Some friend you have. He's a sadistic son of a gun
Some friend you have. He's a sadistic son of a gun. That is both ridiculously cool and is going to be very difficult to fill. In all my years of searching for metric p&c I only found 3 combo wrenches. I recently got a mfd era proto metrick socket set in the tray, only missing one socket, which will now probably take me years to find
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I had found an almost complete early metric set, gave it to Riley. Only missing the 13mm.
Just as a follow up, none of these are in Datamp under Mortensen.a 1966 patent 3,267,553 to a Peter E. Mortensen assigned to The PEM company...at this point located in Milwaukie Oregon.
Here's some of the earlier Patents Mortensen had some hand in 2,044,252 2,074,021 2,091,515



Odd that it lists that wrench for a V8, as most manufacturers offset the V8 wrenches to clear the tires.Here are a couple of P&C scores from a shop cleanout yesterday. The talk elsewhere of a large thin wrench for adjusting leveler legs was on my mind as well, but the P&C logos sealed the deal.
From a catalog that Provincial linked back in 2017
The other wrench isn't in there, but appears to be a match for a Plomb Ford Brake Wrench, catalog image seen here.
Edit, Here is a sibling from a 1935 catalog
The guy had a machine shop in his garage, so I suspect these may have been used for square nuts on lathe fittings.

still looks pretty cool, even if it is!I'm thinking that might be black paint....
P&c roto mat. So stinking cool!Im just going to put these here .Should have done it here in the first place.
I'm just going to put these here




The top three have a four digit number and the bottom two have an N-** two digit number.
Lots of substantive debate, postulation and discussion upthread, Tom. In summary: P&C wartime contracts show that P&C had contracts with the Air Corps - undoubtedly the source of the "WF-" versions of these DBEs previously thought to be P&C helping Plomb fulfill Plomb Air Corps contracts, and with the Navy - almost certainly the source of the "N-" versions of these DBEs, as Don alludes to. One bugaboo was the "N-" numbering scheme, but that was a false issue, because the "WF-" numbering scheme was Plomb's, not the USAAF/Air Corps', and it makes sense that they would lift and shift it for their Navy production, simply swapping the prefixes. Note: the WF- and N- tools lists are not identical. There is an overlap, especially in the DBEs, but even there they made more and different configurations.I believe that the N numbered wrenches were made for the Navy similar to WF production for the Army Air Corps.
I think you know I wasn't passively scolding you for not doing so, just pointing you to further discussion and info. And in this case, probably best you asked and got the summary, skipping the wrangling, consternation, missteps, and some tangents.I knew I was being lazy when I posed that question.
This leads to the speculation that the Navy was more likely to apply excessive force to their tools




....I'd say in excess of 60 years. I have my dad's 3/4" drive open gear P&C, and it was old the first time I laid eyes on it.



Ha ha, I saw that vw box but dropped it like a hot potato when I saw the $140 price. Some of the prices like $20 per old hub cap were way overpriced considering the conditions of most items.Shoot, Smokes, you must have been just behind me. I almost picked that rachet up and took it home. But the seller wouldn't see eye to eye on the VW tool box, so I just shook my head and left.
Yeah those were full blown eBay/ hipster boutique prices and that was when they were all cleaned up. Not barn fresh like they wereGuy had some interesting stuff, but not at those prices. He needed to put it on ebay or craigslist if he wanted to make that money.