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Old Wrench Have ?s

Stubby1743

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Also found this unique little british wrench, has a distinct logo.

It's far from being unique. Thousands of that wrench would have been made. In general Snail Brand tools are common here in the UK and are still made by Smith Francis Tools Ltd. of Birmingham.

 
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Jay__Dub

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It's far from being unique. Thousands of that wrench would have been made. In general Snail Brand tools are common here in the UK and are still made by Smith Francis Tools Ltd. of Birmingham.

It is most certainly unique to me, and I have hundreds of wrenches, and never seen one before.
 

Modern Garage

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And I, for one, admire your will power to resist any modifications. I would have added a necktie to the tee shaped wrench 8th from the left and probably a set of fangs to the one at bottom right.
Joe
 

Private Lugnutz

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It is most certainly unique to me, and I have hundreds of wrenches, and never seen one before.
I think Stubbsy was just letting you know it wasn't super rare, so you would not have misconceptions about it, not diminish your find or excitement about it. There are other examples and entire sets shown on the 'DOE Wrenches' thread as well as the 'Britool' thread, where miscellaneous British wrenches often end up by closest default, if you're interested in seeing their variety and size range, etc. You can find them in the A-Z Index of Threads in the Sticky titled READ B4 POSTING! at the top of the forum if you're interested in seeing entire sets and much more info, including catalog excerpts, etc.
I'm not sure what that top one is with the hole in the center, it is US made.
It's part of a 4-, 5- or 6-wrench set, kept together with a screw and wingnut, marketed for glove boxes, made by Duro-Chrome and Indestro in the 30's, 40's and probably into the 50's. There were several other mfgrs (e.g., J.P. Danielson). We have a whole thread just for that style of small set wrench. See 'Auto Kit wrenches' in the A-Z Index of Threads in the Sticky.
 
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RTM

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Can't find this Lawrence wrench anywhere, or any info on it. Is anyone familiar with this company? Thanks.
So many options for Lawrence, outside of being a Wrench Manufacturer. If it was supplied with a machine, and brand stamped. Just in 1909, there are a few patentees who might have had a wrench stamped for their machine Can maker, loom maker.

 

Jay__Dub

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So many options for Lawrence, outside of being a Wrench Manufacturer. If it was supplied with a machine, and brand stamped. Just in 1909, there are a few patentees who might have had a wrench stamped for their machine Can maker, loom maker.

Yes, its a deep well. I was figuring a bicycle wrench, but had no luck.

Thanks for the info.
 

Jay__Dub

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^ WOW! :oops:
I've seen some "universal one-size-fits-all" examples, but those are something else!
Where on earth did you find those?
Got them at an auction in southern ontario. I've searched all over, but can't figure. I'm thinking they maybe came with a machine and were specific to it. Not sure. Made in Taiwan.
 

Private Lugnutz

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intended to allow you to not have to completely remove the entire wrench before getting a new grip on a hexagon fastener
At first glance, my first thought was also a ratchet action type combination wrench, such as the Craftsman "Quick-Wrench" of the 60s , just to name a popular example (deep dive on history and evolution here), but after a closer look at the milling pattern, and how deep those openings are, I am skeptical of that, and more inclined to agree with...
"universal one-size-fits-all"
two sizes per jaw/grip
 
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