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Provincial

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681B is an industry standard number for a light service "S" wrench with 3/4 x 13/16 openings. Others used the same number, starting with Williams. All the "S" wrenches had a standard number (675, 677, 679, etc, and later, in the late 30's and 40's it was 75, 77, 79, etc), with suffixes for milled openings. They made several "681" wrenches, all with the same die, then milled in different openings. A 681 was 11/16 x 27/32, for example. A 681A was 3/4 x 7/8. All of them would've had the "681" on the shank. Not saying it's not a Herbrand. But you might have to look at Williams and others, too.

RagTopTA posted a Norvell-Shapleigh (brief 1900-1917 partnership) "S" wrench with a Diamond-Edge logo on this thread, linked here.

My reply with some additional Shapleigh D-E info is linked here.

I used this for my research:
http://www.wrenchingnews.com/industry-standard-wrenches/chart.html
It didn't show any others but Herbrand, but it may be incomplete.

I guess you guys didn't see the sarcasm in my "English teacher" post! :lol_hitti
 

Private Lugnutz

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I used this for my research:
http://www.wrenchingnews.com/industry-standard-wrenches/chart.html
It didn't show any others but Herbrand, but it may be incomplete.
It's not incomplete; unfortunately, it's just wrong, Jock. The model number series they are using for Williams and Armstrong are for different "S" wrenches. They made short "S" wrenches with flat handles (66x), short "S" wrenches with concave handles (86x), long "S" wrenches they called car wrenches (3xx), and light service (also called carriage makers') "S" wrenches (67x, 68x). All of them had 22-1/2* angle heads. Herbrand got its model numbers from Williams for the longer "S" wrenches, as did Bonney and many others.

Pic 1 are excerpts from page 51 of the 1912 Williams catalog.
Pic 2 are a pair of Williams light service "S" wrenches, including a 681.
Pic 3 are a pair of the shorter Williams 662 "S" wrenches, which Wrenching News is erroneously associating with the Herbrand version of the Williams 68x series light service wrenches.
 

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Provincial

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What? Something wrong posted on the Internet!!!! Can't be.

EDIT: The photos of other 680-series Herbrand S-wrenches posted on Alloy Artifacts show the same forged-in number size/font as my wrench, unlike the Williams you posted.
 
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Provincial

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Today I found a set of Indestro Select obstruction wrenches.

1821 to 1830, 3/8 to 11/16.
 

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d42jeep

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Here are some DOE wrenches I found yesterday. The Thorsen wrenches are in very good condition.
-Don
 

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Provincial

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This appears to be an International Harvester wrench that I found in a battered old toolbox last week.
 

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Slackmaster G

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Here are some vintage big boys
 

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Land Rover 109

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So here is where I am, so far with Peugeot - I't a bit lopsided, as I only have the one 8-10 from an Eprey buy. The clip is something I just grabbed from the collections of trays and holders. it's not Peugeot, and I'v already outgrown it...

So I'm still going to be looking for 8-10's and the "inter" sizes I don't have...

Just found a replacement 13-15 for my own set. Will come with a 17-19 and a 21-23.
Perhaps missed by others because they were advertised as Geugeot not Peugeot. :)
Just have to await their arrival now. :drool:
 

LesserSon

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I was wirewheeling the rust off some DOEs this afternoon, and revealed some interesting marks. IHC G3172, “D”, and a 665B - the other end has a faintly-stamped oval with a P. I wonder what else was in that oval? Almost looks like PEXTO would fit, but did they make DOEs?

I also managed to wirewheel a good bit of insulation off the power cord of my block grinder (there was a loop sticking up behind the wheel-no guard, of course)...dumb, dumb, dumb! Now it matches my other one, with a stretch of vinyl tape wrapped around it.:mad:
 

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r_olson_06

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Looking for some info on these?IMG_20190427_201113796.jpgIMG_20190427_201130122.jpgIMG_20190427_201135253.jpg

Looking for the following Plomb Pebbles Wrenches 3061, 3070,
 

r_olson_06

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Also a mid to early 20s Plomb exhaust manifold wrench.IMG_20190515_202333753.jpegIMG_20190515_202348958.jpegIMG_20190515_202409149.jpegScreenshot_2019-05-15-20-26-53.jpg

Looking for the following Plomb Pebbles Wrenches 3061, 3070,
 

leg17

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...... and a 665B - the other end has a faintly-stamped oval with a P. I wonder what else was in that oval? Almost looks like PEXTO would fit, but did they make DOEs?

(Sorry, I haven't figured out how to use 'quote' and include pictures.)

This could be a Page-Storms wrench.
 

r_olson_06

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Look to be blacksmith made. Possibly by a RR shop.
Does the stamping have a manual look to it?
The one that has not been ground has a raised stamping that would have been forged in.

Looking for the following Plomb Pebbles Wrenches 3061, 3070,
 

DriftwoodAg

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E0DWz7P.jpg

y2DmXEa.jpg

I've had this forever and never thought to research it until joining this site. The best I can tell Brugnago tools were made in Italy starting in 1948 and may have been made for Alfa Romeo
 
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Provincial

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Royal S-15. 1/4x5/16 with offset ends.

I suspect that this was used to repair Royal typewriters.

Ignore the black wedge in the second photo. It is there to hold the wrench in the proper position.
 

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Provincial

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This weekend there was a flood of Fairmount obstruction DOE wrenches at the sales. I don't remember seeing this type of wrench in the Fairmount brand before. I have seen it in Martin, which is a later branding of the same wrench.

I know that Fairmount was a older brand, but these seem to be post-WWII, and likely less than 50 years old. I know that Fairmount was bought by Houdaille Industries during the period I think these were made, and sold to Martin Sprocket and Gear in 1984. I have never seen a Fairmount distributor in my area, and the Martin brand tools were generally sold through dealers who mainly sold the sprockets and gears.

The first photo is of three I found this morning. 1-1/2", 1", and 7/8" sizes. The second photo shows another 1-1/2" wrench I found at a later sale.
 

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Land Rover 109

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So here is where I am, so far with Peugeot - I't a bit lopsided, as I only have the one 8-10 from an Eprey buy. The clip is something I just grabbed from the collections of trays and holders. it's not Peugeot, and I'v already outgrown it...


So I'm still going to be looking for 8-10's and the "inter" sizes I don't have...

Here are my latest deliveries- two sets of three from different sellers.

P1010043_zps1w5r0wqr.jpg


P1010044_zpspypadttl.jpg
 

Private Lugnutz

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That was a good one! :lol:

But the answer is yes, if by "teeth" you mean tiny pipe-wrench-like serrations on the inner jaws, near the throat. Search on WrightGrip. They are in production today. EDIT: As for vintage, I don't think so. Adjustable pipe wrenches and alligator wrenches, but not wrenches meant for nuts and bolts.
 
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Private Lugnutz

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I thought I had a strange variant in this very early Billings wrench, but the 1409 model number maps to a standard "S" wrench with 22-1/2* angles and 1/4" Hex Cap x 5/16" Hex Cap openings. A PO decided he needed a heckuva lot more than a 22-1/2* angle on the one end, but the bend was so expertly accomplished, I thought it was factory that way.
 

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Private Lugnutz

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I also picked this one up at the flea market today. I don't know who made it. Mossberg made wrenches like this, with crazy milled sizes, but they are usually marked Mossberg or with the < M >. This just has a stock number ("809982") on it. I like it.
 

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Private Lugnutz

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Spotted this at the flea market this morning.

attachment.php


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Picked it up solely because of the intriguing logo on the flip side.

attachment.php


As a militaria guy, I was familiar with Weyersberg-Kirschbaum Co., in Solingen, Germany. At the turn of the century through the end of WWI, they supplied most of the armies around the world with bayonets, among other things. I knew it was the merger, in 1883, of two legendary families and blade makers. And I knew that they used a king's head and knight's head, respectively, as export markings.

Seeing only the Weyersberg name and a cornet logo on an export wrench marked "SELECTED- STEEL" and "GERMANY" with imperial size markings threw me.

A little research revealed that some members of the family re-established Gebruder Weyersberg as a separate entity in 1920, and they apparently made mechanics tools as well as cutting tools.

attachment.php
 

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Dibiase77

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Laundry room converted into a workspace.
Spotted this at the flea market this morning.

attachment.php


attachment.php


Picked it up solely because of the intriguing logo on the flip side.

attachment.php


As a militaria guy, I was familiar with Weyersberg-Kirschbaum Co., in Solingen, Germany. At the turn of the century through the end of WWI, they supplied most of the armies around the world with bayonets, among other things. I knew it was the merger, in 1883, of two legendary families and blade makers. And I knew that they used a king's head and knight's head, respectively, as export markings.

Seeing only the Weyersberg name and a cornet logo on a wrench marked "SELECTED- STEEL" and "GERMANY" with imperial size markings threw me.

A little research revealed that some members of the family re-established Gebruder Weyersberg as a separate entity in 1920, and they apparently made mechanics tools as well as cutting tools.

attachment.php
That's really co. That's why I like old tools. They have history to them. Just curious... How is the quality on that wrench?

Sent from my Alcatel_5044R using Tapatalk
 

Private Lugnutz

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Excellent. Almost too good. Dating it is a little challenging, in fact. Normally, I would automatically think that it had to have been made before 1949 with the "Germany" marking. After 1949 most products were marked "Western Germany" or "West Germany," until 1990, when the wall came down and it became obsolete again. It almost seems too sleek for prewar. But it seems too vintage for 1990's. So for now I am leaning toward late 1930's when companies like Fairmount and others taking advantage of alloys were making pear head sharps. Or perhaps they were one of those few companies that refused to use the "West Germany" marking and it's from the 50's or 60's.
 

Private Lugnutz

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Here's an oddity I also picked up. Check out the small hex throat opening. That has not been deformed from use. That would splay the jaws, as is often seen in older wrenches. It was milled that way.
 

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Private Lugnutz

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Thanks, but I can't take credit. Those dates and markings (pre-1949, and 1990) are well-established in other German antique and vintage collectibles markets, i.e., glassware, figurines, etc. Those kinds of resources and references can be very useful to antique and vintage tool collectors.
 

leg17

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Here's an oddity I also picked up. Check out the small hex throat opening. That has not been deformed from use. That would splay the jaws, as is often seen in older wrenches. It was milled that way.

I expect that vintage would have been milled, but either milled or broached, that would be a more involved operation.

Maybe user modified?
An industrial setting could provide a means to squeeze the end to reduce the opening.

Looks kind of like they needed a smaller wrench but this didn't work out too well either. Notice the raised deformation.
 

d42jeep

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Here is an early Cornwell obstruction wrench I found recently. It took a while to get the rust off.
-DonAD282D74-F153-4841-A643-2F0EFFC202FF.jpg
 
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