I found this #16 JOBE flare end torque wrench at the flea this morning. It was plugged with some kind of hard but chalky glue at the end, probably sold as a pre-set and not meant to be removed, but I dug it out to reveal the tensioning screw recessed inside that would allow you to adjust the torque setting.
@transam81 posted a #10, 11, and 16 in this thread a few years ago, and I think
@RagTopTA may have a couple or at least one, as well, not reported on this thread, and I'm not sure which # his is.
Lugnutz:
OK, so I'm catching up on ancient posts that I didn't see because I thought this thread had gone quiet. I won't assume that anymore.
I was putting my wife's Easter decorations up in the garage this morning when I happened to look over at my own collection of hand tools that is stored there. My collection is in no way as large as any of yours, and it encompasses only JO and Jo-Line products, tools that my Dad or I took as souvenirs from Jo-Line as it wound down here in Southern California in 1979.
I found a JOBE in that pile, and it looked just like yours. I take Dad out to lunch on Wednesdays, so I stuck the tool in my pocket so that he could feel it (his eyesight and hearing are pretty much gone 6 months from his hundredth birthday, but touch still works). I handed it to him before the food arrived. He turned it over a time or two in his hands, and then brightened. "I know what that is!" he said. He then told me the story I relate below.
America was a country in some turmoil in 1940 and 1941. War was clearly at hand and the likelihood of our getting into it was high. The government was beginning to spend big (well, for the day - I'm not sure that people in 1940 could even conceive of how much we spend today on government) to get ready for the war. The men were getting drafted, unless they volunteered first. Rosie the Riveter began making her appearance.
We've all seen that famous poster of Rosie. Sleeve rolled up, bicep bulging. "We Can Do It!'
Well, we could do it and it was, in fact, done. But some allowances had to be made.
Women in America coming out of the 1930's had not, by and large, ever worked on a car, or a plane, or a boat, or a farm tractor. In short, it was the unusual American woman in this period who had ever picked up a wrench with intent to do what wrenches are typically used for. Thus, manufacturers of planes, trains, and automobiles (OK, ships and boats, too) were faced with a problem as they hired Rosie and her sisters. You could tell Rosie to go tighten a nut, but what did "tighten" mean? How tight was "tight"? Rosie typically had less upper body strength than did the man she freed up to go to war, so how much harder than that guy did she have to pull to "tighten" a nut?
Your JOBE is part of the answer to that question.
JO Manufacturing apparently made a large number of these JOBEs in the period 1941-1944. They were preset to "click" at a specified amount of torque. Dad didn't say whether JOBEs were calibrated at the company or out in the field, but either would have been easy to do with the screw at the bottom of the tool and a calibration scale. A JOBE could be set at any of several preset calibrations depending on what its owner wanted.
Rosie could be handed a JOBE and told to tighten specified nuts with it. She was to pull on the wrench until it clicked. She was to stop pulling when the wrench clicked. Flawless. Thought not required.
Further, the wrenches were difficult to destroy as a practical matter. The tool itself is basically a tube of steel with a flare end at one end and a screw at the other. I have no idea whether a JOBE was waterproof, but it easily could be so long as it was not allowed to rust after it was dunked. The part that tended to wear out the fastest was the spring that controlled the break point of the wrench. The spring would soften after repeated uses so that the wrench would click before the desired torque had been attained. The solution to this was easy. Just tighten the screw a little more, run the tool through the calibration scale again to make sure you had it right and voila! A brand new tool, as a practical matter.
We'll never know how many women used your tool in their effort to make quality war materials for their men in combat, or supporting combat. But that's why JO manufactured it and American industry bought it.
I can only speculate about the glue you found in the end of your tool. Mine does not have that, and I am unaware of JO or Jo-Line ever using glue to seal their products (as opposed to Cerrosafe, which they certainly did use). My speculation would be that someone in the field put that glue in there to keep users from fiddling with the set screw at the bottom of the tool, thereby changing its calibration.
Sorry to be so tardy with this stuff.
Bill