Private Lugnutz
Well-known member
Snerk.
Are you sure about that date, Smoke? Is the page that Toolmobile notice appears on physically connected to the Proto mailer cover that is dated 1952? Or could it be separate?
Here's why I ask.
According to the USPTO, Plomb Tool Company applied for that TM on April 12, 1956, and it was granted on November 27, 1956. Link here.
It gets weirder.
In their TM application, Plomb claimed first use of the Toolmobile name on December 13, 1946. I know it appears in Catalog 17B, which was published in 1939!
Did Plomb not have access to their own catalogs and other records? Or by first use are they referring to the first tme they put the "Toolmobile" name on the unit itself, not just in paperwork or packaging? (By the way, I get your point, but it was 17 years from its appearance in the 1939 catalog, and 10 years from their own stated first use date.)
This couldn't get any weirder.
Haha. Well, where he is going is nowhere fast. It's not so much a rabbit hole as a puzzling wall too massive to get around. And research is not going to resolve this.I get where you are going... [ ]...I wish we had someone on this thread who had devoted a fair amount of time to researching the lawsuits and the Pendleton tool company in generalMaybe he could shed light on this rabbit hole
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Haha. Well, where he is going is nowhere fast. It's not so much a rabbit hole as a puzzling wall too massive to get around. And research is not going to resolve this.
There is zero question or doubt about when the "Toolmobile" TM was submitted (April 12, 1956) or granted (Nov 27, 1956) according to the USPTO. There are no records in the USPTO TSDR database of an earlier document and no indications or hints in the certificate or the proceedings or assignment pages showing or indicating previous actions on that TM. (BTW, it was renewed in 1976 and expired in 1997.)
Seeing them extoll the new TM in a Proto newsletter dated 1952 is anachronistic to the USPTO record.
Is it possible that the page announcing the "Toolmobile" TM in your Proto newsletter is from later than 1956, and someone (e.g., a clerk in a store, etc) mistakenly stapled it to the 1952 newsletter. In other words, maybe the staples are intact, and very old, but not original. I texted tin medic and asked him some questions about his newsletters. Maybe he can add something helpful to the discussion.
The other equally perplexing open question for me is why, when submitting the TM application in 1956, would the Plomb Tool Company claim first use on Dec 13, 1946, when a "Toolmobile" appears and is advertised with that name in Catalog 17B (1939), and in every ensuing catalog through Catalog 19-R 2nd Printing (1946).
The only explanation I can think of here, as mentioned, but elaborating now, is that by "first use", the Plomb Tool Company was absent-mindedly referring to the first time they applied the name to the item itself as a decal, not to the first time they mentioned it in catalogs, ads, brochures, packaging, etc. This is a little squirrely, honestly, and it's based on a premise that I don't even know is true or not. I can tell you that no catalog images of the Toolmobile between 1939 and 1949 (4922-M), which is the latest catalog I have, show a "Toolmobile" decal on the unit itself. Just the Plomb Tools logos in the usual places. Someone (Brian, for instance) may know or be able to ascertain when they started putting a "Toolmobile" decal on them. If that was 1946 or thereabouts, maybe it's the answer.

Thanks. Saying they've TM'ed the name "Toolmobile" in a newsletter 4 years before they submitted their TM application is just mindboggling to me then.The staples on this mailer is the same as the other 3 I have so that is why i am certain it is as it left the factory.
I'm not sure what relevance the Plomb Tool Co logos would have on this question, Smoke, embossed or painted. I'm referring to a decal that actually says "Toolmobile," such as the one shown in Pic #3 in JoCo's #550 post. When did they first start putting a decal like that on the Toolmobile itself? That's what we need to know.Smokeshow69 said:I will have to check my plomb catalogs to see when they went from embossed logo to the painted on logo...
Thanks. Saying they've TM'ed the name "Toolmobile" in a newsletter 4 years before they submitted their TM application is just mindboggling to me then.
I'm not sure what relevance the Plomb Tool Co logos would have on this question, Smoke, embossed or painted. I'm referring to a decal that actually says "Toolmobile," such as the one shown in Pic #3 in JoCo's #550 post. When did they first start putting a decal like that on the Toolmobile itself? That's what we need to know.

If you're saying you have a Plomb Toolmobile with the word "Toolmobile" literally painted on it, when do you think that Toolmobile was made? Doesn't Brian have a baker's dozen of them? Irrespective of this question about "Toolmobile" decals, don't you Toolmobile guys have a general idea of the production timeline based on features? Square corners vs round. Pulls. Plomb logo (embossed, painted). Etc. If so, I was thinking you can line them up in chronological order based on those features, virtually, and in Brian's case even physically, and go, "all these have no 'Toolmobile' decal, or Plomb/Proto branding that does not include that word, and then boom, right here is the first one actually labeled with a 'Toolmobile' decal, or Plomb/Proto branding that includes that word, and we consider that Toolmobile to have been made around 19xx."

No, I don't think so. Unfortunately, we seem to be having a massive and ongoing Cool Hand Luke ("What we got here is a failure to communicate") moment.In terms of the comparing them, you and i are saying the exact same thing but maybe are saying it in a different terms ?
I can save you some time...Smokeshow69 said:I plan to look at the catalogs and see how the logo changed over the years...
I can tell you that no catalog images of the Toolmobile between 1939 and 1949 (4922-M), which is the latest catalog I have, show a "Toolmobile" decal on the unit itself. Just the Plomb Tools logos in the usual places.
No, I don't think so. Unfortunately, we seem to be having a massive and ongoing Cool Hand Luke ("What we got here is a failure to communicate") moment.![]()
For example, I have no idea why you are talking about factory vs reproduction.
Probably my fault. My apologies. Let me try one more time in a different and more direct way.
Do you guys have a timeline for Toolmobile production?
Meaning, can you identify, in general, early Plomb (say, 39-44) from middle Plomb (postwar) from early Proto (early 50's) from later Proto (late 50's) Toolmobiles? Note, that question has nothing to do with the trademark. Forget the trademark. It has to do with physical characteristics of the box itself, for example only, shape, corners, drawers, etc, if those things even changed over the years, and whether the logo (Plomb Tool Co) was embossed or painted etc etc. I am not asking you to explain the rationale to me or educate me on all the nuances of the features you have used to construct a timeline. I have no interest in re-examining the features or the timeline itself. I trust you guys have studied it. I am simply asking if such a timeline exists.
If the answer to that question is yes, then I am asking...
When, in that timeline, did the Toolmobile (i.e., the rolling cart itself) first have the name "Toolmobile" physically applied to it in some way?
Painted, decal, or whatever. Note, I am not asking about the logo (PLVMB TOOLS, PLVMB TOOL CO, etc). I am asking exclusively and specifically about the name "Toolmobile." Again, for example, JoCo's box upthread says "Proto Toolmobile." Did the Plomb era Toolmobile in 1939 actually include the word "Toolmobile" on it? Did the Plomb era Toolmobile in 1946 actually include the word "Toolmonile" on it?
When was the word "Toolmobile" actually put on the rolling cart that Plomb Tool Company called a Toolmobile in catalogs and ads? That is my question.
I can save you some time...
I find it interesting that joco's tool mobile doesn't say tool mobile....my toolmobile does say- tool mobile- on it. I hadn't paid much attention to the wording on them but i will look for them this weekend and see what i can find..Thanks. Remember I already looked at 1939 through 1949. I don't have any Plomb catalogs after that.I will peruse the catalogs to see what year range the words- Toolmobile were used
Okay. Good to know. That's what I've been asking! And yours is the painted logo, right? Please post photos or a link to where you've already posted photos if that's easier. Interested in seeing the whole unit, and then a close-up of the part that has "Toolmobile" on it. The question is when do you think yours was made? Could it possibly be 1946 or thereabouts or later but not earlier?Smokeshow69 said:....my toolmobile does say- tool mobile- on it.
That's a good question. A related question is when did they go from embossed to painted logo? My impression heretofore, irrespective of this topic, has been that Plomb went from embossed to painted logos on toolboxes, in general, sometime during the mid to late part of the war. 1943 to 1944-ish. But I don't remember why that's my impression.My Plomb version has the embossing. Do all of the painted logo Plombs have Toolmobile on them?
Smoke just said his has it. And JoCo's Proto Toolmobile has the name integrated with the Proto name with the little (R) registered TM symbol in a single badge screwed on at the bottom (see post #550).I am not aware of any with toolmobile on them.
Pulled this from the Pressteel thread, it belongs to Ben. So the Toolmobile marking predated the change to Proto. I'm far from a Plomb/Proto expert but if I'm not mistaken, at some point before the name change, the side louvers went away. If that's correct, that could help pinpoint when they started marking the boxes as tool mobiles.
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Yup. Thanks. Helpful. Looking more and more like my theory about 1946 is a possibility.So the Toolmobile marking predated the change to Proto.
If you mean the word "Toolmobile", please post a scan. That would jibe with your 1952 dated Proto flyer. But it clearly doesn't jibe with the United States Patent and Trademark Office.**in my 1951 catalog, there is specific wording in the body of the text and the circle r appears next to the word.
That seems to be the case based on what has been posted so far.Lugz- I am still researching but i am thinking the later tool mobiles that were made right before the dual mark transitional period were marked "tool mobile" with the painted logo on the sides.... The early style that is embossed like Joco's and Brians dont say "tool mobile"...
Trademark, not copyright. Two different things. But I am totally confused. How is the "Toolmobile" name relevant to the Plumb lawsuit, or vise versa?Smokeshow69 said:I believe plomb pulled the tool mobile name off them temporarily during the lawsuit period and then affixed it prominently to the newer/ waterloo style tool mobile once the copy right was granted.....however, i need some help in my research
If by "the 42-47 catalog" you're referring to the broad and erroneous date range that someone gave to Catalog 19-R FOURTH PRINTING a long time ago, as annotated on the Ed Buidinot site and then the Van Natta site, we have more of them now, thanks to tin medic, and I have worked out much more detailed dates for them. See attachment. I will make scans of the Toolmobile images from each of the catalogs in that chart later, but I am telling you, I looked at each one, and none of them bear the "Toolmobile" name. If you want them to compare physical features, I think they re-used the same images from catalog to catalog. If you still want them, maybe we should start a different thread. We're going to start bogging this thread down.Smokeshow69 said:I don't have access to the following catalogs- can someone please post the following tool mobile catalog pages from these years ?
1941, 43,44,45,46 (I believe these don't exist due to the war and the 42-47 catalog ?
That seems to be the case based on what has been posted so far.
Trademark, not copyright. Two different things. But I am totally confused. How is the "Toolmobile" name relevant to the Plumb lawsuit, or vise versa?
If by "the 42-47 catalog" you're referring to the broad and erroneous date range that someone gave to Catalog 19-R FOURTH PRINTING a long time ago, as annotated on the Ed Buidinot site and then the Van Natta site, we have more of them now, thanks to tin medic, and I have worked out much more detailed dates for them. See attachment. I will make scans of the Toolmobile images from each of the catalogs in that chart later, but I am telling you, I looked at each one, and none of them bear the "Toolmobile" name. If you want them to compare physical features, I think they re-used the same images from catalog to catalog. If you still want them, maybe we should start a different thread. We're going to start bogging this thread down.


That seems to be the case based on what has been posted so far.
Trademark, not copyright. Two different things. But I am totally confused. How is the "Toolmobile" name relevant to the Plumb lawsuit, or vise versa?
If by "the 42-47 catalog" you're referring to the broad and erroneous date range that someone gave to Catalog 19-R FOURTH PRINTING a long time ago, as annotated on the Ed Buidinot site and then the Van Natta site, we have more of them now, thanks to tin medic, and I have worked out much more detailed dates for them. See attachment. I will make scans of the Toolmobile images from each of the catalogs in that chart later, but I am telling you, I looked at each one, and none of them bear the "Toolmobile" name. If you want them to compare physical features, I think they re-used the same images from catalog to catalog. If you still want them, maybe we should start a different thread. We're going to start bogging this thread down.
Smoke sends me a text asking if I've been following this thread the past couple of days, so I pop in to check things out and all I see is that someone opened a can of worms and is trying to determine what order they fell out of the can!! Worse than that, y'all are dropping my name like I can fix this slimy mess.
In all seriousness, all I can say is that there's no definitive way to determine the exact timeline of the Toolmobile without catalogs being published each and every year, which Plomb did not do.
However, since I am wont to speculation, I posit that Plomb most likely changed from embossed logos to stenciled logos around the start of, or during WWII. I make this assumption because we know Plomb contracted with Pressteel to make rolling cabinets with embossed logos at least as far back as 1939. It would make no sense to end that practice unless the hard tooling wore out. If the tooling wore out after the government started rationing everything, they would have no choice but to simplify the design. If all the aforementioned speculation is true, then Toolmobiles could have changed from embossed logos to stenciled logos anywhere from December 8th, 1941, until the end of the war.
Your guess is as good as mine.
Brian
PS - Lugz, I've had 4 Toolmobiles in my possession. I sold one to Ben, had my daughter pick up another for Ben (which he traded to BMW) and have 2 more myself - one of which is a P&C Toolmobile. If you count the one I found in Eastern Washington last week, which was picked up by a member of the Plomb FB group after I posted it, I can take credit for the re-homing 5. So you were pretty darn close!
but i would say this is probably pretty close to the end before they went to the newer waterloo design.
I know this doesn't help with the timeline sleuthing, but after a day of playing Tetris in the shop I found a both a spot and a job for the Proto.
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... Is it ok if I feel both ? Those sure look nice together!I see it. Kinda hard to miss! I also saw the "Reg. U.S. Pat. Off." notice. It. makes. no. freaking. sense! I am totally baffled. If only to make everyone else as berserk as me about this, I will reiterate that the USPTO documents themselves - this is not just a record of it in a database, but the actual TM application, scanned and digitized, signed by Morris Pendleton, is dated April 12, 1956!Lugz- here is a couple shots from my 1951 Jobber size catalog. Notice the copyright R next to the wording!
I'm not so sure it was prompted by anything specific, other than them waking up to good business practices after their lawsuit fiasco. Plomb owned six (6) TM properties in their lifetime. They applied and were issued five (5) of those in a 5-year span between 1948 and 1952, three (3) of them - for "TAC", the Flying Lady logo, and a re-issue of Proto - all in the same year, and on the same day, in 1951. Now I am wondering if maybe they thought (mistakenly) they had submitted the "Toolmobile" TM application along with those, started using the (R) symbol and making the notices, and then had to apply for real when they discovered their mistake, in 1956.Smokeshow69 said:Something happened to make them go out of their way to lock this down.
I have no idea where I got the number 13, but I know I saw it on here attributed to you for something. (I have to admit, I thought it was obsessive and excessive, even in the context of a site known for having a bunch of excessive obsessives, and even in the context of one famous for long round trips in his trusty Camry!) What Plomb items do you have qty 13 of?PS - Lugz, I've had 4 Toolmobiles in my possession... So you were pretty darn close!
I have no idea where I got the number 13, but I know I saw it on here attributed to you for something. (I have to admit, I thought it was obsessive and excessive, even in the context of a site known for having a bunch of excessive obsessives, and even in the context of one famous for long round trips in his trusty Camry!) What Plomb items do you have qty 13 of?Or maybe someone was hyperbolizing as a joke and I took them seriously.
I think I made a comment in jest about Brian having 13 Deluxe Rollers. He actually only has 12.
You have reached the goal if everyone thinks something is cool just because you have it!

Is that XYZ vise new in box???