r_olson_06
Well-known member
Appreciate it!Douglas Aircraft not Kinner.
See post 13,354.
Appreciate it!Douglas Aircraft not Kinner.
See post 13,354.
Appreciate itDouglas Aircraft not Kinner.
See post 13,354.
Thank you setting the record straight on the K series is for Douglas Aircraft. What is the F series tools that pop up every now and then?Douglas Aircraft not Kinner.
See post 13,354.
The F’s I’ve run across were Boeing. I don’t know of any published Plomb list. I’ve just compared known Plomb examples to tool lists in the respective aircraft manuals.Appreciate it
Thank you setting the record straight on the K series is for Douglas Aircraft. What is the F series tools that pop up every now and then?
Also is there any known published list of these Douglas contract tools?
Here's my low-profile saw after cleaning and handle refinishing, with a new blade modified to fit.I found this at an estate sale last weekend. A close quarters hacksaw? Figured it was worth the $3 asking price.
Plomb (or Plumb) model 344

Some are chome, plain steel, cadmium, or black oxide.Nice find R-Olson-06!
I wonder if those are chrome covered.
I have some older rusty 5 band sockets which I never got to cleaning - wonder if they were black oxide or not...
Nice Dually!







I was looking at that last night, too bad it went so quick.Waiting to hear from the seller on this.
SOLD, but not to me.
I waited all day for a response from the seller, finally told me they had a lot of interested buyers and then a sold message.I was looking at that last night, too bad it went so quick.
Dang. Love the 1" drive Pebble. Looked like a good mix of 3/4" drive as well.Waiting to hear from the seller on this.
SOLD, but not to me.
They are. I don't think I have added any in about 4 years.That's some rare stuff




I see and thank you. I thought they looked close to those years in the catalogs, but the markings shown looked a little different. It matches yours. But my finish is dark?
I see and thank you. I thought they looked close to those years in the catalogs, but the markings shown looked a little different. It matches yours. But my finish is dark?

I thought it was cadmium but, is mine black oxide? I know some about the cadmium because of a WF ratchet I have.During WW2 there were certain metal restrictions, one of which was chrome. Manufacturers used many alternatives including plain finish, cadmium plating and black oxide. Over time the black oxide and cad plating were subject to wear so the wrenches will often look quite different from one another.
-Don
It looks like it from here. It could be a very dark natural steel - I have a few, but most likely Black Ox. As Don suggested.I thought it was cadmium but, is mine black oxide?
Most what?...looks more modern than most.
Newer than what?I knew mine was newer because of the style
No worries. There is quite a bit of junk information out there especially on eBay. Typically uninformed sellers will go to sold listings and pick the title that has sold for theost even though it is inaccurate. This forum is wealth of knowledge and I am still learning for the community even after decade of collecting Plomb.Maybe I didn't get it out my head well, the examples on the internet from the 20's & 30's look archaic. Old school dog bone types, poor manufacturing sloppy quality on many. Doesn't mean I don't want them. So mine looks like a newer more modern style. It looks like it could be sold today, maybe it needs to be chromed.
When I looked online some sites described what mine looks like and put in the 30's, but the pictures and examples didn't come close. Same with catalogs. I knew when the WF's were made and the pebble style were made but didn't know where this one fit. Now I do.
I agree with you Roy. "Trust, but verify" is a good motto for research when it comes to most online sources.There is quite a bit of junk information out there especially on eBay. Typically uninformed sellers will go to sold listings and pick the title that has sold for theost even though it is inaccurate. This forum is wealth of knowledge and I am still learning for the community even after decade of collecting Plomb.
You mean a pebble isn’t the first casting?My favorite is when they claim its the "1st casting "
Rare bird. I can only guess what it was for:Anyone know anything about this one
I think to state the obvious it appears to be a war time production contract tools. I tried to use AI to correlate MPN to some contact or similar manufacture standard but I had no luck. Is it 1/4" or 9/32" drive?Anyone know anything about this one