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Plomb tool picture thread - show your stuff!

ecotec

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Oct 5, 2010
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Where do you live that Plvmb is this common?
Detroit area. I am right in the middle of the industrial suburbs.

In 1954, the government put tonnage of Plomb, P&C, Snap-on… in Cosmoline

While less common than other brands, you can still find it regularly. Some stores still have it in their warehouses, but don’t consider it worth dealing with. Sometimes they put out cardboard “barrels” of it out.

A good amount of Greatest Generation and Silent Generation estate sales have this same extension.

Here is one in 1954 Cosmoline (see picture).IMG_5260.jpeg

I wouldn’t say that the Plomb brand is super common, but the common pieces of Plomb can be found very easily and cheaply.

Are they bare metal?… I have no idea… they are when I take off the cosmoline with a wire wheel… and the ones I see at estate sales look the same.
 
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d42jeep

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BK,
The WF-7 is a 9/32” drive flex handle. I’m not where the flex handle is so I can’t measure it but I’m sure someone who collects WF tools can provide that info.
Humber,
Those additional little letter markings remain a mystery.
-Don
 

z28lsc

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Jan 27, 2021
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Gardena CA
I found this little wrench on my stash but I notice that it does not have a designation number like all the other series of wrenches. I thought it was an ignition wrench but even those have a number.
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d42jeep

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@d42jeep -
Is that WF-7 breaker a 1/4" drive model?

if so... .what is the outside diameter on the fat end of the handle? looks larger than my Proto.
BK,
Here are two different 4766 1/4” drive flex handles. The lower one arrived today and has a date code indicating manufacture in 1941 and the upper one is newer, likely wartime. It seems like the designs were constantly changing. IMG_4021.jpeg
-Don
 

Oregon rock crusher

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A few pieces of Plomb to be had at a weekend swap meet in central Oregon. An 8182 dbe and an 1130 - HC date code dbe. Also Puller parts 4001-R and bolts 4001-C. All on a $1 table. That was all the Plomb I saw there. Ed.
 

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Mintgrun

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Can you spot the Tool Mobile in this photo?

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I went to the last day of a sale today and was the last person to drive away, with a crusty old co-pilot along for the ride.

IMG_8072.jpeg

IMG_8069.jpeg

Four little bolts are all that hold the seat in and it fits in the trunk, allowing me to drag even more junk home.

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The contents of that shed had been spread out on the grass and the tool box drawers were out there too. Pricing was based on how much you could fit in a 5 gallon bucket, all for $10. I've bought tools by the pound, but shopping by volume is even more fun. $2/gallon is a very good deal.

$20 for the tool mobile seemed like a steal, even though it's a bit rough. It doesn't have wheels anymore and the lock mechanism is missing, but otherwise it's complete; including the bar that holds the drawers shut. It got dark before I could take more photos. I'll share some more as I clean it up a bit.

IMG_8070.jpeg

EDIT, now, I am wondering if this is a plain old Plvmb tool box, since it isn't stamped tool mobile. I'm reading up in the Pressteel thread and will probably cross-post there too.

Tom
 
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Mintgrun

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Well, someone’s username finally makes sense. Nice get either way for that price.

The prices at that sale were slightly steep, but very flexible on the last day. I don't think they expected to sell the box and seemed excited when I expressed interest.

That's a Toolmobile alright Mintgrun. Mine are stamped just like that. Just needs a little mint green paint and it can stay right where it sits.....Ed.

I spent some time removing loose paint and washing it yesterday and learned that it was originally a dark green box. I wish it still was! After that, it was a light green color (similar to mint, but subdued) and then a deep dark blue, before finally turning red. It had names and stuff stenciled on it as a mint box and also when it was blue, but it's tricky to read through the peeling layers.

IMG_8077.jpeg

Now, it's a calico box. :)

IMG_8119.jpeg

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A very thin putty knife lifted the loosest stuff, before the garden hose washed off some more and then compressed air created even more colorful confetti. It doesn't appear to have gotten rusty, aside from a little bit around the bottom and the top surface.

IMG_8114.jpeg
Needs turned 90 degree's and then you won't need no stinking casters!

It turned out I already had a set of stinking casters that fit really well. The box was missing one of the inserts and they were too small/short for the replacements anyway, so I pulled them out and wrapped the long bolts with strips of cardboard to fill the gaps. I did it as a temporary stop-gap, but it worked so well I may just leave it. It'll be fine as long as it doesn't get wet. Plus, there's enough thread poking out the top to get nuts on the ends. If I do leave it, I'll wick some oil into the cardboard. (It's a tighter fit than it looks).

IMG_8115.jpeg


5" wheels are a bit large, but boy does it roll around easily!

IMG_8117.jpeg

The drawers still have all the rollers and the rollers still have all their bearings, but they've gotten pretty loose. This one decide to stop spinning a lonnng time ago and the one above it is almost as bad.

IMG_8130.jpeg

Someone made dividers for two of the drawers and screwed them in. They're made of aluminum and the top drawer also has an aluminum liner on the bottom. I think the perforated drawer bottoms are cool, so I'll be removing those and will probably just put the screws back in, to plug the holes for now.

IMG_8132.jpeg

Thankfully, they put liners in the drawers, so the red paint is in great shape. When I flipped one of the liners over I noticed that it'd been a tool box box. Could it have held this box?

IMG_8123.jpeg

is that 2002 a '76?

It is. It will turn 50 years old on Oct. 21st. I've owned it for 14 years. I like driving old vehicles. I've owned the '72 Suburban for thirty years now.

IMG_7891.jpeg

Maybe I should have used Ocre as my screen name. :D
(Is it possible to change names? I might prefer "gleaner").

Tom

EDIT- silly question about the cardboard box originally containing this one. It would have been an MBC box.
 
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Private Lugnutz

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it was originally a dark green box. I wish it still was! After that, it was a light green color (similar to mint, but subdued) and then a deep dark blue, before finally turning red.
Ironically, those are all the colors Plomb Tool Company ostensibly painted their boxes between 1936 and 1948, so you could say it's "representative" and not be wrong or vague! :)

I think your Toolmobile is probably wartime. All boxes were shown and described as "brilliant Chinese red" from 1940 to 1948, with an "All Toolboxes Finished in GREEN" overstamp on those pages in the wartime catalogs. That had to be a reference to the olive green finish we find them in, and, before they switched to red, "Olive green baked enamel" is how all the boxes were described in 1939 (Catalog 17B) - except, oddly enough, the Toolmobile, which is described as "Lustrous metallic blue enamel."

Details here.
Maybe I should have used Ocre as my screen name.
Or Mustard, just to piss off all the Ketchup guys.
(Is it possible to change names?
I have seen it done. But it's rare.
Could it have held this box?
Unless I'm sorely mistaken about MBC, I don't see how. It would mean Pressteel was outsourcing to MBC, for starters. That's possible, I suppose, but I didn't think MBC was that old.
 

Oregon rock crusher

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I spent some time removing loose paint and washing it yesterday and learned that it was originally a dark green box. I wish it still was! After that, it was a light green color (similar to mint, but subdued) and then a deep dark blue, before finally turning red. It had names and stuff stenciled on it as a mint box and also when it was blue, but it's tricky to read through the peeling layers.
One thing to look for while your cleaning your toolmobile up is a number stamped in the left top of the box a few inches in from the back lip. They seem to be on the red stamped logo toolmobiles, probably by Plomb as a S/N. A pic of what you can expect to find. Ed.
 

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Private Lugnutz

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There is a GS contract No there. anything available in the lists?
I only have WWII contracts records. That is a General Services Administration contract number and the GSA was established in 1949. I would think that someone who collects and/or knows something about later vintage boxes knows more about MBC than I do, but I tend to think of MBC as 1960's and later, and I doubt that cardboard box has anything to do with that Toolmobile.
 

Mintgrun

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Private Lugnutz

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I don't need to hang valves and pistons.
Well, hang tools, then, like Plomb shows in the 1939 catalog! (In God...and ITCL and Google Books I trust, all others I verify!) :)

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The text in all catalogs from 1939 to 1949 reads the same: "Bolted on rack, has 16 holes and 8 slots for pistons, valves, and tools." (Emboldening and underlining mine for emphasis.) Who's to argue with the original source if you choose to use it to hang all and only tools? Especially when they picture it that way themselves! I know that's what I would use it for if I had one. Besides, you know you are just itching to make one. :)
 

r_olson_06

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Plomb would make tools for specific industrial requests including making tools not shown in catalogs for the military. Some examples have been posted in this thread. IMG_3239.jpegIMG_8397.jpeg
FullSizeRender 2.jpeg-Don
Nice double sided ell. That is a unique one!
 

r_olson_06

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I have This wrench that is very thick for it's size it is number 42426. I haven't find much info on it. It is almost 3/8 in the middle and .535 on the ends.
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Nice. I have a few of those as well. I believe they are an industrial application given the thickness. Here is the ones I have seen.
 

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