Private Lugnutz
Well-known member
Keeping my streak of finding oddball/unique screwdrivers alive (see the Grover, Hobson’s, Sawyer, and Decatur Coffin Company threads), here is another one.
I picked this up at my flea market this morning. It has no markings on the handle or the ferrule. It has a GRASP-IT logo (a huge fancy G with the tiny letters RASP-IT inside the opening) on one side of the screw holding mechanism, and it’s stamped PAT APLD FOR (patent applied for) on the flip side of that.
Based on the screw holder mechanism, the trade name, and the age of the tool, I am surmising that this is an early approach, way before the Upson’s HOLD-E-ZEE hit the market.
The design is interesting. The frame is curved so that as it is pushed up the shank of the screwdriver in its slots on that T piece near the end, the jaws at the ends that grip the screw first open around the screw head, and then close on the other side. Once the screw is gripped (in this case, better said grasped), the spring provides the tension.
I have used Google, Google Books, and Newspapers.com, but so far I haven’t been able to find any reference to GRASP-IT. Going to plunk away at some patent sites later.
If anyone has any info, please post it.
I picked this up at my flea market this morning. It has no markings on the handle or the ferrule. It has a GRASP-IT logo (a huge fancy G with the tiny letters RASP-IT inside the opening) on one side of the screw holding mechanism, and it’s stamped PAT APLD FOR (patent applied for) on the flip side of that.
Based on the screw holder mechanism, the trade name, and the age of the tool, I am surmising that this is an early approach, way before the Upson’s HOLD-E-ZEE hit the market.
The design is interesting. The frame is curved so that as it is pushed up the shank of the screwdriver in its slots on that T piece near the end, the jaws at the ends that grip the screw first open around the screw head, and then close on the other side. Once the screw is gripped (in this case, better said grasped), the spring provides the tension.
I have used Google, Google Books, and Newspapers.com, but so far I haven’t been able to find any reference to GRASP-IT. Going to plunk away at some patent sites later.
If anyone has any info, please post it.
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