I've still got a rash over the thought of a 10/8 Heritage combo being listed for 40 bucks. Even at 100 it was a steal.
Question/conversation topic for the brain trust. I recently saw another collector post a 3/8d Heritage clamshell box that he was having an issue with. Turns out, I've got one as well with the same issue. On both of these boxes, the socket tray isn't wide enough to accommodate the standard line up of 3/8d sockets. As you can see in this pic, the universal joint wouldn't fit in it's proposed compartment unless you hammered it in with a sledge. I tried BE and H sockets with no luck. I compared the misfit box with a 3/8d pre-war Fit-Mor box and a later Firestone box. Both other boxes have plenty of room to accommodate what's supposed to be in the kit. I briefly considered the possibility of it being designed to hold an expanded 1/4d set. I threw that off pretty quick as the tray is TOO big for 1/4d sockets and there just weren't enough 1/4d accessories at the time to justify a box this size.
Here's the spin: Both my box and the other collector's misfit box wear the blue Heritage logo. I thought mine might be a bad day at the office foul up (and perhaps it still is, along with the other box), but my question to the group is: Does anyone have a 3/8d clamshell box with a predominately blue Heritage logo on it that actually holds the sockets and universal?
I've always wondered about the blue Heritage logo. I'm considering now the possibility that anything blue-badged was from a different OEM. I know we've discussed the possibility of two different OEMs for the early pre-war tool chests. Could there have been another company with a small contract with Sears to keep up with production demand?
I know there's no definitive answers on this but I'd like to hear somebody else's thoughts on it.