LNKMK8
Well-known member
I came across this little Indestro "General Riveting Set" at a sale last month... I thought it was neat and something a little different than most Indestro items I find.

Seems like a waste of tooling and manufacturing prep time. I get why the lengths might be different, as the ratchet heads might not take the extra leverage.What is it that says Indestro?
He tipped me off to that store too! I went there to look at their Vaco stuff:following up on an OLD private message from @DAustin -
back in February, Mr. Austin discovered a little hardware store in Fremont, Ohio that had a mess of Indestro NOS stock hanging on display boards. I finally got around to placing an order with Eddie a few minutes ago.
attached are the photos @DAustin provided me back in February. contact info is in the photo images. BK
Eddie said he also still had some NOS S-K stock, but lacked the ability to provide any photo images.




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Bet you didn't know Anime & Monsters were tools, eh? I drove way past since I had trouble finding it..A store near me (Daly City Tool Mart) has a full display of SK long combos available. Walking in there was the first time I even knew they existed.
Yes that part of the store is a little unnerving!Bet you didn't know Anime & Monsters were tools, eh? I drove way past since I had trouble finding it..
It’s so cool hearing about this stuff. That makes a lot of sense. Was Thorsen still made in Oakland when you stocked them or had they already moved to Texas?^ The same is true with Thorsen. Not sure why this never occurred to me before. Thorsen also packaged their combos in sets using the shorter-length models. They also offered a longer "standard length" model, but we didn't carry them because..... they weren't on the boards we put in the stores!
(The reason that the longer, standard-length Indestros sat in the boxes on the shelves and collected dust in the warehouse was because the factory order (minimum $10K in 1970) was written by Guy Wheaton, the factory rep, who tried to put in every part number in the catalog, including the female drive "refrigeration ratchets".)(That's another story.)
Please, Thorsen was actually made in Emeryville. Emeryville had such a bad reputation with gambling and houses of ill repute that Thorsen claimed that they were made in Oakland. Quite a reversal in modern times.It’s so cool hearing about this stuff. That makes a lot of sense. Was Thorsen still made in Oakland when you stocked them or had they already moved to Texas?
The tappet wrenches are certainly THIN.The Duro-Chrome and Indestro TAPPET wrenches are way thin - skinny skinny - but they never really changed much from the 1930s through the 1990s as far as I know. My set dates from the early 1970s (below.) (T1 - T4)
