Old Man Roger
Well-known member
I know a lot of you guys are vise collectors, but is that vise still worth 200 bucks? I cant imagine it‘s very strong with that kind of a repair?
No the vise as is wasn't worth $200 to me. I didn't want the stand so I sold it to another member. I already knew about the replacement jaw being for sale before I bought it. All together I think I paid about what it's worth combined. I've really wanted a Reed 3C or 4C for a long time. The owner said he found it that way at the scrap yard and used it for many years without problem. I have another Rock Island that the whole dynamic was brazed back onto the beam. The owner used it for 40 years that way in a big fab shop. I'm not saying that I trust it. I will only buy the brazed ones if the price equals less than the remaining parts and/or it's rare.I know a lot of you guys are vise collectors, but is that vise still worth 200 bucks? I cant imagine it‘s very strong with that kind of a repair?
Another **** for 3bay!
I never actually saw the stand in person. @ViceRoy2030 wound up picking it up from the previous owner. He said it was very stout and that it was made in the shop that the vise came from. He's got and anvil and a Wilton C2 on it now. Maybe when he sees this he'll post a current picture of it????@Mr. Wonderful That looked like a nice stand (probably better for a grinder or drill press than a vice). Was it custom or commercially made?
Mike


oh no, not that...anything but thatIt seems a lot longer than 21 days since my last haul. In an effort to calm the DTs, I went to an estate sale that was offering tools today even though there wasn't anything in the pictures that looked especially interesting--but it's been 21 days!! There was nothing remotely interesting--and nothing on the horizon. I may really be forced to go organize the garage...![]()
We started cleaning the house before Christmas, and are trying to keep going, at least a a little at a time. It's definitely helpful when you regain space.
EDIT: Definitely not as fun as buying stuff, of course. But, I read something today that probably won't sit well here in this thread: Whenever you buy something, pick something else in your hoard to get rid of (donate, recycle, trash). If you can follow that rule, you'd never have to worry about junk piles again (although, I don't think that rule should apply to tools, which are always useful, except maybe doubles or triples).
Mike
If you are gonna start cleaning and organizing a garage, can you start with mine?It seems a lot longer than 21 days since my last haul. In an effort to calm the DTs, I went to an estate sale that was offering tools today even though there wasn't anything in the pictures that looked especially interesting--but it's been 21 days!! There was nothing remotely interesting--and nothing on the horizon. I may really be forced to go organize the garage...![]()
Mine was a barn, 2 car garage and a basement workshop. Embarrassment was the least of my problems!I have a two-car garage, but not enough space to work on a toddler's tricycle in there. It's embarrassing and ridiculous.
Mike



The opposite. So-called typewriter font is early and that is very early, prior to the use of the BET'R GRIP trademark, prior to date coding, and prior to alloy. Carbon steel.Danielson 6” crescent wrench. No date codes, so I’m thinking it’s too new for my preferences, but I couldn’t pass it up.
Great news, thanks! Good example of “trust your gut,” and for $2 it lead me right!The opposite. So-called typewriter font is early and that is very early, prior to the use of the BET'R GRIP trademark, prior to date coding, and prior to alloy. Carbon steel.





Whenever you buy something, pick something else in your hoard to get rid of
I love the little hinge on the pipe toilet. It means business.The cars, trucks, bikes and choppers are all Hubley, Tootsie, or Marx. The scale is just too cute, as is the W.C. Fields battery tester, and the smoking pipe shaped like a toilet! I know nothing about the "1910" "T" Rail profile and I don't plan on becoming a glass insulator collector, but they're cool.
I was rained out yesterday and today.
I got all this...
...and this...
...without leaving the house!
It's all from my wife, who picked...wait for it...HER CHILDHOOD HOUSE!
It's a long story. Too long for this thread. I talked about it more in a post on a thread up in 'Free Parking' about wills and executors linked here, but the short story is that her step-dad passed away a month or so ago, she is not the executor, the house is being sold, and after a few weeks of minor squabbling, during which time the executor had already let in a tools guy (aargh!), a glass guy, and a coins guy, she finally agreed to let my wife in to take "personal items".
Her mother, who passed away a few years ago, was an interesting personality. She was very young, and a Go-Go dancer, when she got pregnant. This is a photo of her car!
She raised my wife, an only child, in a boarding house in Philly. She ate dinner in bars. Took her to see Elvis when she was 12 years old. That kind of childhood. My wife had a stupendous collection of 45rpm records in her room, among other treasures. Her mother owned an "antique"/junk/emporium type shop for many years. They shut it down when she was in college and all the stock was moved into the attic of the house. Reluctantly, they also let her go through that stuff.
Here's what she hauled home today.
Check out the bottom of the sign. "ANYTHING OLD"
And all the stuff I showed in the first two pics she grabbed for yours truly!
It's funny how time changes things. When she was a kid, she was surrounded by this stuff and hated it. When I started picking, I could not persuade her to go with me. But she has a really good eye! I won't bore you with all that stuff, which is even less "garage-y" than some of the stuff I already posted, but I'm kinda hoping she got bit by the same bug as me now.
That is awesome.For waiting 4 hours i only walked out with this primitive (maybe handmade) streamlined car picture holder
Snerk. It sure does, literally and figuratively! Mrs. Lugz and I were talking about it last night. Good old fashioned scatalogical humor, probably made by some Pennsylvania Dutch doo-dad craftsman, but from another perspective, it could be seen as a sort of prescient 'Surgeon General's Warning', i.e., if you keep smokin' that sh*t, you're going to die! My dad, a WWII vet, was a pipe smoker. He had a dozen of them in a carousel holder with the tin in the middle. On occasion, when my brothers and I are together for something, we will stay up late outside sipping bourbon and reminiscing, and we each have a few of his old pipes. Next time, I am breaking this one out for a good chuckle.I love the little hinge on the pipe toilet. It means business.
Thanks. I'm no expert but '70 or '71 Fastback, I believe. I've heard about this car our entire life together (since 1983), but never saw a photo until now. My wife and her mom had a rocky relationship and were estranged for many, many years.Lugz, post #107, Toy haul...you **** (and what a COOL picture of that Mustang)
Thanks. Her mom passed away a few years ago. Her step-dad passing late last year is what set this off. This story is a doozy. On the day of his funeral, she got a call from one of her step-dad's best friends (both long time union glaziers), telling her he has had a sealed envelope in the glove compartment of his truck with her name and address on it for five years, given to him by her step-dad, who said to contact her when he died. It was a hand-written will and a key to a strong box! But a cousin who befriended him after he got sick is the executor, and her step-dad's sisters told her it's the third time she has done it. Her step-dad had no children. He and my wife were closer after her mom passed away, ironically. She was always going to get everything and she is still in the "new" will and gets the largest percentage of everything, but that was never really of paramount concern. She wanted them to take their time and let her go through everything first. Her mom was a major picker/junker. Not to get too personal, but I think now that they're both gone it's really hitting her and she is feeling a sentimental attachment to everything. The executor's motivation is to monetize it as quickly as possible. She has an art guy, a books guy, a baseball cards guy, and a dolls woman coming in late next week. My wife is over there again today and tomorrow to try to go through as much stuff as she can, and I'm going to try to go with her next week. She's no expert in any of that and all you can do is trust, and she knows, like we know, they're after the rare items in a box they pay a lump sum for. She just wants to find stuff she remembers her mom talking about or if it looks interesting.Sorry to hear about your mother in law passing and the difficulties with the estate. I have seen that way too many times unfortunately with family members becoming shady/ downright difficult once someone passes. I am glad that she was able to get some good things from the estate.
Marx was big. Tootsie are popular, too, and the Hubley is just as famous and was made locally in Lancaster, PA. There are all kinds of cool toys, but I am only showing the cars and trucks etc as the most GJ related.Some of that stuff is really cool especially the small metal toys. My dad collected a ton of Dinky toys when he was a child and gives them to my son from time to time as gifts. I don’t know much about small toys but I know Marx was king of the toy market back then


'71-'73 body styleThanks. I'm no expert but '70 or '71 Fastback, I believe. I've heard about this car our entire life together (since 1983), but never saw a photo until now. My wife and her mom had a rocky relationship and were estranged for many, many years.
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Thanks!'71-'73 body style