




As always, it comes back to GJa 25th anniversary plier set from Minnesota Tool,
3/16” drive?Here is my haul from two different estate sales on my way home from running the dogs this morning. Highlight of the haul was a mostly complete duro-indestro 1/2-in drive socket set ranging from 7/16 to 13/16. Also included three metric 11, 14 and 17, two 3/16 drive 3/8 and 7/16 sockets, and an extension. In the other fun things was a 15 drawer metal organizer box with a carry handle, full of junk, two wooden boxes with probably Chinese made countersink drills and hole plug cutters and then a US made set of big number stamps. Couple of no name pairs of needle nose pliers just screwdriver with the plastic spiral handle programmable electrical power outlet strip for the yard and Italian made pair of scissors. Also included was a a Malco mini hacksaw with a 1967 patent date, two relatively recent Craftsman ratchets, A German-made VBW pair of water pump type pliers, some collated nails, Mayhew right angle Screwdriver, an HDMI cable, shop vac hose coupler, and a cable cuff. Not shown is a programmable yard power outlet stake
The last fun find was a tiny SS Buck folder, laser etched for an industrial diesel engine distributor that sold out in 2019, but was just across the freeway from my office. Removing some rusty bits lightened the etch a bit.
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Love the xcelite set. You ****.1/8" hex drivers.
I spent (because it was 1/2 off day) $30 for all of that. Some is a bit rusty, but everything is cleaning up nicely. Best part? It is going on again next weekend!




I cleverly found a short-cut that cut my normal drive time from about twenty minutes down to forty-five--and almost all on dirt and gravel!

It's all about the experience, man! 45 minutes on twisty dirt vs. 20 on a 2-lane state highway... I know where I belong.New math, right?![]()
Kinda like hand tool woodworking (or *** for some), the idea is to enjoy the process of getting there.It's all about the experience, man! 45 minutes on twisty dirt vs. 20 on a 2-lane state highway... I know where I belong.
And where you end up only matters if you care!Kinda like hand tool woodworking (or *** for some), the idea is to enjoy the process of getting there.


So this freebie saga, which went active last December, after a years-long hibernation, has ground to a halt, partly because the property has now passed to the third party, partly because I broke two of my damned toes, but not before I picked up the second four-drawer steel cabinet.Free today, from a friend.
MrsLS&I returned to my work friend’s barn this morning, intending to pick up a second 4-drawer cabinet, but it is full to the gills with stuff I don’t want and still wedged into a corner that will make extraction difficult, though I removed some of the obstructing trash today.
Plus, the bottom drawer is frozen with rust. In fact, the bottom four inches of it is rusted into a decayed carpet from what looks like decades of water damage. I let that simmer on the back burner, and picked up a dozen and a half vintage wood shipping crates for summer selling and four two-drawer file cabinets for a storage project I have in mind.
The two blue ones are in good shape, but the gray and putty ones are pretty rusted out at the bottom, as they were sitting in the same wet location as the larger cabinet. I left one two-drawer behind because it was much shallower and the drawers tip out when fully open. I also left a four-drawer file cabinet behind for now, though I may be able to use it in my project if I cut it down (also rusted out at bottom).
MrsLS took a couple salt-fired ceramic coin banks from a no-longer-in-business pottery maker we used to patronize, a couple split-wood baskets (like Longaberger), and a couple handfuls of matchbooks my friend offered.












So this freebie saga, which went active last December, after a years-long hibernation, has ground to a halt, partly because the property has now passed to the third party, partly because I broke two of my damned toes, but not before I picked up the second four-drawer steel cabinet.
I emptied and got it loose from the batshit-saturated carpet that it was rusted into with the idea of cutting it down to a three-drawer cabinet, but then the bottom drawer, which had been riusted in place, suddenly came loose. The rust that ran two to four inches up from the bottom had spared the glides, and eaten one and two-halves of the edge where the base was spot welded to the vertical sides. Hmm, salvageable?
Maybe. I started by angle-grinding the seam where daylight was already peeking through,
harvested and notched (to avoid an internal support) a corner off a similarly-rusted two-drawer file cabinet with ****** glides.
Then I slipped the patch into the four-drawer.
Then some awkward drilling (because the sheet steel on the inside deflected so much, I managed to wedge it with a screwdriver and putty knife) pop-rivets, and a not-color-matched sprayover.
Et voilà, there were two functional, if not pretty, 25d30w42h cabinets.![]()
Thx BMW!Outlaw, Klein sold Champion drivers back in the teens.
Yeah, thanks! Those Champion screwdrivers are featured on the Wood Handle SD thread, and get a lot of interest on the Winchester thread. That they are shown in the 1915 Klein catalog (p44) pushes cat references back a decade (spotted in the Union Hdwr cat of 1926). But the first relevant patent is from the 1870s, so I don’t think we’ve got the original manufacturer pinned down yet.Outlaw, Klein sold Champion drivers back in the teens.
I have days like that....a day of no power at work!
a day of no power at work!
I have days like that....
