I have a Diamond 45170 with the patent number 2232477 and that patent was issued 70 years ago on Feb. 18 1941.
Top ratchet.Just curious, is yours a standard reversible ratchet?
According to AA, this particular model of ratchet has been in production for decades. (Why mess with a good thing?)
I know for a fact that current rebuild kits will fit all their respective sized rats back to the WAYNE days (though, my dealer said S-K will not warranty any tool with "WAYNE" on it. Don't know why.). But I got a rebuild kit for another ratchet, and checked to see if it fit. It did. So, at least back to the early 60's, the ratchets are the same.
I'd be interested to know if you had a rebuild kit - or another, newer S-K that you could test remove it's kit and test - would fit this S-K in a diamond era rat.
AA believes it to be from 1934-1939, but I think it would have to fall from the later 1930s to 1941 or possibly even later.
Here's the reason: this is my 45170:
This style is obviously earlier than than rebelram's, but the patent number is the same. . . .
That patent diagram is very interesting. So were they going to patent the ratchet mechanism rather than the ratchet as a whole? Would that explain the second patent number we have found, so basically the internals were the change? Any chance of finding a patent diagram on that second number? If you look at lbgradwell's ratchet, the actual ratchet head looks identical to the other 45170s. So if it was indeed a patent on the ratcheting mechanism it would make sense.
Also looking at mine near where the snap ring is, right at the base of the head there is something stamped into the handle, possible two "D" characters stamped like this:
D
D
I wonder if that is a date code of some sort?
What I thought was a simple question has definitely turned into an interesting discussion
I'm headed out to my grandparent's place today and I will be looking in my grandpa's shop for more SK stuff to see what else I can find.
Like the 8 6 on mine?*snip*
Also looking at mine near where the snap ring is, right at the base of the head there is something stamped into the handle, possible two "D" characters stamped like this:
D
D
I wonder if that is a date code of some sort?
*snip*
Here's the reason: this is my 45170:
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This rat looks alot like an Artisan rat I saw for sale recently. Is it just me?
Artisan was a brand name used by Gamble-Skogmo Inc., which operated a chain of Gamble Auto Supply stores and other retail outlets.
I wonder if that is a date code of some sort?
What I thought was a simple question has definitely turned into an interesting discussion
. . . I also won a 42470 ratchet on ebay last night and it has the diamond logo as well. I'll post pics of it as well when it arrives.
Nope, you're right Bonneyman! I noticed that Alloy Artifacts has a couple of photos of it and explains that S-K made those for Gamble-Skogmo Inc.
Go here to check it out,
http://home.comcast.net/~alloy-artifacts/sk-knurled-sockets.html#artisan-4270
Steve
Like the 8 6 on mine?
Mines got the newer pat # it seems. Didn't realize it was that old, was gonna send it in because of some chrome issue. Guess I'll just get a rebuild and use as is.
$3 for it.
GREAT PRICE! That ~1954 pearhead (aka boxhead) Craftsman is also a nice ratchet to own these days. I was buying a 6-32 Phillips screw for my 1/2"-drive at a hardware store yesterday and the store clerks were eye-balling it like it was a centerfold. They made the comment, "they don't make 'em like that anymore."![]()
So true,
Steve
bout to head over and see if theres anything good today.
And this little box. I think it was for 1/4" drive sockets. It should clean up pretty well.
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