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Spreading the Bonney affliction!

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twertsy

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Jan 5, 2014
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Reedville, VA
I've got a handful of wartime Bonney pieces.
Here's an ignition wrench set. I'm missing the #E18 if anyone can help me out, I would sure appreciate it! [emoji481]
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Are they Zenel or plain? Quite sure I have spares of both.

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Private Lugnutz

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Mar 30, 2012
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The Authentic Jersey Shore
Had some bonney good fortune at a frozen flea market this morning...

20151205_100114_zps7af3enyj.jpg


The five (5) electrical wrenches, all -ZENEL-, are Bonney Miniature Wrench Set No. 20.

H10 - 3/16 x 7/32
H12 - 1/4 x 9/32
H14 - 5/16 x 11/32
H16 - 3/8 x 7/16
H18 - 15/32 x 13/32

All with an ET or FT (May/June 1942) date code. All some kind of brushed chemical finish, with polished faces.

20151205_100429_zpsxhpqizlk.jpg


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The only thing I need now is the pouch!

Page with Miniature Wrench Set No. 20 from 1943 Bonney catalog

file.php
 

twertsy

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Joined
Jan 5, 2014
Messages
6,725
Location
Reedville, VA
Had some bonney good fortune at a frozen flea market this morning...

20151205_100114_zps7af3enyj.jpg


The five (5) electrical wrenches, all -ZENEL-, are Bonney Miniature Wrench Set No. 20.

20151205_100429_zpsxhpqizlk.jpg


20151205_100512_zpswlzql3mm.jpg


20151205_100520_zpsmusn85ua.jpg


H10 - 3/16 x 7/32
H12 - 1/4 x 9/32
H14 - 5/16 x 11/32
H16 - 3/8 x 7/16
H18 - 15/32 x 13/32

All with an ET or FT (May/June 1942) date code

The only thing I need now is the pouch!

Page with Miniature Wrench Set No. 20 from 1943 Bonney catalog

file.php
Nice snag! "43 Bonney Catalog?"
 

Private Lugnutz

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Interesting. He never answered what the number was on the cat. C-1 is 42, and I have C2, 3, and 4, as well as D-1. None appear to be '43? I'd like to see the cover.

There was no cover. If you go to page 2 of the linked thread, he posted a photo of the index page, where the owner scrawled "#43 / 1943" in pen, which seems to match the information in the Alloy Artifacts catalogs table.

http://alloy-artifacts.org/bonney-forge-tool.html#cats
 
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bonneyman

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Got a 1/4" driver handle in today's mail as a gift, and it's a bit different from the one I already had. I think the gifted one is an older series.
Anyway, here's some pics. The new-to-me driver is the top one.
 
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bonneyman

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OK, my research so far indicates the "newer" style handle and part number went back to at least the 1967 catalog. So I'm surmizing the older handle style is before that.
 

Steinmetz

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Wish they were still in business, did they just go bankrupt or just shut down shop???

They were a wholly-owned subsidiary of a conglomerate (Triangle Industries). As such, they were simply put in the grave and buried.

There was a great deal of consolidation in the tool industry, starting in the 1960's. It was very competitive. Bonney simply couldn't compete.
 

Steinmetz

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Washington State
I have to be honest here - and this may come as a shock to Bonney fans, but - I never really liked Bonney ratchets! Too big a head, too wobbly and clunky feeling for my taste. I have a set simply because, well, my name. But I much prefer S-K ratchets.:lol_hitti

My sockets sets cover from 1/4" thru 3/8" to 1/2" drive. SAE and/or metric, shallow and/or deeps.

No 3/4" or 1" drive.:sad:

Me either. I had a new one (1/2 in. ratchet) start "skipping" while in use. Junked it because it was not safe to use.

I prefer the S-K ratchets as well. To the exclusion of all others.
 

bob15

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Northeasten, CT
They were a wholly-owned subsidiary of a conglomerate (Triangle Industries). As such, they were simply put in the grave and buried.

There was a great deal of consolidation in the tool industry, starting in the 1960's. It was very competitive. Bonney simply couldn't compete.

It was Copper Tools that bought Triangle tool and shut them down in the 1990's. They had no issues in the 1960's, By the late 1970's they were supplying John Deere and Allis-Chalmers with their tools and supplying Macto with wrenches, probably using their old Bon-E-Con tooling.
 

Steinmetz

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It was Copper Tools that bought Triangle tool and shut them down in the 1990's. They had no issues in the 1960's, By the late 1970's they were supplying John Deere and Allis-Chalmers with their tools and supplying Macto with wrenches, probably using their old Bon-E-Con tooling.

I simply made the general statement about consolidation of the tool industry starting in the 1960's. During this time, and forward, all of the independents were being bought out. Symington-Wayne (the gas pump people) bought S-K, then sold to Dresser (another oil tool supplier), Utica was bought by Kelsey-Hayes, Proto by Stanley, etc. etc.

I didn't state that this was literally applicable to Bonney.
 
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rickhigginshtbr

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Aug 7, 2012
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Lower Bucks, PA
you guys are forgetting that the Bonney name may be dead, but not buried. Snap On does own the rights to the name... whether they do anything with it is another question.

Though, the company in Allentown is still in existence, making plumbing supplies, not tools.
 

Sam'sAutoParts

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Aug 27, 2013
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Northeast PA
OK, so on a whim I bid and won these on eBay. Seller thought they may be Bonney (it was scrawled on the boxes that these were kept in). I don't happen to have any Bonney adjustables, so now I'm stuck, would like to confirm they are Bonney.


Just for size reference the largest appear to be for a 10"
 

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twertsy

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Here's the best I can do. BW10 circa 60's - 70's. Hope it helps.
 

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twertsy

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I forgot I had these, ran across them on eBay a while back and found them again this weekend. Original "siding" site plans for the Allentown Bonney Plant, as revised up to 1925.
 

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bonneyman

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I forgot I had these, ran across them on eBay a while back and found them again this weekend. Original "siding" site plans for the Allentown Bonney Plant, as revised up to 1925.

Now THAT'S something you don't see everyday! :thumbup:
 

egnorant

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May 2, 2012
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East Texas
Just found my 3rd Bonney wrench in my hoard! But I am a bit confused by it.

1725B double open end wrench. 1/2 and 9/16th by measure, yet marked with the 1/4 U.S.S, 5/16th CAP and 3/8th S.A.E/ 516th CAP markings. BON(shield)NEY with made in U.S.A...CHROME-VANADIUM and the circle CV logo. All that stuff I understand!

The date code is A2R with a dot over the A! I don't know what it means. Most of the stuff points to the 1920s. Just a little confused and thought someone might clear this up.

Thanks

Bruce

P.S. O.K. 1926...I just found that. Consider this post to be me just saying "YIPPEE I found another Bonney wrench!"
 
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bonneyman

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Location
Desert SW
Just found my 3rd Bonney wrench in my hoard! But I am a bit confused by it.

1725B double open end wrench. 1/2 and 9/16th by measure, yet marked with the 1/4 U.S.S, 5/16th CAP and 3/8th S.A.E/ 516th CAP markings. BON(shield)NEY with made in U.S.A...CHROME-VANADIUM and the circle CV logo. All that stuff I understand!

The date code is A2R with a dot over the A! I don't know what it means. Most of the stuff points to the 1920s. Just a little confused and thought someone might clear this up.

Thanks

Bruce

P.S. O.K. 1926...I just found that. Consider this post to be me just saying "YIPPEE I found another Bonney wrench!"

I'm not the expert on those older wrenches, but I believe yours are the old nomenclature style, which described the bolt diameter rather than the opening. So, it could say 3/8" but actually measure 9/16".

The standard changed to what we now use in the late 20's.
 

twertsy

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Jan 5, 2014
Messages
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Location
Reedville, VA
Ok fellow Bonneyites, stumbled across this wrench today. Streamline outline style, which first appears in the 1963 catalog. Supposedly, date codes end at -W indicating 1959 (W). This wrench has an AX code, which indicates January (A), 1960 (X). While it's possible codes extend into the '60s to Z-1962, I've never seen any and further, the outlines aren't supposed to appear until 63.

Opinions requested! Perhaps an early prototype?

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twertsy

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Reedville, VA
I thought the raised Streamline logo was '49-ish til '55-ish when they switch to the outline style?

You are correct on the "depressed panel/raised Bonney logo" streamline design, they started around '49. But the outline style doesn't show up in catalogs (I have each cat from '47-1970) until 1963. AA also says '63 is the first year for the outline style. It's always possible that they simply used old catalog pics in the '60-'62 cats but the first pictures of these streamline wrenches is '63.

As far as I know the wrench above is the only one known that has a date code of 1960 (X).
 
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