I bet they are stirring rods for some type of chemical or drug manufacturing.



Thanks 3bay, it is difficult finding information on these. I bought them simply because I don't have any.Nce find. I've seen a few sets of those wrenches. Their purpose is pretty much to get at harder to access areas, by turning with a ratchet from farther off. Probably chain driven inside. Snap On offered similar drive tools a long time ago.
That looks like a sawing attachment on one. Pretty neat.
Nce find. I've seen a few sets of those wrenches. Their purpose is pretty much to get at harder to access areas, by turning with a ratchet from farther off. Probably chain driven inside. Snap On offered similar drive tools a long time ago.
That looks like a sawing attachment on one. Pretty neat.
Patten???Dakota was a little company that had the Patten








Those appear to be tappet wrenches based on length and thickness. Bonney usually marked their tools with two letter's to represent the year and month they were made. The years ran from M-Z while the months were covered A-L, with L representing December. The 402 represents 1/2" and 403 represents 9/16".
You can find a lot of info on the rest of your Bonney haul right here
http://alloy-artifacts.org/bonney-forge-tool.html
Those Dakota extension wrenches appear to to be made primarily to engage bolt heads directly, similar to a ratcheting box end wrench, unlike the blue point versions, which are made to use with sockets.
I suspect the adapters are used to attach power tools to drive the extension wrenches; the square is likely for an impact wrench, while the lobed adapters are for use with a power drill.
I think those are pretty cool - would you be interested in a trade for them?
Thanks fretters for the quick find, it seems that I was searching fx when I should have been searching px.




Thanks Hawk. Not sure how you came up with that link though, I need to work on my Google searching skills. I've never seen a hard reamer for cleaning battery terminals but I'll throw it in the box to try it out.The cross with the black knobs is for working on car batteries, post cleaner and battery lug cleaner. The black handled tool looks like a brake retaining clip tool. The other tool is a flanging and crimping tool. http://www.tridon.com.au/products/S...ter/410122/flanging-and-crimping/63141/043100
wkndwarrior29 said:"I've never seen a hard reamer for cleaning battery terminals..."