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A snap-on mystery

reedydrive

Active member
Joined
Nov 26, 2011
Messages
36
Hey everyone. My name is Paul. It's my first time posting in the forum. I'm in Oregon and I'm an avid old-tool enthusiast. I've got an old Snap-on 3/8-drive specialty socket that I can't identify. It appears to be from the "Ferret" series(1938 if I'm reading the date code correctly) but it doesn't corresond to any catalog entries that I've seen. I suspect that it came from a larger set. Check the photos. Any help would be greatly appreciated.

Paul in Oregon
(P.S. This has been puzzling me for 10 years...)
 

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Adam McLaughlin

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 13, 2008
Messages
1,843
Location
Santa Rosa, CA
Early Chevy motors used round headed bolts with a slot for a flat headed screwdriver. The bolts were called stovebolts as they were also used on woodstoves. And that's how Chevy's got the nickname Stovebolts.

Gort

A round headed bolt with a slot is a screw, right?

Hummmm......... I did read in Grapes of Wrath that Tom Joad fixed the Ford connecting rod bearing by replacing the bearing with a piece of belt leather. Thought that this was odd, then when you consider that the compression ratio was something like 5:1, I do suppose that this COULD work....

Adam
 
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