Private Lugnutz
Well-known member
Uncharacteristically, I picked up this 60's era mass marketed tool set in a plastic case at the flea market this morning for peanuts.
These midget hex drive multi-tool ratcheting bit sets are not particular high-quality (compared to, oh, say, Chapman’s offerings, just to name one, and my legitimate favorite bit set mfgr), and they aren’t particularly rare, either (with eBay and others sales showing up quite often – annoyingly, in my research results for older, antique wooden handled multi-tool bit sets). But, much like the “Deluxe Toolkit” I picked up earlier this year with the cheap, brightly handled, mass marketed tools in a faux leather-clad case, thread linked here, it’s complete, it has the original paperwork, it’s Made in the Good Ol’, it’s a little higher quality than Oxwall or G.M. Co. class, and something about it is just too classic – despite the slight gimmickiness, to leave behind.
The fundamental mechanism was patented (2,989,881) in 1961.
Somewhat uniquely, the socket service opening sizes are stamped on the drive end.
These midget hex drive multi-tool ratcheting bit sets are not particular high-quality (compared to, oh, say, Chapman’s offerings, just to name one, and my legitimate favorite bit set mfgr), and they aren’t particularly rare, either (with eBay and others sales showing up quite often – annoyingly, in my research results for older, antique wooden handled multi-tool bit sets). But, much like the “Deluxe Toolkit” I picked up earlier this year with the cheap, brightly handled, mass marketed tools in a faux leather-clad case, thread linked here, it’s complete, it has the original paperwork, it’s Made in the Good Ol’, it’s a little higher quality than Oxwall or G.M. Co. class, and something about it is just too classic – despite the slight gimmickiness, to leave behind.
The fundamental mechanism was patented (2,989,881) in 1961.
Somewhat uniquely, the socket service opening sizes are stamped on the drive end.

















