crguy
Well-known member
It may have. I just wish he'd concentrated on the odd wrenches rather than the most common one. I could have cleaned up.7 thousand wrenches instead of 7 thousand beers worked out better for him I'm sure![]()
It may have. I just wish he'd concentrated on the odd wrenches rather than the most common one. I could have cleaned up.7 thousand wrenches instead of 7 thousand beers worked out better for him I'm sure![]()
I've seen people list a baby Coes that was anywhere from 4"-6". Does this count as a baby Coes? This one is stamped A.G. Coes with the odd stamp symbol patented in 1871.It may have. I just wish he'd concentrated on the odd wrenches rather than the most common one. I could have cleaned up.
Nope, that's not a baby. They are 4 3/4" with small variations.I've seen people list a baby Coes that was anywhere from 4"-6". Does this count as a baby Coes? This one is stamped A.G. Coes with the odd stamp symbol patented in 1871.
Well, he's still dead either way.7 thousand wrenches instead of 7 thousand beers worked out better for him I'm sure![]()
????curious... my guess would be something like a leatherworker's stamp maybe?
I think he is referring to the star stamps on the wrench in #87.????
There's no such thing as an ugly "Baby" (Coes, that is).A little 4-3/4” Coes. Not the prettiest example...
Herb Page probably does!Does anyone know the year range that this size was available?
I see it. I don't remember seeing that before or I would've just linked it. Thanks for letting me know. (Tangentially, a good reminder to myself to always search IA, not just ITCL, because everything on ITCL is on IA, but not vice versa.) I think you have a pretty good answer without seeking out the Herb Page article. Looks like they made a 4-incher from at least 1877 (from the Cope reference) through at least 1891 (from IA). There are none included in the 1906 catalog. Smallest is 6".I see archive.org has an 1891 hardware catalog excerpt of Coes. Lists a 4" knife handle
It definitely is a different wrench. Your wrench has the 1859 patent marking and the early handle. There was an intermediate design, before they went full "Knife-Handle" (i.e., "Perfect Handle"), with two steel tongues. Maybe something about the early 4-incher and the later 4-incher affected the capacity.Says it opens 1/2". Hmmm.
Error(s)?
Different wrench?
Perfect reason to buy a tool. No shame there.Hey, I don't think I have one that small!".
I ran across this post about your baby Coes & thought I'd chime in. Basically because I recently acquired a baby Coes (pics below). I haven't received it yet, but the gentleman I bought it from says it measures 5 1/8" OAL. It's also stamped COES in all caps on the opposite side of the patent date. Is this an odd overall length for a baby Coes?Yes, if it's unusual. I just found a FOAK for me. The marking is worn, but these all steel handle beauties were patented (689,692), explicitly for the all steel handle, on December 24, 1901. It's a 6-incher.
There are definitely smaller examples. 3Bay and I were discussing them upthread, posts #93 - 96, with external references, if you want to go through them.Is this an odd overall length for a baby Coes?
What I've always heard referred to as a Baby Coes is the ones with wood handles that are about 4 3/4", not ones like yours.I ran across this post about your baby Coes & thought I'd chime in. Basically because I recently acquired a baby Coes (pics below). I haven't received it yet, but the gentleman I bought it from says it measures 5 1/8" OAL. It's also stamped COES in all caps on the opposite side of the patent date. Is this an odd overall length for a baby Coes?
I know the early wooden handle examples are 4 3/4" or 4 5/8". I've read that anything that was around 5" or less falls into the baby Coes category. Mine has the same 15/16" opening as the older wooden handle ones. Do we know if the December 24, 1901 patent (steel handle) wrench included the "less than 6" option?What I've always heard referred to as a Baby Coes is the ones with wood handles that are about 4 3/4", not ones like yours.
One is intended for the Australian/South American market.
Now that is an Awesome pic
Or likely the same markings as this oneGot a small handful left to clean and sort but found this interesting Mark on the first one I started cleaning. Looks like it says property of NY railroad or R.R. hard to tell. There's also an M marking on it
Lots of the big heavy wrenches were purchased by railroads. Not unusual to see one marked RR.Got a small handful left to clean and sort but found this interesting Mark on the first one I started cleaning. Looks like it says property of NY railroad or R.R. hard to tell. There's also an M marking on it
I apologize for the inconvenience. I'm from Vietnam and I also own these types of wrenches; this is a brass one I recently bought. This material is quite unusual for this type, so I'm wondering if anyone has seen them before and if there are other sizes available.Nice wrench. Can you translate your second post?