Part of a pile of old wrenches. Very slender, like a tappet wrench, but with SAE sizing. Alloy Artifacts seems to peg it as c.1927
OOB I can't make out the size. is that 5/16 or 9/16 or???
Part of a pile of old wrenches. Very slender, like a tappet wrench, but with SAE sizing. Alloy Artifacts seems to peg it as c.1927
Snagged these at the flea yesterday. Impressed by the ratchet (50's), never handled one before. Not sure what the detent ball is for on the hexagonal rotating handle on the speeder (likely prewar).
Ahhh. That makes sense. Better than the stops hidden underneath.There is a groove on the bar that ball rides in, keeps it in that spot.
They do seem very common, I just haven't come across one before, OOB. Funny, too, because I had a bunch of Cornwell (at least fifty (50) pieces, 1/2- and 3/8 drive, angle wrenches, ignition wrenches - see posts #29, #44, and #58) that I traded to UNAIU, all kinds of handles, but no ratchets! I was looking for the matching older style ratchets for a number of years and never did run into those either.I'm flabbergasted that you haven't had that ratchet before.




Not lazy, but exclusionarily prideful. It shows up quite often and if you search GJ VB on "USAC" you'll see a variety of several other examples where I provide this same kind of response. Not as common as "USAAC" or just "AC" on tools, but it's almost like a hopeful, prescient version of "USAF".Did someone just get lazy and skip an "A" when stamping it?








Don, what did you use to unscrew your cover? Thanks.Shiftless stopped by yesterday and allowed me to go through his treasure trove of free tools. One of the goodies I grabbed was this rusty 3/8” drive Cornwell ratchet that had been assembled backwards. I took it apart and added a bit of 3 in one oil. I spent some time de-rusting it with my 3M rotary 220 brush. It now works almost as smoothly as my others.
Here is my newerJR-3 in a catalog listing
-Don
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Pretty sure I have one of those Lugz. Just gotta get the Cornwell stuff into my new shop!Snatched this Cornwell ignition set "hiding in plain sight" on a table of other unrelated miscellaneous stuff on the table of a house closeout at the flea this morning. It had the missing later "IW" marked wrench (see attached Pic below), which made me wonder if it might not've come that way in some postwar transitional period, or lost and replaced later by PO (more likely!), but either way, I will be on the lookout for that wrench (7/32"-15* x 1/4"-60*) in the earlier more primitive hand forged type and earlier more primitive marking to complete it. Classic GMTK early war spec style with every opening except the largest getting a 15* or 60* angle.
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Terrific!Pretty sure I have one of those Lugz.
I'd say I'd stop in have a 10AM beer and do some horsetradin' next time I'm at Ft Belvoir - but you up and moved away on me!Just gotta get the Cornwell stuff into my new shop


