If it was just a little earlier, with the older logo oval decals (like the flip-top boxes that JjKk and I have from some short postwar transitional period of old logos on red boxes...), I can promise you gents that I would be on my way to Whitehall to grossly overpay for it.



This bad boy is illustrated on pp5 & 6 of the 1947 catalog, but described as tan crackle. So I guess red must be 1948 or 1949.![]()
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Buffalo is a bit farther than Whitehall. Even launching from my parents’ place in the twin tiers, it’s a day trip.
No. There are several of these kinds of brandings, a few of them just associated with CV (think of the little stickers that are on every single wrench shank, for instance) that fell below the 'include' line, if only because it's space limited.Not sure if you put it on your chart?



I believe Huot made that bottom box. Maybe top box, also, but certainly the roller.![]()
After work today, I gave the CC5 roller a pretty good cleaning with mineral spirits and WD40. There was really only one bad patch of rust, on the bottom shelf - you can see the dark spots in the second photo. That logo is fragile - especially the cream pigment - some of it came off on my shirt when I carried it, and then more when I wiped over it. Beware!
The MB76 got just a quick wipedown today, but I can see that the two logos are not identical (particularly the weight of the “TOOLS” part), and the one on the MB76 is less flakey.
I think they must be lithographed on after the crackle paint.
Because even though we use the term very freely for all wrenches of this type today, back in the day, Roebling owned the trademark and guarded it as ferociously as a big Florida golf course water hazard reptile. Just to round out LS's info....to compete with Alligator pipe wrenches

2 new grabs off the bay. 1 is a wartime brown 1/4" dr box and the other is another wartime brown box but its different! It has been a thorn in my side for over a year! I was listed for very expensive for a long time. I sent him an offer out of the blue and he lowered the price significantly and I pulled the trigger! Its in great shape and it a box for the "p" series drain plug sockets. The inside sticker is going as it does not belong. The water decal on the front is in excellent shape! Now to find the correct sockets to fill it which i have only 1! I wanted the 1/4" box for my wartime ratchet and drive tools as right now they sit in a spray bombed wrong box Hahaa! Hahaa! Here they are...
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It's in the 1941. Bottom of page 47. The extension and the cross bar that comprise the "T handle" are out of that front compartment, which you can't see anyway due to the angle, and resting on the lid. Probably not shown in the severely abbreviated 1946.it dosnt resemble any of the "K" series drain plug socket sets in any of the catalogs i have.
Do you mean "tacky" as in sticky? Or "tacky" as in aesthetically displeasing? You're right, it wasn't correct for the color of the box, and seems grossly oversized for the size of the box, but I am curious about how it got on there. Was it a repro? Is someone making a modern repro of that very late 40's and 50's decal? Could Bonney have slapped that on an older box in the very late 40's? Or are you thinking a PO did that? Don't get me wrong, it would've bugged me, too. But it is curious.I took off that tacky, wrong inside sticker as well!
That bottom left socket is for Chevrolet brakes. Did it come with the drain set? Seems to fit nicely. That is a nice set. Mine is Indestro and has been well-used.
Dooood! You been holding out on us in a major way!All have been well used.
I have the earlier 9/32-inch drive set in that same midget box. Maybe you commented earlier on that and I missed it.The 1/4 box is still in use in my truck.
Agreed! (But I'm having label scratch-and-dent cringes just thinking about them getting banged around in your truck!Coolest Logo of all.
I found a k1 a few week’s ago in a rem line toolbox I bought nice!Picked up this postwar No. K-1 magnetic holder (see Pics 1 & 2) from wrenchguy in a trade for a 1920's BKLYN logo Williams spark plug wrench. I've got a few longer ones (Blue-Point and Duro), but this one is really cute. I'm going to keep it in my No. VS5 Extra Small Socket and Tool Set, where it fits nice and snugly (see Pics 3 & 4) - and appropriately, too, as a later production alternative/back-up to the miniature mechanical No. K-4 holder (see Pics 3 & 5) these sets came with in the 30's. 1951 catalog excerpt in Pic 6.