Indeed they are. What is the big size? Seems like the 1-1/16" and 1-1/4" are near impossible.Recently added 5426-S to my 1/2" drive set. These 8 pt versions have proven challenging to find. Still missing a couple, but chipping away at it!
Roy, I am indeed still missing the two you mentioned plus the 5/8" and the 3/8". The largest one I have is 1" and attached shows a pic with the 8 pt and 12 pt counter part side by side. Quite a difference!Indeed they are. What is the big size? Seems like the 1-1/16" and 1-1/4" are near impossible.
Don, your great family photo inspired me to get my 1/2" drive box out and take a similar pic. As I was doing so, I realized that one of my breaker bars, an extension and one long socket are in my fifth wheel (used to pull my water heater anode) and are missing here.I have five 8 pointers in my 1/2” drive set. I don’t run across them very often.
-Don
Lugz, all of mine are the smooth finish.I found this 3324 (3/8") electrical wrench at the flea yesterday. Note the non-pebbled recessed panel. We talked about these back in 2018, but I was never satisfied with the answers, and I still don't think it's resolved. As you can see in the group shot of the paltry, fugly Plomb electrical/obstruction wrenches I have managed to find in the wild, they clearly made 33xx series wrenches with a smooth shank. That's a 3318 directly above it. I don't know if the recessed panel was a factory thing, in parallel with the smooth shanks, or a time thing, made earlier or later than the smooth shanks. But 33xx electrical wrenches were never shown with a recessed panel in any Plomb catalog as far as I know.
I collected a bunch of 8 point sockets a few years ago when I owned a boat, an older boat, 1967 Criss Craft, and I still worked on older machines of different sorts. Not much call for them or less call as time has marched on. Now the manufacturers throw weird fasteners at us willy nilly but the old square drive was popular back when.
I remember when I first encountered a clutch drive bolt on my 1954 Ford. That blew my mind.
This could be read two ways. You are an advertised expert hired on the up and up by an institution or a major architectural construction firm looking to carefully remove some historic manufacturing machinery prior to a demolition scheduled to take place sooner than planned due to some administrivial ****-up. Or, you broke into an abandoned building at night to steal a lathe and daylight was approaching fast. Either way, you didn't have any 4-pointers!I learned from experience about sockets for square heads doing a detailed time sensitive salvage operation in an old factory where the ingress alone took considerable time and effort only to realize that a significant item would involve time frozen square head fasteners requiring an offset means of access. I thought my "assault pack" combined with cheater pipes etc. that would be found onsite would cover just about anything I'd run into but I didn't have the experience to know what I didn't know.

Nice! Never seen one in person and resolved to the fact that I need to spend some time on the left coast after retirement in June!Picked these up recently. Kind of interesting 3/4" drive WF's as they're 1940 date codes and chromed. I'd have close to a whole set by now if I hadn't been trading these off over the years.
This could be read two ways. You are an advertised expert hired on the up and up by an institution or a major architectural construction firm looking to carefully remove some historic manufacturing machinery prior to a demolition scheduled to take place sooner than planned due to some administrivial ****-up. Or, you broke into an abandoned building at night to steal a lathe and daylight was approaching fast. Either way, you didn't have any 4-pointers!![]()
MR. X: sounds like a movie I watched called "Oh Brother Where Art Thou" starring George Clooney.
Nice! Never seen one in person and resolved to the fact that I need to spend some time on the left coast after retirement in June!
Those are interesting. Any pics of the tops?

Thats the exact reason why I always keep a set of 8 point sockets in my car tool box.
this is the only other pic I have for now.
Thank you sir!Congrats on your retirement. These 2 were found South of Harrisburg PA.
Are there any markings on the crossbar? I would not expect to see any. I would like to see the manufacturers marks on the drive tools, if possible. Great set. Thanks.
-Don
That's alot of plomb!
Well, I finally made it back across the country and got my grubby mitts on the Plvmb 5400T set.
As promised, here are some pictures of the drive tools. As you suspected, there are no markings on the crossbar.
After double-checking the catalog, it looks like I need to find a 5463 10" extension to complete the set... I'll keep my eyes open.
Best regards,
John