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d42jeep

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1/2” & 9/16”. I have no idea who made it. I wouldn’t call it a top quality product, though. It’s stamped.
-Don406879F2-C944-4B8D-9763-37E6236BDC9C.jpeg
 
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four.cycle

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most likely NOT this Stromberg:
Stromberg / Stromberg Motoscope, 2703 Belmont, Chicago, IL / "Grip Point" screwdriver /
??
(I have a Stromberg vacuum/fuel pump tester but I very seriously doubt they made it in house at a carburetor manufacturing facility.)
Stromberg was located in Chicago - they would have no shortage of neighbors capable of stamping out an open-end wrench.
 

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Outlawmws

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It says Stromberg Carb and they were active for many decades. Guys were still using 6 Strombergs on race cars into the 70's at least.

I agree, not likely made in house.,
 

99TDR

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^ those are some nice old CM open-ends there. I am assuming they are the =V= production code (on the other side) -

welcome to the site! :thumbup:

So it seems all but one "standard" are =V= .

All the metric are -V- , and one standard (the lone -V- standard is all the way to the left).

Please share the difference ? (I assume year of manufacture?).

See below.
PXL_20211107_191510384-m.jpg
 
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d42jeep

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=v= is earlier than -v- and =v= generally doesn’t have part numbers like -v- generally does. Here is the link to Lauver’s list.
-Don
 

99TDR

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=v= is earlier than -v- and =v= generally doesn’t have part numbers like -v- generally does. Here is the link to Lauver’s list.
-Don
Thanks Don , Geez, who would of thunk soo much talk about Craftsman hand tools. Guess they were "it" for most of us till the early 90's.
 

GreenIron

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To my recollection, I don't think I've ever owned DOE wrenches. :unsure:

I've have worked with a couple guys(long ago) who owned and used them. I never had the need for any when I was a working stiff.
 

Mintgrun

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Kingston, Wa.
What do you call this type of wrench? I've gathered a few. This is a mix of Armstrong, Williams and one Bonney.

IMG_2225.JPG

IMG_2228.JPG

DOEs this count as a DOE? I cannot find information about F.W. KRAEMER, so I don't know how old it is. It doesn't look old though. I think it is a tool for straightening auto/truck frames. I've used it a few times to bend other things. It probably doesn't belong here, but it DOEs have two open ends!

IMG_1757.JPG

IMG_1758.JPG

Tom
 
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3baygarage

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SW Florida/from Buffalo,NY
I believe that other tool is probably a bending iron for orthotics and prosthetics.

I found this one on the wall of a resale shop. Unique name on it, but after seeing the forge marking, knew it has to come home with me.

42BCFD55-64FB-46E2-A934-7BCB36546F72.jpeg
B3E195AD-03CF-471D-B345-9CE984A14D84.jpeg780DA6CC-71DD-43E6-8145-CBE809A0B2CE.jpeg
 
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Mintgrun

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Thank you for the quick replies. I like using the set screw wrenches on welding clamps, which have a square head instead of a through rod. They really do get a good purchase on square fasteners and can apply plenty of torque. They're quite beefy.

I had seen something about orthotics while searching for the Kraemer tool. It may be inappropriate to call it a wrench.

Tom
 
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Private Lugnutz

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These "DROP FORGED" wrenches are so ubiquitous I usually ignore them.

20211119_183703.jpg

But I flipped this one over out of habit at the flea this morning only to be greeted by this cool diagonal and underlined "DRIVER" marking. No idea what it means. Never seen one before. Look closer. The letters in the die were individually assembled.

20211119_183729.jpg
 

Isaiah6113

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Oshawa, ON
These "DROP FORGED" wrenches are so ubiquitous I usually ignore them.

20211119_183703.jpg

But I flipped this one over out of habit at the flea this morning only to be greeted by this cool diagonal and underlined "DRIVER" marking. No idea what it means. Never seen one before. Look closer. The letters in the die were individually assembled.

20211119_183729.jpg

Have a look at my Avatar; your Driver wrench might be associated with The Driver Line of Walker Turner machines.

Matthew
 

Private Lugnutz

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Have a look at my Avatar; your Driver wrench might be associated with The Driver Line of Walker Turner machines.
Go figure! That's the corner of my odd and ends wrenches box I threw it in! I was thinking it may have been letterpress or something. Very cool. Thanks for the info. I knew of Walker Turner, but was not aware of a Driver line.

20211119_201515.jpg

The letters were probably hand stamped into the die.
For sure. None of them are aligned.
 
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Outlawmws

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Go figure! That's the corner of my odd and ends wrenches box I threw it in! I was thinking it may have been letterpress or something. Very cool. Thanks for the info. I knew of Walker Turner, but was not aware of a Driver line.

20211119_201515.jpg


For sure. None of them are aligned.
Here you go Lugz, from the 1931 catalog - I believe I found your wrench:

Driver.JPG
 

Rbcsci

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Adams, MA, USA
Years ago, when I heard that Craftsman wrenches were no longer being made in the USA, I took a ride to my local Sears and went through all the racks, buying up the few loose ones that had “Forged in the USA” on them. This was the biggest prize of the day - 1 1/2” x 1 5/8”. The 1/2” is for scale.

D8698402-9326-41A6-86F8-21C6A1CF2F7C.jpeg
 

Private Lugnutz

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Despite the branding, I was thinking some kind of tank wrench when I picked this up this morning at the flea.

20211127_124553.jpg20211127_124603.jpg

No other DOE wrench THIS small has openings (1-1/4" x 11/16") THAT big!

But the "EVEREADY" name kept nagging at me for the same reasons that it may be nagging at you. Well, I just figured it out.

This 1922 ad shows that Oxweld Acetylene was using the "EVEREADY" brand on its regulators.

Eveready Oxweld ad.jpg

Okay. Good to know. But how and why?

This 1920 article pointing out that Oxweld Acetlyne replaced their "Prest-O-Lite" branding with "Eveready" was also helpful.

Eveready Oxweld ad 2.jpg

But neither one explains how Oxweld Acetlyne was using a brand name associated with batteries since the turn of the century.

Per Wikipedia, in 1914, the American Ever Ready Company (formerly American Novelty and Manufacturing Company) was acquired by National Carbon Company, which merged with Union Carbide to form the Union Carbide and Carbon Company.

Great. But what does that have to do with Oxweld?

The bingo moment was this 1930 article pointing out that Union Carbide and Carbon owned Oxweld Acetylene.

Eveready article.jpg
 

four.cycle

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yes... Eveready = Union Carbide

never knew there was any connection to Oxweld though. could they have gotten the letters in that die any more wonky?

what surprised me was the connection to Prest-O-Lite.
 

Private Lugnutz

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never knew there was any connection to Oxweld though.
Me neither! Again, I'm thinking gas all the way, but the name was making me question myself.
could they have gotten the letters in that die any more wonky?
I know! The second wrench I have had in a week in which each figure in the dieblock was obviously hand-emplaced.
 

four.cycle

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There was a reason why both "Oxweld" and "Airco" found places in the list - both of them were directly responsible for a whole bunch of different wrenches. While the connection to Union Carbide shouldn't come as any surprise, I'm still a bit puzzled about the "Prest-O-Lite" connection, although that may well be my having been misinformed in the past about Prest-O-Lite.
The manner in which the letters were set up in the die makes me wonder if that was a one-off run of that particular size, perhaps? (It is, I'm sure you'll agree, an odd duck.)
 
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