Private Lugnutz
Well-known member
Yes. Everything in that chest is Bonney. I can see why you'd be interested with that Ford V8 main bearing wrench peeking out!Are they Bonney?
Yes. Everything in that chest is Bonney. I can see why you'd be interested with that Ford V8 main bearing wrench peeking out!Are they Bonney?
You don’t have to worry about it. Keeping them is exactly what I would do with them!Yes. Everything in that chest is Bonney. I can see why you'd be interested with that Ford V8 main bearing wrench peeking out!I stow most of my routine Bonney tools in a later Bonney carry box, and I keep the older or unique pieces in the chest. They're all keepers for now, though.
Eventually Bonney was bought out by Cooper (who really only wanted the Utica pliers and torque wrench division) and let Bonney just stagnate till they closed it. They were profitable up until the end, but, when they needed some capital investment for tooling upgrades Cooper just shut them down. The Chinese imports by then just made US production noncompetitive.
I like bonney. The newer stuff before they went out of business seemed to rust easier.
That's when I found out Bonney was out of business, and my quest began.
Never really thought about it until the early 2000's when I lost a wrench and went to replace it (I don't like incomplete sets). That's when I found out Bonney was out of business, and my quest began.
Cooper production? I don't even know when they stopped using the name.
There is no "recent" Bonney production. Out of business since 1990's.
^ So, this sad subject - Bonney going out of business - has come up often here, but nobody has ever really put a hard date to it other than vague handwaving at an entire decade, as far as I can tell.It also suffered the same issue as the neon tube burned out in mine in 1999 and since Bonney was out of business...
The concept of Bonney and Billings "merging" or being "united" under one corporate banner was foreign to me. I think of Billings as being swallowed up by the Crescent-Niagara then Cooper conglomeration, and Bonney as being swallowed up by the Utica then Triangle conglomeration, and never the twain shall meet. I was aware that Cooper bought Triangle in the 1990's, but I don't think of that as uniting or merging anything, let alone producing any kind of active production of either the Billings or the Bonney brands.I know Bonney supplied ratchets and sockets/drive tools at times for Billings, esp after they were united under one corporate head, but I'm pretty certain these wrenches long pre-date the merger.
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Really cool. Love that box.
Great find! Might not be the prettiest or lightest action but those tools will be among the little that survives the apokalypse - along with the roaches! lolA Bonney CV A series set of 1/2" sockets, with breaker bar. I found this ratchet that I think is from the same era. It won't fit in the box with the breaker bar though. I need to get it cleaned up and see if I can find them in a catalog to see what actually goes with the sockets. The spinner extension is also marked CV.
I'm a little surprise nobody has commented on this. I waited a few days to see if anyone would blink or throw up or question it.And here is the TM being conveyed from Cooper to Snap-On in 1996!
Yes, and it presents a real Sophie's Choice! Are we meant to interpret it as a kick in the teeth or a saving grace that they buried it? They did not bury the Williams or Blackhawk names. They are still using them today, as brand names for cheaper tools, some or all apparently made offshore. So, was it out of some kind of special reverence that they did not do that to Bonney? Or just neglect or dumb luck or a roll of the dice?Apparently, they did both!
Ricky Joe said:"I think Stanley cared more about marketing than the quality of the tool."
If I remember correctly the Flank Drive actually came out a few years prior and it was a obvious copy of the Loc-tite patent that Triangle Corp sue and won the lawsuit for patent infringement and Snap-on had to pay a royalty to Triangle for it. Then suddenly **** any mention was gone. It kind of explains what really happened.Gotta bury the biggest threat.
Locrite became Flank Drive
Loc-Rite (1964) came out earlier. For prior art, Knudsen (Snap-on) cited Kavalar (K-H) and a couple of Europeans in his patent application. Flank Drive was introduced in 1967, but not TM'ed as a name until 1980. You can read much, much more on wrenches with ratcheting or off radius openings in a deep dive I did on the Lugzsonian thread, including a very handy, colorful timeline chart, entering it here, in the 60's, and paging back or forward from there.If I remember correctly the Flank Drive actually came out a few years prior and it was a obvious copy of the Loc-tite patent


also good advice on a Monday, Tuesday,……EDIT: Oh, hell, here's a teaser. Why work? It's Friday. Read my study instead!![]()