

Completing a whole set with war finish would an extremely tall order. The most common war finished stamped tools seem to be 3/4" 5 ring sockets. I am convinced that not all tools were stamped with the war finish marks. I know sockets, wrenches, ratchets and a few others were. I have yet to see any extensions with the mark. Maybe someone can shed some light on it and prove me wrong. Similar to the SK Wayne Knurled 1" socket that seems to be non existent.sorry for the confusion, it's the 1/2 set I'm completing. only have six wartime 1/2 sockets. the universal is the only one marked war finish
Fair point. Hell I have found chrome plated WF stuff.I assume that the date codes that you are referring to are on the sockets. I’ve never been convinced that the wartime date code theory is valid. I’ve seen too many tools that are chrome plated supposedly made during the wartime chrome restrictions. Those pebble ratchets and flex head speeder are unlikely to have originally come in that box. Here is a picture of my 1/2” drive set that came as close as I could to matching the catalog 5400OC set listing with wartime tools.
-Don
Completing a whole set with war finish would an extremely tall order. The most common war finished stamped tools seem to be 3/4" 5 ring sockets. I am convinced that not all tools were stamped with the war finish marks. I know sockets, wrenches, ratchets and a few others were. I have yet to see any extensions with the mark. Maybe someone can shed some light on it and prove me wrong.
So, it's not a single find, you are cobbling a set together, the photo is how far you've gotten so far, you goal is a "correct" set, and what you meant by "the date codes run from AC to FC" is that six of the ten sockets you have have date codes from AC to FC, the others don't, and the universal joint is WAR FINISH.sorry for the confusion, it's the 1/2 set I'm completing. only have six wartime 1/2 sockets. the universal is the only one marked war finish
That's a keeper! Probably a mistake.I've got a War Finish 3/8" drive 5" extension, but to mix things up even more, it's actually a Wright Field, WF17, and actually is stamped WAR FINISH.
I prefer to use softer caveats when discussing Todd's date code system, like the "not 100% foolproof" description I used above, because I have a hard time invalidating the otherwise overwhelming soundness and tightness of its logic (i.e., the large majority of pieces do match the time period, and the letter-letter coding fits so well for the four wartime years, not only within itself, but within the entire corpus of Plomb tools, that it's hard to imagine what else they could be signifying) with what could be production mistakes and anomalies.I’ve never been convinced that the wartime date code theory is valid. I’ve seen too many tools that are chrome plated supposedly made during the wartime chrome restrictions.
Agreed on the early flex head speeder. Definitely disagree on the pebble ratchet.Those pebble ratchets and flex head speeder are unlikely to have originally come in that box.






I was already convinced that the sockets, the extension, and the ratchet were plain steel. This finish was polished, but only once, so it can look dark but not flat with some sheen. Given your up-close-and-personal confirmation, I would build your set out around those pieces if I were you.I thought mine were steel finish because to me chrome damage is always feelable. my two pebble ratchets don't have any of that.
LA: December 1941
AB - LB: January 1942 - December 1942
AC - LC:- January 1943 - December 1943
AD - LD: January 1944 - December 1944
AE - ?E: January 1945 - ? 1945
PLOMB LA - 7,8,9,0,1,2,3 (1927-1933)
PLVMB LA - 4,5,6,7,8 (1934-1938)
PLVMB USA - 9,0,1,2 (1939-1941)

Possibly a "0C" (zero C), 1940, as you already suspect, Unaiu, but not plated. AA (and nobody else that I know of...) has offered any explanation for the letters in the 1934 to 1942 alpha-numeric system. Otherwise, I don't know. Todd may have more data or a better explanation.
I see that there is a ton of extra space in the second row of your socket tray. Is there some larger sockets that are supposed to fit in there?I assume that the date codes that you are referring to are on the sockets. I’ve never been convinced that the wartime date code theory is valid. I’ve seen too many tools that are chrome plated supposedly made during the wartime chrome restrictions. Those pebble ratchets and flex head speeder are unlikely to have originally come in that box. Here is a picture of my 1/2” drive set that came as close as I could to matching the catalog 5400OC set listing with wartime tools.
-Don