this post has no references to green tool boxes.........oh wait......doh!!
well, it's in Thailand, circa 48 I think. It's Bangkok, pretty sure the West side of the river. The sign in Thai script says Plomb on the top and then (khreuuang meuu) "tool hand" - (chang gohn) "mechanic" below. (it does not say "streamlined") I saved this on my computer a long time ago but if you google plomb thailand there'll be an image you can follow to something about a S.E Asia photo collection taken by Robert Pendleton ( Morris's brother it turns out). Something like that.
We now return control of your green Plomb tool box thread to you.
Mr. X is the "Banksy" of the tool world. This is the only known photo of him!
Hey Smoke. I bought that red one years ago and it had some rust around the very bottom so I sanded it up a little and put a black stripe around the base ( which I messed up) of some brand of rust seal paint as a temporary measure and then never got around to doing a more professional job. The red paint is original. It's full of every kind of tool except Plomb as I recall.
We can make this a red tool box thread as well ! Any more pictures of that beauty? It looks mint. Has it been repainted or is it original?
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I thought he'd be taller.
Hook, line, and sinker!
When trollin,I hear it's best to use a copper clad lure.
You got it! You got it!
Is it, indeed, copper plated and not BeCu, compositionally? (I'd be tempted to notch it somewhere inconspicuous with a serious edged tool...) Is the finish thick, solid, and heavy or does it look like it was washed on like some of my older copper oxide tools?
You may be in a club of one with that thing.
You got it!
Is it, indeed, copper plated and not BeCu, compositionally? (I'd be tempted to notch it somewhere inconspicuous with a serious edged tool...) Is the finish thick, solid, and heavy or does it look like it was washed on like some of my older copper oxide tools?
You may be in a club of one with that thing.
Please post a photo when you get around to it.I have one plated early doe that is plated and that’s it...plated tools are fairly rare in these parts
That would certainly spare the knife!Magnet.
Sorry about that. I have BeCu tools and I have copper-plated tools. The latter was the subject of some debate here on GJ last year (not specifically here on the Plomb thread) in which some participants, misinformed by AA, if I had to guess, argued that vintage tools with a coppery finish were either misidentified BeCu tools or chrome- or nickel-plated tools where the plating was badly worn and the copper undercoat commonly applied to chrome- and nickel-plated tools in the pre-war years was simply showing. The discussions/debates prompted a re-visit on the Plomb KOP-R-KLAD line of tools in the very late 30's, and spawned two threads, one on Bethlehem Spark Plug drive tools, linked here, and another on tools with copper-coatings or -plating as an intentional final finish, in general, linked here, for which your Plomb pebble field DOE wrench is another great example. (I suspect Smoke has a similar example. Perhaps we shall see.)OK, I literally had to move 1,000 lbs. of **** to pull these out...
c'mon..........dang!....nothing.
Got one here. Nice Williams. Didn’t expect to see a Stanley or Hinsdale either. Nice collection.

I should've been more explicit, or explained that my query wasn't ignorant of the differences. Didnt mean to make you do extra work! But I do appreciate it.
However, I don't believe I have seen a copper-coated (or -plated, still remains to be seen) Plomb drive tool before, let alone a copper-coated/plated WF drive tool! Hence, my 'perhaps a club of one' reference to Slew.
Got one here. Nice Williams. Didn’t expect to see a Stanley or Hinsdale either. Nice collection.
Maybe it's just the photo, or just me, but I'm not seeing copper-plating on that one.Pictures of my only said plated tool! Dated 7c, 3030 plvmb Los Angeles. I got it years ago in a trade. I have no clue on its rarity or worth ]
That's saying a lot more than me saying I have never seen one!I have never seen a copper plated or whatever plomb drive tool either. I can't tell anything from that photo.
You mean like this Plomb spud wrench with a "1/2AM (13/16)" size marking?MR.X said:BTW, I THINK that Hinsdale double box is WW2 era. I'm guessing the "USS" sizings goes with the same convention for structural and industrial usage wrenches that Plomb for example used on their heavy duty stuff well after the late 20's switch to AF sizes.
Interesting theory on the BeCu Hinsdale, but I can't recall other mfgrs being nearly as tyrannical as Plomb about that as late as the 40's.Maybe it's just the photo, or just me, but I'm not seeing copper-plating on that one.
That's saying a lot more than me saying I have never seen one!
You mean like this Plomb spud wrench with a "1/2AM (13/16)" size marking?![]()
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That reference to American Standard nuts and bolts followed by the actual milled opening in parentheses has furrowed many collectors brows!!Interesting theory on the BeCu Hinsdale, but I can't recall other mfgrs being nearly as tyrannical as Plomb about that as late as the 40's.
That reference to American Standard nuts and bolts followed by the actual milled opening in parentheses has furrowed many collectors brows!!Interesting theory on the BeCu Hinsdale, but I can't recall other mfgrs being nearly as tyrannical as Plomb about that as late as the 40's.