kellyron500
Active member
Hi all,
I have inherited my father's 1962 (same year I was born, BTW) Snap On top chest. He bought it immediately after opening his first gas station in 1963...The ol' Air Force plane mechanic did well. I have the roller cabinet too, but much newer and I believe Craftsman - Front emblem is off and I have not poked around too much, but black drawers, silver handles, all factory and smalls of Craftsman.
I have a lot of shots of the box as I began disassembling because I take on a lot of different restoration projects, mainly wood, and I kick myself when I have this beautiful piece at the end but can't show anyone how it looked when I started. When I get off work, I will throw some shots online of the SO box.
So I want to do this one justice and bring it back for another 5 decades of life. Here a few questions I have if anyone has traveled down the same road:
(1) I want to remove the drop cover and top lid. Both are hinged. I would rather separate them and strip/repaint versus trying to get the spray into all areas of the hinges once I am ready to do so.
Am I looking at a nightmare pulling out these hinge pins? I figure I can WD-40 them do death, drive them from one side and pull from the other???? These pins are what, 26, 28 inches long? There is no rust, but I am sure accumulated **** inside. Let me know if you have done this before and how you tackled it, or gave up and drank instead!!!
(2) I have stripped the handles on the sides. I really like the look of that silver metal handle...it has the enlarged metal grip and looks great the way it is stripped. It there anyway I can leave that bare and coat it with a clear coat or something? I think it would look great against the Snap On Red color of the box but I want it to last as long as the paint I put on the box.
I want to not only leave the handles that bare silver, but the handle plate that is welded to the box. The box will be in my home garage and I live in the mid south, so excessive humidity and exposure to the elements is not a problem. Regardless of what I coat the metal with, will it stay as long as the primer and paint I put on the box, or will it be more prone to rust getting under it?
(3) The Snap On emblem is in great shape and only needed polishing when I took it off, but the front handle has a lot of little dents and dinks. Should I be looking at Snap On for a replacement or can I match this well at the big box stores? I think it is $5 from Snap On but I hear the wait for parts is ridiculous...maybe I just do both..order one from SO and buy a temp locally.
Same thing for the lock...looks like ol' Pops replaced that and there is no key. The cylinder that is on there does have the locking tab that rotates when the cover is down to secure the cover, but I noticed the holes on either side of the box frame in front of the lower drawers. I think it is safe to assume that when the key was turned, two rods inserted in the holes to secure the sides of the cover as well. The cylinder (with no key) that is there doesn't seem to have hardware that would accommodate rods, even if I had them. I can put on a temp lock and order the full lock and guts from SO, unless someone knows another route???
(4) The box is in incredible shape...the only major ding is in the back. Looks like it was hit with a ball peen or something. I was able to rework some other minor cosmetics, but this dent is in an area I can't get behind to work it out. Can I use bondo on this once the metal is bare? I know it is in the back and will never be seen, but I will know it and I want to take this thing back as close as I can get it to original. Any experience with bondo on a box, let me know if I am going the wrong direction please.
Even though I want it to be original, I was highly thinking about using brush on truck bed liner inside all of the drawers and the top tray. Has anyone done this?
Enough for my first post. This is my first real metal restoration and any help will do. I play more with wood...never got in the swing of bending over fenders for 8 hours a day like my Pops, but I can still turn a mean wrench. But as a good crossover, i will post some pictures I have on my work PC of a tool box I built for myself...made out of wood, although I cheat painted it to look like a roller cabinet. It makes a great conversation piece.
Anyway, thanks for reading and thanks for any thoughts you might have.
Best...
I have inherited my father's 1962 (same year I was born, BTW) Snap On top chest. He bought it immediately after opening his first gas station in 1963...The ol' Air Force plane mechanic did well. I have the roller cabinet too, but much newer and I believe Craftsman - Front emblem is off and I have not poked around too much, but black drawers, silver handles, all factory and smalls of Craftsman.
I have a lot of shots of the box as I began disassembling because I take on a lot of different restoration projects, mainly wood, and I kick myself when I have this beautiful piece at the end but can't show anyone how it looked when I started. When I get off work, I will throw some shots online of the SO box.
So I want to do this one justice and bring it back for another 5 decades of life. Here a few questions I have if anyone has traveled down the same road:
(1) I want to remove the drop cover and top lid. Both are hinged. I would rather separate them and strip/repaint versus trying to get the spray into all areas of the hinges once I am ready to do so.
Am I looking at a nightmare pulling out these hinge pins? I figure I can WD-40 them do death, drive them from one side and pull from the other???? These pins are what, 26, 28 inches long? There is no rust, but I am sure accumulated **** inside. Let me know if you have done this before and how you tackled it, or gave up and drank instead!!!
(2) I have stripped the handles on the sides. I really like the look of that silver metal handle...it has the enlarged metal grip and looks great the way it is stripped. It there anyway I can leave that bare and coat it with a clear coat or something? I think it would look great against the Snap On Red color of the box but I want it to last as long as the paint I put on the box.
I want to not only leave the handles that bare silver, but the handle plate that is welded to the box. The box will be in my home garage and I live in the mid south, so excessive humidity and exposure to the elements is not a problem. Regardless of what I coat the metal with, will it stay as long as the primer and paint I put on the box, or will it be more prone to rust getting under it?
(3) The Snap On emblem is in great shape and only needed polishing when I took it off, but the front handle has a lot of little dents and dinks. Should I be looking at Snap On for a replacement or can I match this well at the big box stores? I think it is $5 from Snap On but I hear the wait for parts is ridiculous...maybe I just do both..order one from SO and buy a temp locally.
Same thing for the lock...looks like ol' Pops replaced that and there is no key. The cylinder that is on there does have the locking tab that rotates when the cover is down to secure the cover, but I noticed the holes on either side of the box frame in front of the lower drawers. I think it is safe to assume that when the key was turned, two rods inserted in the holes to secure the sides of the cover as well. The cylinder (with no key) that is there doesn't seem to have hardware that would accommodate rods, even if I had them. I can put on a temp lock and order the full lock and guts from SO, unless someone knows another route???
(4) The box is in incredible shape...the only major ding is in the back. Looks like it was hit with a ball peen or something. I was able to rework some other minor cosmetics, but this dent is in an area I can't get behind to work it out. Can I use bondo on this once the metal is bare? I know it is in the back and will never be seen, but I will know it and I want to take this thing back as close as I can get it to original. Any experience with bondo on a box, let me know if I am going the wrong direction please.
Even though I want it to be original, I was highly thinking about using brush on truck bed liner inside all of the drawers and the top tray. Has anyone done this?
Enough for my first post. This is my first real metal restoration and any help will do. I play more with wood...never got in the swing of bending over fenders for 8 hours a day like my Pops, but I can still turn a mean wrench. But as a good crossover, i will post some pictures I have on my work PC of a tool box I built for myself...made out of wood, although I cheat painted it to look like a roller cabinet. It makes a great conversation piece.
Anyway, thanks for reading and thanks for any thoughts you might have.
Best...




