A local auction has a bunch of tools that were made for IBM by Snap-on. Is there any collector value to these? My bid price will be based on using them, but I did not want to miss a resale opportunity.
I would suppose it depends on what the tools are. I've worked on IBM Selectrics, and there is always a small market for Selectric tools. Can you post some pictures?
Ramper, honestly I don't know what the collector market would be for these. But S-O guys love their S-O's, so there's no telling. (I've got a really clean Selectric 1 and a just-redone dual-pitch, correcting Selectric 2, both with 15 inch carriages)
Looking at the Snap-On combination wrenches in that auction, I don't see any connection stamped on the tools to connect them to IBM. Am I missing something?
It appears that the seller disassembled an entire IBM service toolkit, including case. In my opinion, the entire kit as a whole would have been worth more than the sum of its parts. But then, nothing stops a prospect from bidding on each individual item, many of which should sell real cheap.
The snap-on screwdrivers were made to IBM service specifications against snap-on's recommendation. They were jokingly called Snap off by Customer Engineers because they were brittle.
Gotta love a selectric. The same design of the typewriter was used for terminals and consoles on the 360 series of computers. It was a very intricate design with tilt and rotate tapes and interchangeable type balls. Servicing them in the computer realm was challenging.