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Pliers; How Many Is Too Many?

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LesserSon

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Well, YOU reposted the pic - something I’m not savvy enough to do!
RTM, you had that Bethlehem Spark Plug Co socket that had the stamp that looked like one thing one way and another turned 90°?
I struggled with a Craftsman mfr stamp on a locking pliers that looked like an Indestro forge mark. And some Snap-on date codes.
I just think the lesson is, stamped numerals don’t always look like what they are.
 

RTM

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So, let’s explore other alternates too. Let’s find the history of the Super Grip Tool Co Iowa. If they didn’t exist before 1920 ish, I’m really gonna have doubts about the stamping of the patent date, as the 17 year rule says if it was post 1917, it should not have the patent info.

As that a fair assertion?
Going down a different rabbit hole, because searching for “super grip tool co” Iowa
in google books only got a couple of hits in the 40s, and lesser phrases as well. On the main web, most were the listings LesserSon was mentioning.

I started searching google patents, oldest first, for
Iowa pliers

After wading thru 40+ pages of undated foreign patents, I finally found some in 1876, page 54 finally hits 1899. And page 55 starts with 1900. Needless to say, nothing that look like the pliers in question, or even like pliers (gotta love OCR).

Not that this is a definitive NO, but not even a nibble to keep me fishing.
 

LesserSon

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I haven’t proved the connection, but this Gilbey M Clifton is in the right generation for a 1933 patent and buried in the right state.
EDIT - 18mi/20min drive between Perry IA and Ogden IA. So, yeah, I think this is probably the same Gilbey.
As a US infantry private dying on 5Nov1943, there may yet be some researchable leads. I can’t see what type of plaque is hiding in the headstone’s shadow. Would have been just 17 at the end of WWI…early 40s in WWII. I wonder what his service dates were. Then there is his widow.
1727238330050.png
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/103532543
 
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RTM

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I haven’t proved the connection, but this Gilbey M Clifton is in the right generation for a 1933 patent and buried in the right state.

https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/103532543
I can’t imagine there were too many “Gilbey Clifton”s running around, google didn’t find any yet. The only “Gilbey M Clifton” seems to be highly involved in a patent for a pliers, so far.

Nice work
 

Private Lugnutz

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You guys agree though, that those Super Grip Tool Co pliers are represented in the patent drawing for US1915404 right?
Yes. It's only the apparent PAT. date marking that's amiss. It's not the first time we've seen a marking that seems awry. As I said in my first reply, usually a trademark date, a foreign patent, a mistake (one digit), or the marking is illegible or misread. This one is very off.
...haven’t you generally been seeking slipjoints bearing brands for which there is documention of government purchase?
No. Have you seen my slip-joint collection? I just provided a link if you missed it or you need to refresh your impression of my slip-joint collecting habits. Scroll down from there for a few more that are brand-specific, too. Most of my slip-joints are prewar, some postwar.

When I pick up or turn over a pair of slip-joints at a flea market I'm generally looking for any unique brands I don't have, or brands I already have in different lengths. If I happen to run into wartime 6" and 8" slip-joints, I have a tendency to bring them home, of course - except for CEE TEE CO (which I personally validated as an option, in a book, for the entire jeep community), simply because I have so many already, more than I need or would ever be able to pass on to another collector, but I am not only looking for pliers with wartime markings. (The correct jeep issue Utica slip-joints are so rare, I've never found a pair in the wild!)

I don't like to nationalize or transpose my collecting experience on others, but in this case, I am prepared to test it. I would bet that in general an overwhelming majority of all slip-joints seen in the wild are branded or marked with a logo of some kind rather than not, and I think the psychological effect in play here is the opposite - of exaggerating the third-party unbranded production. Again, I see plenty of them. Especially Vlchek. And with respect to Vlchek, I see more unbranded than branded. But there are a lot of Crescent, Klein, JP Danielson, Utica, PEXTO, etc etc etc slip-joints out there and I rarely if ever have seen unbranded versions of those OEMs.

EDIT:

Maybe I have made an erroneous assumption about your post. I consider your collecting experience to be on par with mine in terms of source, frequency, duration and volume. Do you think you generally see more unbranded slip-joints than branded slip-joints? I will be shocked to hear a yes.

Curious to hear @d42jeep 's answer to the same question. What say you on this point, Don? You go to more estate sales and the like rather than fleas, so your wild is slightly different than my wild, and you're on the other side of the country, but your volume, frequency, and duration are probably close to mine.
 
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AreBeeBee

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Here is a different version with the city added, and the word TRUTH under the pivot

1727233394784.png

Aha! The TRUTH [Tools] comes out. I have a Truth Tools catalogue (#42, but no date) listing a Super Grip plier and saying it is "new patented".

However, the Truth Tool Co. is in Mankato, Minn., not Jefferson, Iowa, so if Truth Tools took over Super Grip and stamped the original old stock with TRUTH, then we'd have what we see.
 

username2

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re: Jefferson, Iowa.

Of interest only to me, probably. I see that **** Oatts is from there.

He is one of the kings of sax section lead for modern big bands. Thad Jones-Mel Lewis Orchestra / Vanguard Orchestra. Big discography.

The other, not great, pic of the genius pliers.
 

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username2

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From: The Jefferson Bee, Jefferson, Iowa Tuesday, May 9th, 1933
 

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four.cycle

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Super Grip / Super Grip Tool Co., Jefferson, IA / patent 1915404 Jun 27 1933 Gilbey M. Clifton / pliers / * some examples stamped with patent date of 1-16-39 * /
 

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Private Lugnutz

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I have a Truth Tools catalogue (#42, but no date) listing a Super Grip plier and saying it is "new patented".
Interesting. And good on you for making that connection. My first thought when I saw "TRUTH" was Pexto, which TM'ed a stylized version of that word, believe it or not. I would not have suspected the Mankato tool company.

The No. 42 catalog is almost assuredly from 1934. Unless they really messed with their own sequence. The No. 36 on IA/ITCL is dated 1928. The No. 39, No. 40, and No. 41 on IA/ITCL are dated 1931, 1932, and 1933, respectively.
* some examples stamped with patent date of 1-16-39 *
That's a Monday.
 

Private Lugnutz

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From: The Jefferson Bee, Jefferson, Iowa Tuesday, May 9th, 1933
Are you sure about the date? What's the source, Newspapers.com?

The article states "...a newly patented plier" in the first paragraph. May 9, 1933 is a month and a half before the patent was granted (June 27, 1933). If the publication date is valid, the newspaper could have misinterpreted what the company reps told them, or the company reps could have misinterpreted what Mr. Clifton told them, or Mr. Clifton could've misinterpreted the correspondence from the USPTO on its status. This is pure speculation, but if they jumped the gun on that, they may have been just as likely to jump it on the marking, and perhaps January 16, 1933 ("1-16-1933") was some intermediate missive date. The die wasn't fixed, and with such a short run, maybe never fixed.

Note that Mr. Clifton is not mentioned in the article as being a part of the enterprise. His patent was not assigned to the Super Grip Tool Co., and he was not an assignor for the Super Grip Tool Co. That means he was either licensing the rights or they bought him out. Judging only by the article, I think the company was a head shed only. One of the principals was a lawyer from Jefferson, the other was from Perry, but not the patentee, and it indicates that TRUTH would be the manufacturer. We have seen this before. It's the 20th century industrial version of the "start-up." Party A invents something. Party B and C raise some capitol and endeavor to make a business out of the invention, buying out Party A and hiring Party D to make it.

Super-Grip Tool Co map.jpg
 
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LesserSon

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@Private Lugnutz
First - sleep deprivation probably fueled an argumentative impulse that would have better been surpressed.
My subjective impression is that I probably see at least two branded slipjoints for every unmarked slipjoints.
I stand by my suggestion that that impression is suspect for the reasons I gave. However, I think @username2 ’s opposing impression (that there are more unmarked slipjoints) is equally suspect. Once we have an impression like this, confirmation bias keeps reinforcing the impression. Who carries a clicker to do real statistical analysis of slipjoints?
I don’t much pursue slipjoints; I don’t really like them, so I tend to ignore them (which probably makes my impressions even less reliable). As users, I’d rather use a small Channelock for roundish/hexish things and linesmans for most everything else. As collectibles, if I have cash in pocket, I’ll buy just about any depressed-diamonds Utica or nested-diamonds Craftsman or FSP Vacuum-Grip or Winchester or Red Devil pliers I see, including slipjoints - but not because they’re slipjoints.
 

Private Lugnutz

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Thanks. 2 to 1 is lower than my 9 to 1, and lower than I would expect, but it's not inverted, which would shock me. I didn't take it as argumentative, by the way, and my question was just a curiosity gut check. I know you and your collecting so it was a handy trustworthy way to expand the sample size of my experience.
 

username2

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Are you sure about the date? What's the source, Newspapers.com?
Guessing that the local historical society (Greene County, Iowa) had newspapers, I looked around for a sec.

It takes a bit of searching.


It's worth noting that the infamous Guy Richardson is an attorney, the county attorney in some newspapers. I doubt he was cooking up pliers secret sauce in a backroom somewhere. Wheels within wheels (or gears).
 

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username2

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My subjective impression is that I probably see at least two branded slipjoints for every unmarked slipjoints.
I stand by my suggestion that that impression is suspect for the reasons I gave. However, I think @username2 ’s opposing impression (that there are more unmarked slipjoints) is equally suspect. Once we have an impression like this, confirmation bias keeps reinforcing the impression. Who carries a clicker to do real statistical analysis of slipjoints?
We are all Bayesians in the final analysis.

Just for the sheer ******-mindedness of the thing, I was considering building a toolkit consisting only of unbranded old tools. I can make a sticker for the box that says 'Drop Forged'.
 
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WisJim

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I have a pair of the Super Grip pliers, marked with the Jefferson Iowa and Truth stampings, and the patent date is clearly 1-16 and not so clear 33 or 66 or 88, but I guess we know it is 33.

super grip.jpgsuper grip close up.jpg
 

username2

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Aha! The TRUTH [Tools] comes out. I have a Truth Tools catalogue (#42, but no date) listing a Super Grip plier and saying it is "new patented".

However, the Truth Tool Co. is in Mankato, Minn., not Jefferson, Iowa, so if Truth Tools took over Super Grip and stamped the original old stock with TRUTH, then we'd have what we see.
 

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username2

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...which, naturally, led me to this. A product discussed elsewhere on this site I believe. Not a Truth, but then really, what is?

(Good Lord, there's a lot of those for sale on eBay)
 

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Private Lugnutz

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...the patent date is clearly 1-16 and not so clear 33 or 66 or 88,...
Thanks for posting your example, Jim. After looking at many of them from afar (i.e., photos), I tend to agree. Some owners (and sellers and collectors and collecting sites etc) seem pretty sure of what they see, though, including RJ...
The “99” is much too clear to be a transliteration of any other numbers.
What's funny about that is that others are just as confident it's a 33 or an 89, etc.

I think the die, the stamping, and the stamper probably all contributed to the ambiguity.
1/16/33 (wrenching News debunked this mark)
What did they supposedly debunk? The marking (i.e., that it's not physically a "33")? Or the fact that 1-16-33 is also not a patent date (Tuesday). And do you have a link or reference? I'm curious to read their rationale.
 

RTM

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What did they supposedly debunk? The marking (i.e., that it's not physically a "33")? Or the fact that 1-16-33 is also not a patent date (Tuesday). And do you have a link or reference? I'm curious to read their rationale.
Just the wrong date, and the corrected one as well. Most other sites just published the incorrect date without comment.

From http://wrenchingnews.com/2020-york-auction/catalog.html

Choice Box 103: Lot of seven Plier Type Wrenches (1.) SUPER GRIP TOOL CO - IOWA - PAT 1-16-33--8 pliers with a geared cam mechanism. Patent was granted on June 27, 1933 (not Jan 16, 1933 as marked on the pliers) to Gilbey M. Clifton of Perry, Iowa. Excellent. (S245) *PAT*
 

Private Lugnutz

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Thanks, RTM. Okay, so not providing any information that we have haven't collectively provided here. It's an interesting blurb, though, because in the process of pointing out that the date marked on their example of the tool is not in fact the correct patent date, they are indubitably reading the marking on their example as "1-16-33".
 

four.cycle

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What did they supposedly debunk? The marking (i.e., that it's not physically a "33")? Or the fact that 1-16-33 is also not a patent date (Tuesday). And do you have a link or reference? I'm curious to read their rationale.
So... if I am understanding this conversation correctly, the incorrect patent date which is actually stamped on the pliers is being seen as 33, 39, and/or 89 ?

:headscrat
 

four.cycle

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And "99" (RJ, and others) and probably a few other numbers.

I'll make a revision of that note in my list.
There are all kinds of examples of wrong patent dates stamped on pieces, but the wrong patent date not being stamped clearly on this particular unit appears to have caused some confusion in more than one place.

this ought to cover it adequately, yes?

"* some units erroneously stamped with patent dates appearing to be 1-16-33, 1-16-39, 1-16-88, 1-16,89, 1-16-99, among others *"

* Included so that the patent date can be searched for within the list. *

now I need to go back into the list and edit all the other entries so they can be found simply searching "erroneously".

(photos: ebay)

edit 09/27/24 12:00 PDT you should be able to use the "search" function within the list - in notepad - to search patent numbers, dates, and (now) "erroneously". I'm sure I've missed one or two - one of my objectives is exploiting that "search" function so it can be used to find stuff with incomplete information. BK
updated list posted 09/27/24 12:04 PDT
 

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d42jeep

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Pliers that live in the washroom. Too many? The bolt was backwards on the Cee Tee pliers so I turned it around.IMG_6644.jpegIMG_6645.jpeg
Upper left pliers are unmarked. Good loaners!
-Don
 

LesserSon

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I'll make a revision of that note in my list.
There are all kinds of examples of wrong patent dates stamped on pieces, but the wrong patent date not being stamped clearly on this particular unit appears to have caused some confusion in more than one place.

this ought to cover it adequately, yes?

"* some units erroneously stamped with patent dates appearing to be 1-16-33, 1-16-39, 1-16-88, 1-16,89, 1-16-99, among others *"

* Included so that the patent date can be searched for within the list. *

now I need to go back into the list and edit all the other entries so they can be found simply searching "erroneously".

(photos: ebay)

edit 09/27/24 12:00 PDT you should be able to use the "search" function within the list - in notepad - to search patent numbers, dates, and (now) "erroneously". I'm sure I've missed one or two - one of my objectives is exploiting that "search" function so it can be used to find stuff with incomplete information. BK
updated list posted 09/27/24 12:04 PDT
Please add 1-18-38, since it is an actual Tuesday.
Unmentioned so far is criticism of the font of the stamp, resembling Copperplate,
IMG_3344.jpeg
Americana,
IMG_3345.jpeg
or the diabolical font used for eye exams.
The type design lends itself to mistaken recognition of the numeral characters, made worse because only a few characters are present, so cannot be visually compared to those absent. The rounded nature, vertical symetry and near-closure of returns to the center means 3, 6, 8 & 9 bear enormous similarity, even when perfectly stamped. Imperfect stamping adds 0, 2 & 5 to the confusion. It is a “bad”choice among fonts for stamps intended to convey information like dates.
“Good” choices would include asymmetry, wide-open gaps; pronounced risers, descenders and generally more straight lines in non-corresponding locations. Like Goudy.
IMG_3346.jpeg
 

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LesserSon

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[Struggled to post some text with my last post.]
My Klein pliers by age groups.
First pic includes 1939-1947 with struck date codes and the “1857” graphic.
IMG_3350.jpeg
Second and third pic 1949-1968 with forged-in date codes.
IMG_3353.jpeg
Fourth pic is 1965-1970 with forged-in date codes. Last pic I don’t fully understand what appear to be date codes, but I think 1980s.
 
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