Private Lugnutz
Well-known member
Thanks. Just went back and checked it out. Now I'm thinking that is probably the catalog AA has in their library, which they date to 1931 at the earliest.
Where did those pics come from? Your catalogs Notlob?
Reminds me, I have to download those and get mediafire off my site.....
Yeah, some of their browserjacks are kinda dubious.Reminds me, I have to download those and get mediafire off my site.....
Sent from my VS990 using Tapatalk
Thanks, Don. shanny19 on the 2018 Garage Sale thread said his dad has had the exact same torque since '63, so possibly older than '75. Unfortunately, we've only got the 1931 and the 1975 cats with a lot of guesswork in between.It appears in the '75 catalog on Tool Archives.
-Don
As first reported in the 2018 Garage Sale thread, linked here, I picked up a Thorsen T-150 torque-indicating wrench today at the flea market. I never see Thorsen tools, so I couldn’t resist. And I am fond of the fluted handle design.
No clue on vintage. 50's? 60's? Anyone know?

Looking for missing pieces for this metric Action set (9, 15, 16, 18 mm):
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Here are a couple more recent vintage Thorsen sets.
If anyone has a Thorsen 3/8 dr 10mm socket and/or 5"(?) extension you would be willing to part with, I'd be mighty grateful if you'd let me know.
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I put a spare Action 53J in the Notlob bag today.
-Don

This one almost was thrown into the scrap china socket box for recycling!
Looks to maybe be a cadimum plated 9/32" drive-six pointer. Never seen any TT in a circle ever--just a rare find on my part-was in a junk mixed box of **** I picked up! Maybe thorsen did mfg. a "Midget" set? The "Holly Grail"??
d42jeep said:"...6 point on one end and 12 point on the other..."

Very interesting find, Dan.
We were just talking about this a few pages ago. There are no midget (1/4- or 9/32-inch) square drive tools in the 1935 (TT) logo era catalog. There is a special 1/4-inch hex drive set in a different undated (TT) logo era catalog posted on page 4 of this thread. So your 9/32-inch drive (TT) 3/16" socket is either later than those catalogs, or contract only.
The other strange thing about this socket is that it's the exact same service opening size (3/16") as 3bay's oddball cad-plated 1/2-inch drive socket, #506X (see post #350 and the ensuing conversation on page 18 and 19 of this thread). As discussed back then, 3/16" is an extremely unusually small opening for a 1/2-inch drive socket. If they were making 9/32-inch drive tools, including a socket with a very typical 3/16" opening for midget drive tools, why would they need to make such a weird 1/2-inch drive socket? (EDIT: Maybe some special fastener with a 3/16" hex head had unusual torque requirements.)
