Damnit! I would of bought serial number 1.
These really are the absolute best hammer of its type that you can buy. I am probably going to order some additional faces for mine and I havent even used it yet.
Great marketing pics!
Serial #3 is still available!
Chad, that's a hell of an endorsement coming from a Snap-On man, thank you. I know you know your tools, after all it is your business!
I had to pull out Adobe Illustrator and re-familiarize myself with it. It's been a while!
MD11 said:
Yeah, most of my PB Swiss is serial numbered with numbers in the 234235 type range.. so to get a 00001 or 001 or what ever is going to be nice!
Is there going to be a letter designator? such as A for series A, or H for Hammer, so that when you expand into other items the serial numbers will have some meaning?
Gentleman, I think we have the beginnings of a successful small business here... Paulding Instruments or Paulding Tools... Look out Snapon!
MD11,
In 1929, a horrible year to start a business, two men set out to build an electric hedge trimmer. Apparently, it worked. Yet, because of the climate of the time, the business failed. Not to be deterred the two men cut their losses, re-invented themselves and set out to build a vertical milling attachment for the horizontal mills common at that time.
The two men delivered their first vertical milling attachment in 1932. By 1938 there was such a high demand for their milling attachment they decided to build an entire machine around it. It was built by hand in their shop and painstakingly aligned to master references by hand scraping. They called their machine "The Bridgeport". Little did they know their little machine would change the course of machining history and it's name, the city in which it was built, would become synonymous with
machine tool.
Today, most tools are serialized by automatic methods. These machines are designed to mark millions of parts with a unique serial number (or not). As a consequence, they have lots of extra, unnecessary zeros. Laser etching and pin marking machines have default settings placing lots of zeros in front of the number. Maybe tool companies think it makes them look bigger. Maybe they're too lazy to change the default settings.
Regardless, the first marked hammer will be numbered the same way the first Bridgeport was marked in 1938, with a number stamp, a steady hand and a good hammer: 1
