The last digit indicates the year so likely 1952.What year does that code say it is?
I had to double check mine. Same wrench. It is really smallI had to squint to read it the lettering was so small
They were hand-made from unobtanium by a specific tribe of elves who raised a breed of spotted unicorns that only eat purple four leaf clovers. They made them on Feb 29th but only if that coincided with a full eclipse.Just how rare is the WF-2?

I was thinking the exact same thing. It may be unusual, but it has to be one of the most ignoble unusual wrenches ever.…and the $#!%tiest Plomb wrench award goes to…

I was thinking the exact same thing. It may be unusual, but it has to be one of the most ignoble unusual wrenches ever.![]()
OK it started funny, but than the Dad jokes took over...
. It's a TRI-TAP-TOOL with the Proto style grip. I thought it was rather unusual that it was not branded Proto.
I think mine is a Craftsman or Klein, without any of the class of a Proto.Used by electricians for repairing/tapping threads in the boxes and such. I have afr number of these, with an without handles, but none Proto.
unicorn? or just a drawing they made up for the ad?
4C as Mr X said, I think the Ranger AT-160 may be a match for the tool you show in that ad. On the Plomb Ranger list, AT-160 is described as "Tee Handle Tool With Piloted Slot, 4 1/2"". I didn't find one shown anywhere on GJ, but seems like I remember seeing one elsewhere online a few years ago. I wish I had taken a screen shot of it, because I don't remember if it was configured as a fixed tee handle or if it was a removable cross bar.
A couple years ago 4C had found an ad for a tool that we decided looked like the Plomb Ranger AT-160 which was described as "T handle tool with piloted slot, 4 1/2" but until now I haven't seen one in real life and jumped at the chance when it was presented to buy this one. The "0" is missing off the end of the p/n and now reads Ranger AT-16, but it is in really nice shape otherwise. I've also included a copy below of the ad that 4C included in his original post.^ Hey, I was just curious... I figured somebody here would recognize it.... it's a screen shot I came across yesterday and figured it would be appropriate for this thread.
Purely wild-*** speculation on my part, but I would imagine along with the very odd widgets like that "Ranger AT-160" (or the odd Packard-Merlin tools or British-made wrenches made for adjusting machine guns) there's a gazillion military-only tools most of us will probably never know about.



