Oldtuleguy
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- Nov 4, 2017
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Some great points there joco. I have wondered about that circle h stamp as well. Maybe we can get gearwolf to weigh in on this as well.
Bottom line up front: When did New Britain start using the Circle H stamp?
Smokeshow recently posted that he was looking for a 1/2" speeder with the rotating forehand grip on it to replace one without the forehand grip in a post war 1/2d set. That got me thinking and rooting through my assorted 1/2d speeders.
I had to go back to the 1934 catalog to find an illustration of a 1/2d speeder without the rotating forehandle. I've got both with and without in both H and BE. I've always assumed that BE came first (and I think this is correct as the earliest NB drive tools and sockets are all marked BE) and that there was a period of time when NB was using both stamps. I also believe that at some point, BE went away and the dying breath of the NB Sears tools were all marked H. I've never seen a BE marked piece with the =CRAFTSMAN= logo on it. Only H.
I recall reading a post from Twertsey here in Vintage Tools detailing the demise of the Husky plant but I can't find it. As I remember it, Todd dispelled the myth that Circle H tools were made in the Kenosha plant as the plant was abandoned and all the tooling moved to CT when NB bought it out (1931-ish??). Am I dreaming that? If not can somebody point me in the right direction to find that conversation?
I might be overthinking this but my thoughts are that NB started using the Circle H stamp once they moved the Husky tooling from WI to CT and used it to designate tools made on the former Husky machinery. Forgive me if this horse has already been beaten.
Thanks Smokeshow! I just looked at 15 pre-war 1/2d speeders!!!!
Both of the pictured speeders are Circle H.
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It's a good 'compromise theory' in the sense that it might explain why NB would even need a second code to begin with (H=Husky machinery) if H=Husky plant in Kenosha is chronologically impossible. But if the tools are identical or nearly identical (in the sense that they BE and H were clearly made with NB dies, for NB patents and designs on those Husky machines), and all made by the same company, why would Sears require a separate code? Is there precedence for them wanting traceability to particular machines? Unless the separate codes were an NB convention for their own purposes. I'm not throwing darts here, just floating things we would need to come to grips with.I might be overthinking this but my thoughts are that NB started using the Circle H stamp once they moved the Husky tooling from WI to CT and used it to designate tools made on the former Husky machinery.
Sears didn't have an "abuse" clause in the warranty; all that mattered was "customer not satisfied" for Craftsman. (A few products exempted like vises)
Unless my count is off and I am leaving someone out (and please speak up if that's the case...), that makes three of these Reed drop-head type threader sets on this thread now. You can see photos of mine here, and if you scroll up to post #272 from there, you can see Smokeshow's. The other dies and guides were 1/4" and 3/8".This must have been a transition piece because it has a Heritage label slapped on the side of the carrier in a sloppy manner.
Where did the bar go? Inside the handle? Mine didn't include that.It also came with a tapered bar that I assume was used to reopen the bore of the pipe after the pipe cutter left an internal burr in the end.
So I did miscount and forget someone. Thanks for piping up.Another pre-war version here.
Thanks. It is. Just to clarify, I found that and showed it back in March in more detail, linked here. Just showed it again because of the Vlchek-made Fulton half-moon wrench I found yesterday. Those are my only two Fulton items.JoCoSawdust said:Lugz: That's a great Fulton cased set you have there. Case appears to be in amazing condition!
Unless my count is off and I am leaving someone out (and please speak up if that's the case...), that makes three of these Reed drop-head type threader sets on this thread now. You can see photos of mine here, and if you scroll up to post #272 from there, you can see Smokeshow's. The other dies and guides were 1/4" and 3/8".
Interestingly, all three are slightly different in terms of some of the markings.
On the top of the head of the diestock, mine has REED MFG CO forged in, yours has the Long C Craftsman forged in, and it looks like Smoke's is blank there.
Yours and mine have the Heritage stickers slapped hastily on the carrier (patented by Reed, 1,961,450 in 1934, by the way, for the way the handle of the die stock doubles as the handle for the carrier - which is rather ingenious), whereas Smoke's has the Long C sticker there.
My dies all have Long C markings, and I am assuming yours and Smoke's do.
The only other example of a company contracted by Sears using two different codes is the SK examples that can bear either the Circle K mark or BM. Of course we've discussed this before in here and I think the general assumption is that BM marked tools were manufactured in the Brazil plant while the K marked tools were manufactured in the SK plant. Those markings do serve as another example where markings are time-sensitive with BM only appearing on the very earliest of Craftsman offerings.
My gut feeling is that the use of two codes is more likely to be a NB issue, not Sears. Perhaps a quality control measure? The fact that the markings are time sensitive may support the "machinery theory". There's anecdotal evidence that the use of two codes has three phases. Early tools only show up bearing the BE mark. For a period of time, the codes overlap. We can establish that the H code goes back to at least 1934, possibly earlier, based on the 1/2d speed wrench with no rotating foregrip. I think the strongest augument for the codes being tied to machinery is what happens towards the end of the NB/Sears relationship. The BE mark simply goes away. Every NB item I've seen wearing the =CRAFTSMAN= logo has had the H code. The fact that Sears was courting other makers couldn't have been a secret. Perhaps NB decided to change tooling for the new logo only on the line that was using the H code until they knew whether or not their Sears contract would continue.
It's a good 'compromise theory' in the sense that it might explain why NB would even need a second code to begin with (H=Husky machinery) if H=Husky plant in Kenosha is chronologically impossible. But if the tools are identical or nearly identical (in the sense that they BE and H were clearly made with NB dies, for NB patents and designs on those Husky machines), and all made by the same company, why would Sears require a separate code? Is there precedence for them wanting traceability to particular machines? Unless the separate codes were an NB convention for their own purposes. I'm not throwing darts here, just floating things we would need to come to grips with.
Outlaw, I've never seen any Craftsman branded Vlchek with the BC mark. Any idea what tools they were found on?
I posted one example - a punch, upthread, linked here.Apparently just striking tools from my notes. Jo

Thanks Don. Wow...I do have one or two! I've been sitting here resisting the temptation to go out to the shop. Once that was planted in my brainpan I seemed to recall seeing the BC mark. Didn't realize it was Vlchek.

Unless my count is off and I am leaving someone out (and please speak up if that's the case...), that makes three of these Reed drop-head type threader sets on this thread now. You can see photos of mine here, and if you scroll up to post #272 from there, you can see Smokeshow's. The other dies and guides were 1/4" and 3/8".
Interestingly, all three are slightly different in terms of some of the markings.
On the top of the head of the diestock, mine has REED MFG CO forged in, yours has the Long C Craftsman forged in, and it looks like Smoke's is blank there.
Yours and mine have the Heritage stickers slapped hastily on the carrier (patented by Reed, 1,961,450 in 1934, by the way, for the way the handle of the die stock doubles as the handle for the carrier - which is rather ingenious), whereas Smoke's has the Long C sticker there.
My dies all have Long C markings, and I am assuming yours and Smoke's do.



Yes, cut down from a 5/32" pin punch. I've done that!


Briefly back on the subject of the Reed-made drop head pipe threaders...
I saw this Reed-made and Reed-branded set this morning at my flea. First one I have ever seen. They're always Craftsman. I didn't buy it, but I snapped some photos. (I thought about you and your missing nut, Jock, but it was too expensive to buy to salvage.)