The vendor is a regular. You want me to grab it for you if it's there today or next week? The shipping will run you some dough (I'm at 07704 if you want to do some parcel post by weight guesstimating...), but he only wanted $10 for it.That's it. Identical
Like doing a 20-year hitch with the Army and going to work for the Post Office.Western and Bell were so closely aligned during that period that his time at Western accrued to his time at Bell and counted toward retirement.
Got it!Thanks grab it and we can work payment.
Cooter Brown:
I'm not following the "but" on your 1929 Klein linesman pliers. The "Bell System" name and logo was trademarked in 1921.
I am a little surprised by the Lindstrom needle nose. I didn't know that Bell was buying tools made outside the U.S. I'm not a Bell System tools/toolkit expert. I wish we had one on this thread. I don't ever recall seeing tools with a foreign COO before. How old do you think they are? What does that "Bell System" stamp look like?
Gotcha.I was just pointing out that though the Kleins are a common tool, this example is quite old.
A lightbulb just went on. I wonder if they were for the international arm of the Bell System, and made it back to the US somehow.Cooter Brown said:The Lindstroms are the only ones I've seen, and in my "collection" the only tool of foreign manufacture with the Bell System stamp.
Gotcha.
A lightbulb just went on. I wonder if they were for the international arm of the Bell System, and made it back to the US somehow.
The good thing about Jeff's collection is that it covers the later vintage stuff (clearly a few generations older than modern, but not early), if that makes sense. I don't even know if this is true, but he seems to have a lot of Bell System E stuff, and many of the pliers handles are Plasti-Dipped or rubberized, which has always led me to believe their modeling scheme may have been chronological in alphabetic order, since the oldest stuff is always Bell System A or B. 
Classic!I used to know and I wasn't interested in collecting anything but a paycheck.
Hey that's me! Old video, will have to update it.
Nice fast moving video. Please give us an update.'Zackly! Love it. It's like the Blair Witch Project (found video footage) approach of tool documentaries!You’re like ehh, another one of these, another one of these, another one of these things.Nice fast moving video.
Have you experienced any unexplained bouts of short term memory loss since then? Migraines? Nausea? Vertigo? Psoriasis? Infertility?3baygarage said:It was full of black liquid, the goo used to make the handle...[ ]... Had to be decades.

Never seen it before. I wonder what the various openings were for. EDIT: We might have to put southalabama Senior on this case.Do you or anyone else collect these?
It was a good couple drops in there.Wasn't doubting that, Jeff, just explaining why they seemed a little odd to me. Thanks!I have an older pair without notches in my collection, but they are snips just the same!
'Zackly....brass clip and exposed rivets.
Thanks for posting, AI, but just for your situational awareness, that's not true. Read through the thread and you will see plenty of tools marked with the OEM's brand and the BELL SYSTEM marking.Agree that Bell bought big lots of tools from a manufacturer but none were marked except for the Bell Systems stamping...