I have a pair somewhere, they seemed decent, so I grabbed them.They turned out to be marked Sears 3079 with a WF code. Made in Japan. Had I known, I might have left them behind but they seem to be decent, quality wise.
I would never be critical of you. I have about 250 pair of Pedersen Vice grips.Pliers are easy to dismiss and misplace. Eventually you need one. Or find another one at that sale . . .
Craftsman Water Pump Pliers, Non-Slip
KIEBA ? The maker for searsI found these paint covered lineman’s pliers at a Sunday garage sale. It wasn’t possible to tell who made them until I spent a couple of hours cleaning off the stubborn paint. They turned out to be marked Sears 3079 with a WF code. Made in Japan. Had I known, I might have left them behind but they seem to be decent, quality wise.
-Don
What year did the cross hatching on the 1950s end ?
I held back from posting the majority of my Utica pliers, as they have been shown individually and in retail display case elsewhere.Before LesserSon[…]inundates this thread[…]
-Don

There are four added notes - VAH8, AF, VA14-5, P/P C1 - none of which mean anything to me yet.
When was the VA started?I would take a guess and say they are of RAF tool board , the VA being plane identifier number it is only a guess. ( commonwealth airforces are very careful and stringent with each crews tool board , part of their safety protocols)
Living in the antipodes I have never seen Lloyds tools a lot of English tools here though, I like your opinion. RegardsMaybe these have something to do with the markings?
VAH-8 to VAH-123 Heavy Attack Squadrons US Navy
AF...Air Force ?
VA-145 Attack Squadron 145, US Navy
C1
C-1A (TF-1) Trader
www.history.navy.mil
I haven't found any history for 'Lloyds England' but it could be what's now 'Lloyd and Jones'
History - Lloyd Jones
It is very unlikely that, when he set up his own horse-cab and transport business in 1883, Arnold Birch had any idea he was founding a dynasty that has provided an ongoing service to Liverpool’s industries, tradesmen and residents right up to the present day. But that is exactly what has...www.lloyd-jones.com
I see various ones on eBay too, but unfortunately haven't found any good information about the maker. Internet searches using the name are swamped by Lloyds Bank and Lloyd's of London insurance..On eBay, I see both “Lloyds England” and “Lloyd England” variations. Most currently shipping from NE USA (in fact, a few are shipping from within half an hours drive). But a pair in California, Virginia, and a pair in UK.

Unbranded made in Germany End Nipper.
Funny, going against stereotypes here, the German one is the more stylish, the Italian purely functional.Unbranded Made in Italy 5978 End Nipper/Nail Remover.
Thank you, great information , the first pair I saw with a crimper was in 1981 produced by Marvel of Japan. It took crescent until 1987 on the 3800-8CT, to add the crimper and Channellock 1992 on the 3248 (export) the pliers shown on the patent look great do you have a pair with the grips ?The assignor, of Ideal Industries, of the common commutator/stripper fiefdom, owns the utility patent for the connector and the pliers to crimp them, as well as the design patent for the pliers.
The pair I found that I am showing in post #303 had what was left of the grips. I cut them off....the pliers shown on the patent look great do you have a pair with the grips ?
They are well worn, Ideal made after market grips for them they were 35-006 , 7,8 a copy of the crescent grips different colour. I have to laugh thinking these were latest in 81, and they Promoted them as a newly designed, and the other makers copied the copyists. I give you full marks to me this is the best post I have seen on the site. RegardsThe pair I found that I am showing in post #303 had what was left of the grips. I cut them off.
I give you full marks to me this is the best post I have seen on the site.
Don’t see that Crescent logo very often. I found these pliers yesterday and cleaned them up this morning. I’m not sure if the plating is nickel or chrome.Added these very early MoToR KiT pliers to the slip-joint collection this morning. More photos on Don's 'More than just adjustables' thread here.
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I think it's the only one in my collection.Don’t see that Crescent logo very often.
I see what you mean. The Evaporust 'shined up' the dullness we usually attribute to nickel vs. chrome. But I think nickel with the early CTC monograph. If you look through ads in the early 20's or the 1926 Crescent catalog, when these logos were most prominent, nickel finishes predominate. There are some nickel-copper. No mention of chrome.I’m not sure if the plating is nickel or chrome.
I’m not sure if the plating is nickel or chrome.
I see what you mean. The Evaporust 'shined up' the dullness we usually attribute to nickel vs. chrome. But I think nickel with the early CTC monograph. If you look through ads in the early 20's or the 1926 Crescent catalog, when these logos were most prominent, nickel finishes predominate. There are some nickel-copper. No mention of chrome.



I gather there was never a Niagara stamp and the style of stamping changed when the plant was moved circa 1968 from Net York state to North Carolina production ,the 68 -77 stamp is a well defined change. Stamping ceased late 77 and etching was introduced ( which i do not like ) there are other markings mostly pre war I will take a few photos and post them. I have put up the most common post war markings the black gripped 1950-8 being late 1950s , the yellow set were from 68-77 North Carolina production, the carded 3800-8 were purchased January 1980 , the 50-7 ,and 50,7Tenite grips and the 3800-8I are all 68-77. You have raised another matter , with the Niagara buy out their was a rebranding and Logo change and new boxes were made but a lot of stuff I have bought boxed in particular dipped handle items have come in the pre Niagara boxes with additional labels like cushion grips ( using up old stock obviously) this must of been for a number of years.Crescent is not in my wheelhouse, so I’m just looking on Alloy Artifacts for company history, combined with a general impression of tool industry marking trends.
Just as a starting point, “Crescent Tool Company” (post 314) sounds like the family-run business that ended in 1960. In the catalogs on Internet Archive, the stamp in the illustration does not change through the forties and fifties, so that’s the range I’d expect for the pliers in post 314.
I don’t see a more modern catalog to compare.
Without such resource, I would expect a “Crescent-Niagra” stamp 1960-68.
“Crescent(R) Brand” (post 315) sounds like a tool line within a conglomerate, so Cooper (1968). With an actual stamp and no laser-etch, I’d guess your “virgin” pliers are from the early end of the 1970s-1990s.
Apex since 2010, so maybe what’s shown online now is typical. Current slipjoints are offered with dipped handles and have a modern CTC-circle logo stamp. The bare chrome-handled slipjoints are laser-etched with “CeeTee by Crescent”.