Well... this thread certainly has run a circuitous route, hasn't it?
I'm coming into this conversation late, gentlemen. Indulge me.
Private_Lugnutz:
In regard to your original inquiry regarding the selling prices of Craftsman
=V= tools on Ebay:
A while back, another member had a question about the value of some older Craftsman
BE socket sets. (see here:
https://www.garagejournal.com/forum/showthread.php?t=320642 )
I made a concerted effort to try to get some kind of feel for the Ebay selling prices of Craftsman
BE and
"circle H" 1/4" drive socket sets (Both made by New Britain during the same era. I focused only on 1/4" drive so I was working within narrower parameters.)
You will note that in that thread, I noted that I had attempted to get some kind of feel for the "average" selling prices of Craftsman
=V= 1/4" drive socket sets as well, but because of the sheer volume and the huge disparity in selling prices, I abandoned any attempt at trying to make sense of the
=V= selling prices; there simply was no common point anywhere.
(Bear in mind that as a buyer for a mult-store retail chain for 17 years, part of what I did was keep track of selling trends, patterns, commonalities, and anomalies.)
I run searches on Ebay all the time. I search by brand name. I search by item (i.e., "socket set" or "wrench set" or "whatever".) I watch selling prices on items that catch my eye, even if I have no intention of buying them.
In the two years I've been using Ebay, I know one thing for certain:
There is no making sense of Ebay selling prices. I believe I've stated that many times here already, but to reiterate: there is no second-guessing the Ebay marketplace. It has absolutely no relationship with anything happening anywhere else, whether that's online, or in brick-and-mortar stores, or garage sales or swap meets or flea markets. None. Zip. Nada.
Expounding a bit more on Ebay, let me submit that my observations of selling prices on the Craftsman
=V= led me to conclude that the market was absolutely nutty, so I picked up two or three little
=V= 1/4" drive sets (and, as I recall, a smattering of 3/8" drive stuff as well) for what I considered fairly reasonable prices, and called it good. Since then, when I use the "search" function on Ebay, "Craftsman" is always entered into the "exclude from search" window; I simply haven't paid any attention to Craftsman on Ebay now for almost a year, simply because the market, for reasons which defy explanation, is insane.
Back to Craftsman
=V=, there were a couple points mentioned above that I think are valid:
The "nostalgia" thing is a factor. These were the tools Grandpa owned and used.
Perception is reality in the mind of the retail buyer. This is one of those "is so" universal truths I learned after decades in sales and marketing. The Craftsman
=V= is
perceived to be a superior quality tool. (Refer to above anecdotal comments about flea-market sellers separating the Snap-on and Craftsman and tossing everything else together in a barrel.)
Another point mentioned is the "Sears is going out of business"/"Sears is getting rid of Craftman"/"Craftsman isn't made in the USA anymore" factor. Those of us reading the plethora of "Craftsman" threads here, are, for the most part, fully aware that there's enough Craftsman
=V= out there in the second-hand market to carry us through to the next ice age, but Joe Blow out there on his lonesome, sitting in front of his desktop, could easily be deluded by the obscene asking prices and crazy selling prices he's seeing on Ebay, and believe that there's some shortage and the prices are justified.
In the larger context, the selling prices on Craftsman
=V= aren't really any more outlandish than on several other "collector" brands of tools. A few weeks ago, an early Blackhaw 1/4" drive set went for $183 and change. We've watched PLOMB 1/4" drive sets go for crazy money (refer to the "Plomb" thread.) Hell, I've seen people pay crazy money for Indestro and Thorsen, and those are by no means high-dollar brands.
Speaking of which:
DadsTools said:
"...just take a walk down the schizophrenic Duro-Indestro lane..."
I have to tell you that I cracked up when I read that.
====
Regarding that copper wrench:
It should not be summarily dismissed out of hand that there could be an entirely different story behind that.
It's
entirely possible that the seller was just making up a wild story for the purposes of selling the item, and "non sparking"
does sound like a credible explanation for a copper-plated wrench, so it's certainly a
plausible story.
But it's
entirely possible that Acme Mechanical's 35-year-veteran office manager was going have a retirement party, and they went down to the hardware store and bought a big wrench and took it over to the plating shop and had them doll it up for a presentation piece.
I know that sounds silly, but that's
exactly the sort of thing
my mother would think up for some public "civic event".
So
anything's possible.
That said, maybe it's the sole remaining survivor of a short run of copper-plated wrenches that Uncle Sam had J.P. Danielson crank out for some deep-sea Navy dive team salvage operation. I would think a copper-plated wrench would certainly be more corrosion-resistant than a plain steel wrench, but I'm not a metallurgist.
Being what appears to be a one-off piece, I'm not sure I'd make any conclusions about it without some more digging.
==
As to the "copper plating" that Private_Lugnutz mentioned:
This might provide a better explanation for the early use of copper.
Bethlehem's (The Bethlehem Spark Plug Company, of Bethlehem, Pennsylvania) "Quickway" sockets were "Oxidized copper plated to prevent rust", according to this 1927 catalog advertisement:
I don't know what kind of condition the copper plating is on your set, Lugnutz, but my little "Set A" sockets have hardly a trace of the copper plating left on them. Most of the Bethlehem "Quickway" sets that I see on Ebay (the "Set A" being most common) have only traces of the copper.
Some, like this fabulous "Big Boy" Set F, still have some of the original copper plating intact:
https://www.ebay.com/itm/Bethlehem-...907104?hash=item1a38c9eca0:g:reEAAOSwa3BZ9gnm
==
Finally, the reference to Occam's Razor is more than appropriate here.
The simplest and most logical explanation is probably the one that is correct.