Private Lugnutz
Well-known member
?? The Tool Archives, of course! There are fourteen (14) P&C catalogs between 1926 and the 1960's. Are you not a member? Link here.Got any P&C catalog pdfs anywhere you can think of?
?? The Tool Archives, of course! There are fourteen (14) P&C catalogs between 1926 and the 1960's. Are you not a member? Link here.Got any P&C catalog pdfs anywhere you can think of?
Thanks! I've already used it once but not for its intended purpose evidently! Appreciate the info.^ RagTopTA, the lug wrench is fabulous.
It's an early cotter pin removing tool. They were made by a number of different companies. Some of the larger Mossberg socket sets included them.
Here's a couple early catalog snips - they were made with points on both ends or with one pointed end and one flat end:
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Well, if the odds were 50/50 ratchet or 4-way lug wrench, it's less amazing.I have only seen a P&C ratchet that had some pebble I think... other than that..

Yep, wish I'd had this a long time ago. Handy little tool that is staying on top of my bench. Glad I could resurrect it!Rag: I was thinking by your post that it was pretty big and might have been a pipe wrench, but if 3Bay really just guessed what it was. GEEESH that's AMAZING.
nice find and good for you for going back for another look.
Rub: funny the maintenance guy at the storage unit i lease a unit at uses that tool to pull new rubber door seals out from under the door so they'll (the rubber sealer) lay flat.
:Thanks! I've already used it once but not for its intended purpose evidently! Appreciate the info.
I am but I have never been able to get my dang password to work. I got it changed! Looking at the catalogs now to see what year has the pebbled 4 way!?? The Tool Archives, of course! There are fourteen (14) P&C catalogs between 1926 and the 1960's. Are you not a member? Link here.
Rag: I was thinking by your post that it was pretty big and might have been a pipe wrench, but if 3Bay really just guessed what it was. GEEESH that's AMAZING.
nice find and good for you for going back for another look.
I usually try to do a second look when I go somewhere new! you just never know what you missed the first time around.
Sweet score!
I sort of knew what it could be with a little bit of photographic memory. Plus I’ve seen a lot of tools. Plus I may have some psychic ability.
Plus Flatland Dave has one as his avatar!:
https://www.garagejournal.com/forum/showthread.php?t=216917
Good job then 3Bay!!! hahaha you had us all going!
That is actually similar to what I was doing with it yesterday while cleaning some gunk out of some tight spots on some old toolsI had one of those until I lost it. Never knew it was for cotter pins, but the flat end worked fantasic to open gallon-size paint cans, and the pointed end was good at clearing paint from the trough in the rim.
Bam!!
$5
Wow, that's interesting.Briefly back on the 1948-1949 Plomb-Proto transition topic, here are some pics of a J.P. Danielson made PLVMBALVY 708-S 8" adjustable that I found at a flea market last year. Excuse the brown crud, which is paint that I have left up to its new owner to keep or remove. The appearance does not mar the most interesting part of this wrench, which is in its date code: J.2.8. (February 1948)!
Lugz,Briefly back on the 1948-1949 Plomb-Proto transition topic, here are some pics of a J.P. Danielson made PLVMBALVY 708-S 8" adjustable that I found at a flea market last year. Excuse the brown crud, which is paint that I have left up to its new owner to keep or remove. The appearance does not mar the most interesting part of this wrench, which is in its date code: J.2.8. (February 1948)!
And the fact that they were branding them with a forged-in PLOMBALOY in 1948 - pursuant to the discussion about when the dual brandings started, i.e., 48? as AA says and as we see on the questionable stamped tools, or 49? as TA says based on the Time/Duke U articles.Lugz,
Is the significance of the '48 date code the presence of the broached hole? AA notes that after Plomb's acquisition of JPD in 1947 they dropped the broached hole in '48 onward.
Then that really is an eerily good guess, because it could've been anything. It wouldn't matter if 3bay has one or has seen one, you're not showing enough of the tool to know that it's not something else. All we see is the logo on a pebble field. It could be any pebble P&C tool. Unless the 4-way lug wrench was the only thing they made that was pebbled, and I don't think that's the case. I'm sure 3bay will enlighten us soon.
And the fact that they were branding them with a forged-in PLOMBALOY in 1948 - pursuant to the discussion about when the dual brandings started, i.e., 48? as AA says and as we see on the questionable stamped tools, or 49? as TA says based on the Time/Duke U articles.
I found this combo wrench in my stash tonight and I didn't even know I had it!
Plomb NAF 1147 USN 9/16" combo
Brian
Having just gone through a bunch of catalogs and as many photos of P&C tools as I could find, I might go even further than doubt. Which is exactly why RagTop's guessing game has turned out to be so supremely ironic. The 4-Way Rim Wrench is apparently the only tool that P&C ever made that bears the full P&C logo (P&C within a hexagon) on a pebble field!I doubt anything else sold by P&C looks even close.
The "Transition adjustable" with the stamped dual brandings and the forged-in March 1948 date is very interesting, RagTop. Especially on the heels of me posting my forged-in "PLVMBALVY" with a forged-in February 1948 date!Heres all the ones I have, including a Transition adjustable. Dual marked.
The "Transition adjustable" with the stamped dual brandings and the forged-in March 1948 date is very interesting, RagTop. Especially on the heels of me posting my forged-in "PLVMBALVY" with a forged-in February 1948 date!
Having just gone through a bunch of catalogs and as many photos of P&C tools as I could find, I might go even further than doubt. Which is exactly why RagTop's guessing game has turned out to be so supremely ironic. The 4-Way Rim Wrench is apparently the only tool that P&C ever made that bears the full P&C logo (P&C within a hexagon) on a pebble field!![]()
Even the 1/4-inch midget ratchet that they made with a pebble field handle - throw-back style, in 1953, and the only other P&C tool I can even find that even has a pebble field - doesn't have the full logo. Just "P&C".
What makes this whole thing even stranger is the fact that the same image - full P&C logo in a hexagon with a pebble field - boldly graces the cover of the 1947 and 1948 catalogs.
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Why is that strange? Because, while the full P&C logo can be seen on some of the larger flatter pieces in those catalogs, such as pouches and tool boards, none of those logos have a pebbled field, none of the tools in those catalogs have a pebbled field, and the No. 175 4-Way Rim Wrench, shown on page 17 of those catalogs, doesn't even have the flat shield-shaped piece of steel at the nexus of the two shanks to hold a forged-in full logo on a pebbled field. (I am assuming they used an earlier figure of an earlier tool, or the 4-way Rim Wrenches that RagTop, Rileysan, and others have with the pebble logo are later production.)
Of course, going back to RagTop's first image, which only showed the logo on the pebble field...
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...to the formerly uninitiated (no problem raising my hand on this one!), it seemed as if RagTop's guessing game was impossible. With the premise that all P&C tools in this era had the full logo on a pebbled field, it would be like guessing which Plomb pebbled tool this logo is on...
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I did notice they don't actually show the pebble part in the three catalogs I looked at. So strange.Agreed, but see my edit. I just remembered that Ed (Oregon Rock Crusher) actually has a dual-stamped Plomb / flip side PROTO adjustable that was forged by JPD earlier (January 1948) than my Plombaloy was forged. So they were shipping out blanks (no branding) and then still making forged-in Plombs!
That's a Utica. Utica supplied Plomb's pliers and adjustable wrenches before 1947, before Plomb bought J.P. Danielson. EDIT: And Utica tools were not date coded.The strange 6" Plomb adjustable has no date codes on it. I looked it over with a magnifying glass and nothing.
That's a Utica. Utica supplied Plomb's pliers and adjustable wrenches before 1947, before Plomb bought J.P. Danielson. EDIT: And Utica tools were not date coded.
Not too early with the V in the Plomb. But earlier than 1947 for sure. And later than 1934.ahh so its earlier then? I was wondering. Its in the best shape out of all of them.
Hit a sale over the weekend and got a handful of wrenches for 50 cents each.
They were very grimy but was glad to see one was a Plomb after I used some steel wool on it. The rest were Blue Point wrenches.
EDIT: I may have to start a little chart to keep track.