Private Lugnutz
Well-known member
All those pliers were made by J.P. Danielson, LS! (AA refers to that pattern as "herringbone".)
I think the pliers that say UTEE-Co are Utica. I have seen them with the "Utica, N.Y." address marking underneath the "UTEE-Co" marking. I have not seen this documented anywhere, but I have theorized that UTEE-Co was Utica's answer to Crescent's CEETEECO. Unaiu has a pair.
If you have a pair of CEETEECO pliers - literally marked CEETEECO - with a J.P. Danielson herringbone grip, I would love to see them.
Bonney must have been buying pliers from J.P. Danielson (your example), then Crescent (my example)! Yours are older than mine and the herringbone pattern is J.P. Danielson's wartime pattern. Prior to that they used a checkered pattern. I don't have any Bonney wartime pliers, so this is not something I have noted before. I think Unaiu has Bonney wartime pliers. Mabe he will chme in or he already has (on G503.com) and I just haven't taken note of the switch from J.P. Danielson to Crescent postwar. It makes sense now that I think about it, because Plomb bought J.P. Danielson in 1946, so Bonney would've had to go to another source.
I think the pliers that say UTEE-Co are Utica. I have seen them with the "Utica, N.Y." address marking underneath the "UTEE-Co" marking. I have not seen this documented anywhere, but I have theorized that UTEE-Co was Utica's answer to Crescent's CEETEECO. Unaiu has a pair.
If you have a pair of CEETEECO pliers - literally marked CEETEECO - with a J.P. Danielson herringbone grip, I would love to see them.
Bonney must have been buying pliers from J.P. Danielson (your example), then Crescent (my example)! Yours are older than mine and the herringbone pattern is J.P. Danielson's wartime pattern. Prior to that they used a checkered pattern. I don't have any Bonney wartime pliers, so this is not something I have noted before. I think Unaiu has Bonney wartime pliers. Mabe he will chme in or he already has (on G503.com) and I just haven't taken note of the switch from J.P. Danielson to Crescent postwar. It makes sense now that I think about it, because Plomb bought J.P. Danielson in 1946, so Bonney would've had to go to another source.
The model numbers H25, H26, H28, and H210, for 5", 6", 8" and 10" pliers, respectively, are only found forged in on the handles near the pivot on Crescent's CEETEECO brand pliers, LS. And the model numbers G25, G26, G28, and G210, for 5", 6", 8", and 10" pliers, respectively, are only found forged-in on Crescent's MoToR KiT brand pliers. They are Crescent model numbers. They are visible without removing the pivot, but they are much more easily visible when disassembled. The suffixes (-4, -5, etc) you will find are all different and they are thought to be some kind of forge number.LesserSon said:I am trying to find the model number. Do you have to take out the pivot to see it?
Attachments
Last edited:

Well put.





