Old Radar
Well-known member
Haven't seen that before. I would guess user mod to correct or overcome wear to the original wood bottom. Looks like a well executed mod, though.
an unnamed bull nose most likely London maker,
Iron casting in one piece. Looks similar to some early Holland London planes.Is this one a steel or brass body? 3rd or 4th I've seen in that shape now. Mine is upthread, in brass.
Nice gift, someone really like you! One listed here on CL for $1k.
Yeah but they aren't selling for that. I checked the sold listings after seeing CRS's post. One did sell for $400 IIRC.
...DUNLAP was also a Sears brand prior to and overlapping CRAFTSMAN for a while...
Made some nice scores at an estate sale today after it got cancelled yesterday due to thunderstorms. Luckily for me I was first in line both days. I picked up one plane. This is the first Stanley No 239 I've ever seen. Looks to have a 1/8" blade. The cutting blade and scoring blade are both Sweetheart logos. Has the fence. I think it's complete but hopefully one of you guys will know for sure. I also was wondering how do you tell a No 239 w/ 1/8" blade from a No 239-1/2? Was the 239-1/2 marked as such?
I did a write up on the Stanley #239 at the link below. Go to page 58, replies 858 and 859.
Jim C.
http://www.papawswrench.com/vboard/index.php?topic=9443.msg59439#msg59439
.Here is a quick link to page 58
http://www.papawswrench.com/vboard/index.php?topic=9443.855
I’ve never seen a 238, 239 or 239-1/2 in the wild. Nice score.
I did a poke about into Craftsman planes made by Sargent and Millers Falls, as I used to have a bunch of peers. Many people say the Craftsman have lighter castings, cheaper hardware, etc. Not true in the ones I looked into.
You can see some details here
Sears Craftsman logo timeline, I need to use IE to get the graphics in each box to load.
https://www.craftsman.com/history
The great Neck is the only questionable quality one there IMO.
OK, took a few more pix, starting here.
https://kirkhmb.smugmug.com/Woodworking/Craftsman-Connection/i-GKGxCBn
There are a few pix prior to the link which show the differences in length between 4's, 3's, and the in between sized one.
Your blade width numbers seem about right, length seemed about right to what what you measured.
The other place to look might be the Sargent plane page here, where I thought it interesting that the 1950 was nickel plated, and the #4 sized had lots of nickel on mine.
http://www.sargent-planes.com/sargent-409-smooth-plane/
The blade logos in mine seem to match yours, but the swoopy logo (on the lever cap) from the craftsman history page seems to seriously pre date that, and the GJ known history of Craftsman with geometric font etc. It would be hard to say my two, both with "not changed by me" irons, bought used in Cal, happen to have both been changed to match yours, bought across the country in NY?
So many questions, so few answers.
One note from Stanley Blood & Gore on length: "All dimensions that follow each number indicate the length of the sole, the width of the cutter, and the weight of the tool. There were some subtle differences in the dimensions, but only those that are significant are mentioned where appropriate. Some of the bench planes are a bit longer/shorter, wider/narrower, heavier/lighter than what's noted for the fact that the planes used many patterns over their decades of production. So, if you have a plane that's one-half inch shorter or longer than what's mentioned here, don't go thinking that you have some ultra-rare version of the tool. You don't (except in the case of the #2). If the plane is inches shorter than what's listed here, you have one that's suffered an amputation along the way"
I thought there was some note about not including the length of the handle bump out, but don't see it. Since this isn't a Stanley, it isn't really material to this discussion anyway.
http://www.supertool.com/StanleyBG/stan1.htm