four.cycle
Well-known member
^ I believe Roger is correct. Enlarge that image and look at it. It's lookin' more like 5 than 3 to me. (power of suggestion?)
Are you using your phone right now? From my iPad it’s pretty clearly a 5I am not sure why you guys are trying so hard to convince me. I have no stake in it being 1937 vs 1957! I'm just simply relating that the entire thread has been pursuing it as a 1937 stamp. The way you said, "it's marked 1957" led me to believe you either mistyped or you had been thinking it was 1957 all along, despite it being identified as 1937 in the thread title and despite us discussing it as a 1937 tool.
If you want to now open a whole 'nother line of inquiry on the date stamp, have at it. Or maybe ask the OP to re-examine to make sure of the digit. I'm not personally convinced it's a 5 instead of a 3, even with it zoomed in. But these and several other digits are often hard to discern as we all know from experience.
With respect to it being a screwdriver/spanner/key for large gun with a hydraulic buffer, 1957 would be getting very late.
Nope.Are you using your phone right now?
lol You've made it quite clear that you are very convinced that you are seeing a "5", Rog. I'm not seeing one, and, respectfully, I am going to take the OP's word for it being 1937 for now until he tells me otherwise. As I said, I am fully prepared to shift gears to postwar.From my iPad it’s pretty clearly a 5

Jeez don’t get angry.lol My only research is zooming in.That C with arrow symbol is not contiguous with the same marking, Rog, was not applied by the same organization, and has a good chance of being applied with a completely different die. But I will re-emphasize, I am not sure why you're trying to convince me. It's not my tool. Your argument is with the OP. If you're convinced it's 1957, I look forward to your research on gun keys/spanners from that timeframe.


No anger, Rog. Just explaining the two different markings (and numerical fonts), emphasizing that I am not convinced, and re-directing your inquiry about the date to the OP. As for zooming, it looks like you need to up your game. 4.c is at atomic level!Jeez don’t get angry.lol My only research is zooming in.
Like the op said, 1957 might not even be a year.^ okay, but now I'm absolutely baffled. If it IS what we believe it to be - a "gun sight adjustment spanner" - does 1937 make more sense than 1957? I'm lost on this one, Lugz - I don't know jack about guns or military stuff.
Have you read the thread from the beginning? I highly recommend you do. It will provide a lot of context you may be missing trying to jump in at this time without doing so.okay, but now I'm absolutely baffled.
Who's we, Kemosabe?If it IS what we believe it to be - a "gun sight adjustment spanner" -
Yes. For one thing, the OP's tool has the identical C-and-arrow symbol that is found on British materiel in the 1937-1939 timeframe. The link to the British militaria forum that @alfadan helpfully posted was validating his earlier confirmation of my hunch that the symbol looked martial, which he made yesterday. And, if you scroll down from the prewar examples, someone posted an example from 1949 that was completely different. The arrow was next to the C.does 1937 make more sense than 1957?
He’s here. Coincidentally someone on that forum thought it was 1957 also.How many pages back did we lose the OP?
It clearly is 1957--but is that a date?He’s here. Coincidentally someone on that forum thought it was 1957 also.
^ well... THIS is what I was running with... it definitely looks plausible that the OP's unit could very well be a cut-down version of what 3bay found on ebay.Make no mistake, I DO think the gun spanners that 3bay posted from eBay, which retained a "key" like blade, you will note, help the cause significantly.
He’s here. Coincidentally someone on that forum thought it was 1957 also.
https://www.nwhikers.net/forums/viewtopic.php?t=8040124&start=15
If you mean gun spanners of that type, with multiple openings on the ends of a bar that is also used as the handle for a prominent offset key or screwdriver-like blade in the middle, yes. The similarities are clear. We started considering that as soon as Tom mentioned it and I drew more of something on the other side. And the handbooks seem to be showing discontinuing the keys in favor of multi-purpose spanners. So it all seems to make sense. Finding examples of British versions with similar British markings to the OP's would be much more definitive, though.it definitely looks plausible that the OP's unit could very well be a cut-down version of what 3bay found on ebay.
And apparently enlisting your hiking group into the alphanumeric code-breaking!And yes, I've been following this all along
Good to see they're arguing just as much as hereHe’s here. Coincidentally someone on that forum thought it was 1957 also.
they are?Good to see they're arguing just as much as here
The OP questioned exactly that.It clearly is 1957--but is that a date?
Hmm. I must have missed that. Please re-quote him questioning that.The OP questioned exactly that.
...where he re-confirms the number he is seeing on the tool in his hands from his thread title.It looks most likely to read:
N HYD BUFF NO.146 AS&S T1 1937
Excuse me, but I did not say or imply colony. It is a very difficult read but Robert Hughes' The Fatal Shore is very decent book on this subject. Likely the stamped 1937 is a date, but not yet a certainty.
I’m sorry, it wasn’t the op, it was Dave.Hmm. I must have missed that. Please re-quote him questioning that.
There is an oddly placed “11” over the 1937/1957. I don’t know what that would mean if it were or were not a date?
Maybe it's time for a new iPad.From my iPad it’s pretty clearly a 5
Would you care to revise your rather assuredly declarative statement, sir?It clearly is 1957-
You are being far too kind.Admittedly it is ambiguous

I restrained myself from suggesting it was an "11" rather a "T1" - because, you have a better view than me, but I would now suggest it might be an "11" (signifying November) to go with that "1937". The entire stamping was non-uniform and done by hand with letters out of whack and leaning and that figure could easily be a misstamped "1". If the "T1" or "11" was not located so close to the "1937", I might not go that far. It's sort of innocuous anyway. The year is important in keeping us prewar and in perfect synch with those C-arrow markings on the helmet liners. It's a military piece. Or at least government.To throw some light onto the "date" stamp, I've cleaned then captured in different light situations.
Amazing difference with those last photos! I was 100% on the '57 bus.Maybe it's time for a new iPad.
Would you care to revise your rather assuredly declarative statement, sir?
You are being far too kind.![]()
well... you sure had me fooled for a bit there.Told ya it was a 3.
you too, huh?I was 100% on the '57 bus.
Did it taste like crow?So then he ate it.