







In pic 2, a perfect handle screwdriver which is stamped on the shaft but at an angle. It is difficult to read but appears to be 3-line banner with "The H______ Co" followed by "Pat______". The 2nd banner underneath the 1st has "Perfect Handle ___" and I cannot read what is stamped in the 3rd banner.
I posted pictures of the Smith Perfect Handle screwdriver I found in November in post 238.I picked up quite a few screwdrivers at an estate sale on Sat. After getting home with my haul I noticed the set of Bridgestone phillips drivers No 4 (large) thru No 1 (small). All marked Lic 7 on the shaft. A Stanley marked with "Lic " but no number after that but two patent #s different than the Bridgestone patent. Below the Stanley phillips is a Reed-Prince phillips. Above the phillips drivers is a 23" flat screwdriver which looks old to me but is unmarked. In pic 2, a perfect handle screwdriver which is stamped on the shaft but at an angle. It is difficult to read but appears to be 3-line banner with "The H______ Co" followed by "Pat______". The 2nd banner underneath the 1st has "Perfect Handle ___" and I cannot read what is stamped in the 3rd banner. I'm sure someone here recognizes that description. Yes? If so please share the maker. Below the PH driver is a Stanley, followed by 4 unmarked as far as maker goes and finishing up with my first wooden Proto driver, a phillips.
*&^%$#&*@! That's what files are for!I passed one up yesterday that had its Phillips tip buggered up.
Cracks me up, actually. Just in case the user forgot what it's for, I guess.It did have clear inked markings, though.

Thanks, it is. SigO found it, as usual. She has an eye for such things.Beautiful, Mr Ed.










It's a good thing when the person in charge embraces old, rusty and crusty . . . like us.My wife is great at spotting desirable vintage tools at estate sales as well.








I also have an affection for 'woodies.' Based on geography and history, I tend to gravitate towards Ct-made tools (raised in Ct, where my grandfather ran a small-town hardware store). The pictures below show:not sure if it's been done but I've been wanting to learn more about my little collection of vintage wood handled screwdrivers.
post up yours, or add comments if you can identify some of the odd features.
i'll go first and post individually.
Finally a highly polished shaft marked postwar Irwin I received as a gift.
-Don
I just use my 6" bench grinder, coarse wheel; grind the tip square, then grind the faces to get the desired tip thickness. You don't want to overheat the steel and lose its temper, so I have a cup of water handy and frequently dip the tip to keep it cool. [same basic procedure to prepare old chisels and plane blades ready for final sharpening]
Looks like on my dad used to use for weeding.The tip of this North Brothers Yankee #90 has not seen screwdriver duty for a long time.
The tip of this North Brothers Yankee #90 has not seen screwdriver duty for a long time. How would you bring the tip back to shape?
I agree with kwigly. Although I like to use a hand crank grinder so I can grind at a slower speed.I just use my 6" bench grinder, coarse wheel; grind the tip square, then grind the faces to get the desired tip thickness. You don't want to overheat the steel and lose its temper, so I have a cup of water handy and frequently dip the tip to keep it cool. [same basic procedure to prepare old chisels and plane blades ready for final sharpening]

Thanks all. This driver was in a bunch of tools I bought from grandfather back in the 80's. But back then I suffered from a severe case of young and stupid-itis so it was relegated to paint can and wife-needs-a-screwdriver duty. As per the video below and 40 years of wising up, I now appreciate the thing. I don't have a grinder but a Worksharp 2000. I'll go real slow.Looks like on my dad used to use for weeding.
I would do as kwigly said, but go real slow, cuz I tend to burn tips real easy.
You could go custom and make a parallel grind on the tip. In 30 years people will go bat$hit trying to find that in a catalog.