"Where did I put that ****** thing?! There goes a week's pay!"I found this model 3227 12” English-Metric rule lost in an old piece of furniture I recently took apart. Four days in Evaporust made it readable again. Looking online at catalog 11, page 102, I find the model a little different, so I’m thinking this is from between 1897 and 1918.











There’s a vintage (1945) catalog available here:Gentlemen, can anybody school me a bit on these old Lufkin mics? I've decided I want a quality vintage 0-1" mic, but can't decide which one. I think I've settled that I'm looking for friction thimble, but I'm not sure what that translates into in the old lufkin model #'s? I see 1911's 1641's, 1641V's, 1942's...
Any help?
Very helpful. I'd looked for something like that catalog, but had struck out. This armed me with what I needed to low-ball a guy on a set of 1911's last night, and won them. Now I'm bidding on a 2-piece set with a 1941V and 1942. Wish me luck.There’s a vintage (1945) catalog available here:
http://vintagemachinery.org/pubs/detail.aspx?id=29996
It looks like the V denotes ten-thousandths (tenths) graduations.
I think pages 12-13 have what you’re looking for. Happy hunting.
Makes sense now.I imagine the "V" was for the vernier function of the ten-thousands graduations.



Surveyor's tape. Be glad it wasn't in chains and links!I had a Lufkin wind up tapes once ......feet and inches,right ? ......nooo..... feet and 1/10s of a foot ..........that caused some stuff ups before the penny dropped.




As long as you only use that tape to measure everything, it will be fine. Even gives an automatic offset for internal dimensions for clearance.Or, leave it the way it is and compare the measurement to another tape and then subtract the difference each time you use it.![]()
Actually, the diagonal strap IS the belt clip. It's all a single piece of metal. And thanks for pointing out the detail about the bent tab. I used a pair of vice grips to hold the tape at the rivets and a pair of duck bill pliers to try bending the tab back into shape. Despite my best efforts, I wasn't able to get it bent back perfectly. Compared against a more modern tape measure, the Lufkin reads about 1/8 of an inch shorter than it should. This appears to be due to play where the tab is held to the tape by two rivets. I'm open to suggestions on correcting that discrepancy. I'd like to use it as a "daily" tool, but the thought of it being off by 1/8 plays with my mind. You can PM me with thoughts so we don't clutter this thread. Thanks!Nice one! Is that diagonal strap across the back what holds the belt clip on/part of the clip?
You might need to carefully bend the tab on the front of the tape back to perpendicular to the base/tape. It looks like it got dropped and bent in. That'll throw the accuracy off (by a lot in this case).
I'd probably whittle out a wooden pad to hold onto the tape and tab where it's riveted on, so the wood fits the shape and use pliers to hold it, while using other pliers to bend the tab back.
Or, maybe you can bend it back while it's retracted in the body and let the slot support it.
Or, leave it the way it is and compare the measurement to another tape and then subtract the difference each time you use it.![]()
Be careful, some of those tape measures were made where the hook is supposed to slide the thickness of the tab so that it automatically corrected for inside versus outside measurementThis appears to be due to play where the tab is held to the tape by two rivets. I'm open to suggestions on correcting that discrepancy