller said it came off an air seat installed in a truck that had hydraulic brakes, hence no air system. I think the pump just charged a tank and shut off at 120 psi, The valve then was back-fed from the tank, and the compressor cuts in if the pressure drops to a set amount.I agree Nice find on the Plvmb Plies Prov!
Looks like the compressor is regulated? is it marked or have you tested?

