
That’s a really nice grab! Not many of those out there
I think that’s a universal tool collecting law. You can look for years and not find one. Or you can buy the spendy one off eBay and then the next day you find 2 posted locally for cheap.I only seem to find speedmaster stuff when I am not looking for it!




Hinge handles yes but the ratchets also had it to some degree as well.... Not as pronounced but still pretty cool. Definitely a unique piece
I have a suspicion that they don’t exist simply because the details would probably be more costly than MW would have wanted given it’s small but I have learned in this hobby to never say neverWell, I guess that just leaves the 1/4" breaker to be found, if it exists.....
It seems odd that there aren’t any Indestro marked 1/4” drive sliding T’s because Duro ones aren’t particularly rare.^ All kinds of stuff was not made in all three drive sizes by all kinds of different manufacturers.
Off the top of my head: Indestro never made a 1/4" drive "sliding T handle" that I know of. (only one I can pull off the top of my head without digging.)
Setting up tooling to produce a weird handle on a low-dollar-amount item just doesn't make sense. I'm questioning whether it made (economic) sense on 3/8" and 1/2" drive. Those examples above are the first time I've seen that, and I've looked at a LOT of ratchets on ebay and here. My guess is that they weren't real hot sellers or we'd be seeing more of them.



d42jeep" said:It seems odd that there aren’t any Indestro marked 1/4” drive sliding T’s because Duro ones aren’t particularly rare.
Agreed, but not only for economic reasons. Practicality played a part. You won't see a lot of 1/4-drive speeders, for example. Conversely, you'll see some 3/8-drive spinners, but not many 1/2-drive (fit in hand and physics of turning that size fastener with lots of wrist), or 1-inch drive ratchets or speeders, either, where heavy duty truck sets favored L-handles. If you graphed out diversity in handles left to right by drive size (1/4 - 3/8 - 1/2 - 3/4 - 1), it would peak in the middle and taper off left and right. Most types of handles were useful at 3/8- and 1/2-drive. Left and right of that, several types get iffy. Timeframe matters, too. I'm talking mainly vintage above, say, oh, 1939. Lots of mfgrs didn't even make a midget drive ratchet with their first offerings of midget drive sockets, just spinners. Not to digress or encourage further digression. Perhaps a subject for a more appropriate thread.^ All kinds of stuff was not made in all three drive sizes by all kinds of different manufacturers.
Jeep, I just finished cleaning up a large selection of 1/2" and 1/4" drive sockets and such. Good quality build on every piece. Majority is unbranded but all looks the same and all came from an older 60s toolbox. There are two sockets marked STW, one from both drive sets. What leads you to say STW is a SW production? Just curious as AA got me nowhere. There's also a funky 1/2" to hex adapter in there too.Stevens Walden, I believe
-Don




