Oldtuleguy
Well-known member
- Joined
- Nov 4, 2017
- Messages
- 10,457
I think maybe some late ones could have been red




in hopes of inspiring some crinkle













I took two photos (one holding a ruler for scale) and pasted them into MS Publisher. I matched the ruler to the app’s border scale, then scaled the rulerless photo to match as well, and deleted the one with the ruler. Now I could print the logo at actual scale without trial and error.

If you could take good photo with no reflection, in photo editor try changing colors or switching to negative photo colors. Also try a UV flashlight, there cheap, and that may get print or logos to " pop out ".
I have this complete set with red roll up. The sizes are 1/4 thru 1 inch the set I bought new in 80's. They have served me well in the Aviation industry.
Nope. I actually went back and checked. $3 and $5 shipping.including shipping?
Are you trying to collect a set? Are you familiar with the origin of the model number and the history?Bonney 585 wrench
Yes to both, and I have your thread on the subject to thank for this next endeavor….like I even needed another.Are you trying to collect a set? Are you familiar with the origin of the model number and the history?
Excellent! I may have a few spares.Yes to both, and I have your thread on the subject to thank for this next endeavor...
I keep trying to tell myself it's not as expensive as golfing....like I even needed another.

I'm guessing your presumption is based on the switch, which is, admittedly, very reminiscent of the Bonney switches of the 40s, but it's probably just a coincidence of TRUTH using a similar, simple pin-type design. The forgings of the bodies of the ratchets and the construction are not the same. I can see how the "B" (in that "B" with a small "s" inside of it forge marking) is also tempting a Bonney ID, but as 3bay alluded to, that marking doesn't show up on Bonney ratchets or other tools and is not known to be associated with Bonney.Since I presume Bonney made the Truth ratchets...
Thanks to you guys, 3Bay & Lugz, for the direction on this. I scoured the Truth thread (only 3 pages vs. 131 pages here!) and noticed a 1/2 ratchet virtually identical to this one in an old Ward Master set marked "R6 USA". If you want to go down in history as true sages, you might offer insight to the Part No. logic that makes mine read "R6A USA".......I'm guessing your presumption is based on the switch, which is, admittedly, very reminiscent of the Bonney switches of the 40s, but it's probably just a coincidence of TRUTH using a similar, simple pin-type design. The forgings of the bodies of the ratchets and the construction are not the same. I can see how the "B" (in that "B" with a small "s" inside of it forge marking) is also tempting a Bonney ID, but as 3bay alluded to, that marking doesn't show up on Bonney ratchets or other tools and is not known to be associated with Bonney.




Nice!Picked up a mostly-complete Set No.WS in original box...[ ]...“U” (1929).
Post an update if not.Missing D24,22... missing 5”ext ...[ ]...but probably have the three missing items to fill in.
I don't think it was me, unless you mean the unbranded machinist box I posted on the GS thread in mid April.I thought OR posted a box like this, without a visible logo, but haven’t relocated the post.






My dad would of straighten those nails and used them again. It is a growing up in the depression thing.^ the odd hinged thing is a P38 can opener
Shelby / Shelby Corp., Shelby, OH / "P38" can opener / patent 2413528 Dec 31 1946 & RE22934 Nov 11 1947 John W. Speaker / see also J.W. Speaker Corp., see also KoolAir, St. Paul, MN /
Speaker / J.W. Speaker Corp., Milwaukee, WI / "P38" can opener / patent 2413528 Dec 31 1946 & RE22934 Nov 11 1947 John W. Speaker / also manufactured by KoolAire, St. Paul, MN, and Shelby Corp., Shelby, OH / https://www.army.mil/article/25736/the_best_army_invention_ever /
KoolAire / KoolAire, St. Paul, MN / "P38" can opener / patent 2413528 Dec 31 1946 & RE22934 Nov 11 1947 John W. Speaker / see also J.W. Speaker Corp, see also Shelby Corp. /
^ this is all more in Private Lugnutz's area of expertise, but ..... I THINK that the Speaker company was the first to produce these units. (Can openers, bottle openers, lid lifter, and corkscrews is a weird rabbit hole.... I still have several hundred files in an "unknown" folder I need to sort through, which is why I try to NOT mention them here.)
Why always the bent nails in tool boxes? What's up with that? Is it a thing like using roofing nails to secure the heads onto ball-pein hammers?
(I've sent an inquiry to Wright regarding those sockets, but my eyeballs are telling me some sort of gland nut socket maybe? I hate making wild guesses.... especially when that gizmo in the other thread turned out to be a "barrel vise".)
I thought OR posted a box like this, without a visible logo
Yep. The only thing similar is neither has a visible logo. Although the machinist box I suggested was just as far off!EDIT - right guy, wrong box and wrong thread.