I ask forgiveness of the future collectors of something that is common today...[ ]...Here is a ratchet I modified.
Very nice stubby, larry - and no forgiveness required!
Despite the reverence some of us (including me...) have for vintage tools, not even a maimed collectible is worth crying over. (Okay, maybe a tear or two, if it's rare.

) I think it goes without saying - but maybe needs to be emphasized so as not to offend anyone reading or lurking, that most of us understand that many of the tools that are going to show up here in this thread were modified for expedience, necessity, or efficiency at some time or place or situation in which there was no sense of a tool having a value beyond the utilitarian value, and, that some of us (including me...) have modified a few tools ourselves.
Having said that, now that I'm inching up on 60 instead of 16, and I am aware that our culture has developed a healthy museum-like respect for the tools of our nation's vanishing industrial heritage, that antique and vintage tools clearly and unequivocally
do have a value beyond their former merely utilitarian role, as icons of a bygone era, I don't even use a collectible antique or vintage tool if I can avoid it, and I wouldn't dream of ruining one for any reason when I can buy one or get the job done another way, no matter the cost in time or money. Just my personal feeling.
And, there are good mods, not so bad mods, and ugly, WTF? mods.
I have a P&C 1/4" drive speed handle that probably approximates the dimensions of this modified one. Perhaps the owner wanted the same results without spending any more money.
The PO obviously wanted a 1/4-inch male drive speeder, RJ. And I applauded his cleverness, work, and finished product. I do still wonder what was on the end of the speed handle to begin with, though. It may have been a drive stud that broke, or something else.