Smokeshow69
Well-known member
yep, you have a spare lid?
I do not but you could fabricate one on a sheet metal brake
Sent from my iPhone using The Garage Journal mobile app
yep, you have a spare lid?
I do not but you could fabricate one on a sheet metal brake
Sent from my iPhone using The Garage Journal mobile app
I'm still looking for the tray that came with these 9998 boxes. Got this plomb pry bar in today.
Is that 16"?Got this plomb pry bar in today.
I have a Craftsman USA version of that bar, and I wish it had the square or hex shank yours has. Mine is round. A lot of times the foot hung off the edge of something and away she'd go. Can't say I've seen a plomb before, very cool.
Is that 16"?
Nice. There might be some droolingly jealous WWII collectors looking at that for their Plomb-oriented GMTK boxes!!![]()
Whats a GMTK box?


I thought I had put this up in here, but I guess not. I found this old puller in the box at an old guys shop in Eugene. 80 if a day, Burt is one of those fix anything types and he is starting to clean out his shop and yard. About a hundred riding mowers, old sewing machines and refrigerators (even monitor tops). Anyway, this was one of the treasures I have found there.
Before (on the left)
After. I thought the paint would be a better match, but oh well.
I thought I had put this up in here, but I guess not. I found this old puller in the box at an old guys shop in Eugene. 80 if a day, Burt is one of those fix anything types and he is starting to clean out his shop and yard. About a hundred riding mowers, old sewing machines and refrigerators (even monitor tops). Anyway, this was one of the treasures I have found there.
Before (on the left)
After. I thought the paint would be a better match, but oh well.
Hi Roy. If the context is early tools (mid 20's), when they were still using an alphanumeric part number system, many of them phonetic, all the Ford special purpose tools started with an F, and all the other car maker's special purpose tools (e.g., Chevy, Nash, Buick, etc) started with a K. I don't remember what the C tools were. I would look through the 1925 or 1928 catalogs.Does anyone know what a part number starting with K is for and what a part number starting with C is for? I remember something about something about contract productions. Does anyone have any light they want to shed on this subject?
Yeah they look unused. Strange seeing them with what appears to be a wartime toolbox made by E.J. McAleer. $1,000 is way overpriced for that lot, though! Late Pebble with some other special purpose mfgr's and a coupe old Bonney thrown in.Not mine, but an interesting look at what I make to be late pebble minty tools, packaging, and presentation
If you're referring to the Registered Trademark symbol, this came up the other day on a different thread and nobody knew when they first started using it. Your post implies that it was later than mid-to-late 50's. Do you have some info on when they first started using it? The symbol was established by the USPTO in 1946.I take it they used to pebble design on these Proto's for quite some time unlike the other pebble/recessed plomb-type tools they phased out by the mid-to-late 50's.
Plomb has a total of nine (9) contracts with the US Army Air Corps listed in the War Production Board's Alphabetic Listing of Major War Supply Contracts: Cumulative, June 1940 through September 1945, published in 1946. Three (3) of them were awarded prior to war being declared, in January, June, and November 1941. EDIT: Strangely, when chrome-plating was precisely abolished is actually a little vague. WPB Material Order M-18 took control of chromium on July 7, 1941. WPB's weekly bulletins throughout late 1941 talking about alternatives and panels looking at alternatives imply that it has either already been restricted or soon about to be. WPB Limitation Order L-216, which concerned commercial production, wasn't first issued until December 1942. The consensus on chrome WF tools seems to be either pre- or possibly immediate post-war.Did the WF contract predate the WPB L-216 restrictions?
There are no "circle R" registered TM symbols on Proto LA tools, therefore, it was at least 57, but I think it wasn't until they were acquired that it started being used.Hi Roy. If the context is early tools (mid 20's), when they were still using an alphanumeric part number system, many of them phonetic, all the Ford special purpose tools started with an F, and all the other car maker's special purpose tools (e.g., Chevy, Nash, Buick, etc) started with a K. I don't remember what the C tools were. I would look through the 1925 or 1928 catalogs.
Yeah they look unused. Strange seeing them with what appears to be a wartime toolbox made by E.J. McAleer. $1,000 is way overpriced for that lot, though! Late Pebble with some other special purpose mfgr's and a coupe old Bonney thrown in.
If you're referring to the Registered Trademark symbol, this came up the other day on a different thread and nobody knew when they first started using it. Your post implies that it was later than mid-to-late 50's. Do you have some info on when they first started using it? The symbol was established by the USPTO in 1946.
Plomb has a total of nine (9) contracts with the US Army Air Corps listed in the War Production Board's Alphabetic Listing of Major War Supply Contracts: Cumulative, June 1940 through September 1945, published in 1946. Three (3) of them were awarded prior to war being declared, in January, June, and November 1941. EDIT: Strangely, when chrome-plating was precisely abolished is actually a little vague. WPB Material Order M-18 took control of chromium on July 7, 1941. WPB's weekly bulletins throughout late 1941 talking about alternatives and panels looking at alternatives imply that it has either already been restricted or soon about to be. WPB Limitation Order L-216, which concerned commercial production, wasn't first issued until December 1942. The consensus on chrome WF tools seems to be either pre- or possibly immediate post-war.
Not mine, but an interesting look at what I make to be late pebble minty tools, packaging, and presentation
https://www.ebay.com/itm/PLOMB-1-2-...m=382467477847&_trksid=p2047675.c100009.m1982
Otg,Isn't the speculation that war contract stuff was made at old bog plant?
Anyone have a WF 61 or thereabouts to compare to that "C"-5542?
Otg,
In addition to the nine (9) US Army Air Corps contracts, they had six (6) Navy contracts, two (2) US Army Ordnance Dept contracts, and two (2) Treasury Dept contracts. In those days, Treasury had the Federal Standard Stock Catalog and those tools could've went to any federal agency ordering tools by Federal Stock Number - this was the forerunner of todays GSA Schedule and NSN system. Almost all the contracts were overlapping after 1942. They were using every factory they could get their hands on to fill orders, including Cragin/Bog, including P&C (which also made WF- marked tools). Todd's got a source that puts a crazy number on the number of factories.




Otg,
In addition to the nine (9) US Army Air Corps contracts, they had six (6) Navy contracts, two (2) US Army Ordnance Dept contracts, and two (2) Treasury Dept contracts. In those days, Treasury had the Federal Standard Stock Catalog and those tools could've went to any federal agency ordering tools by Federal Stock Number - this was the forerunner of todays GSA Schedule and NSN system. Almost all the contracts were overlapping after 1942. They were using every factory they could get their hands on to fill orders, including Cragin/Bog, including P&C (which also made WF- marked tools). Todd's got a source that puts a crazy number on the number of factories.
Thanks for clearing that up! That would make sense considering how stuff they were producing.
The 1/2 drive WF sockets look like that, and I think the heavy duty or power drive 3/4 do as well. Cheaper to not knurl in the grip rings maybe.
That x-ray pic is awesome!Hip hip hooray, you finally got it x-rayed!And because sometimes it is not what you know, but who you know...
But that is the LAST thing I expected to see under that dead blow hammer (predicting, wrongly, the 7/8" box end). So not only did Enco re-purpose (and re-chrome) a Plomb WF-83 for some of their drawbar wrammers, they welded a different end on it? (I guess they would have to, some kind of box for casting the composite hammer around...) You gotta update your thread!My WF-82 collection. The chromed by Plomb wrench is nowhere near as smooth as the chromed by Enco one.
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My WF-82 collection. The chromed by Plomb wrench is nowhere near as smooth as the chromed by Enco one.
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