I've been following along...some nice finds on here fellas. Ed, I find it interesting that there's at least two versions of that wrench case out there. Smooth interior and crinkled interior. I have one of each as well except that my "smooth inside" version is a much lighter blue on the inside.
OTG.. congrats on finding the 3/8d set in the Costello tray. That one is still eluding me.
Tex...you've gotten some solid advice on your midget set. Lugz summed it up well in that it's a fool's errand to try to pinpoint an exact date on immediate post war Craftsman stuff (which is what your midget set is). They were all high on kicking Hitler's **** and it was pretty much anything goes during that time.
I did do some looking and found a quirk in the post war midget sets that I hadn't noticed before. This clip is from 1949, the last year New Britain tools appeared in a Sears catalog (at least to my knowledge). Notice the Lone Ranger NB 7/16 socket in the drawings along with the round, knurled handle hinge handle, obviously NB. The other sockets as well as the rat are obviously the "new" MDF stuff. I thought the hinge handles might just be crappy drawings of MDF pieces but, looking at the 1950 images, the artist nailed the MDF look then.
Obviously, I'm not saying that every 1949 midget set had a NB 7/16 socket and hinge handle but I think this image does establish two things. One, Sears didn't care if they were mixing sets once they brought MDF on board. They shelled out the NB pieces until they ran out. Two, the artists caught more detail than we sometimes give them credit for. This guy (or gal), had a mixed midget set in front of him and that's what he drew.
Also of note, the "two-ended" socket tray in the clamshell. I think it was Don that posted two clams of this era, each with a different type of socket tray. The other type was a continuous "wall" from end to end. I can't find the wall type in any catalog images. Don't know what to make of that. 2 OEMs or the same OEM with two different hat tricks? Who knows.....
